Europe's new terrorist organizations
Terrorist organizations staging attacks in Europe since Daesh promulgated its own state in Iraq and Syria in June 2014 point to the birth of a new type of terrorism, namely within-family terrorism. This is a type of terrorism committed by siblings and members of the same family.
It
also discloses the emergence of new recruitment mechanisms within terrorist
organizations. These mechanisms add to the challenges facing counterterrorism
efforts.
Within-family
radicalization recreates extremism and causes it to move on from one generation
to another within the same families.
Within-family
terrorism is not new though. Six of the 19 terrorists who staged the 9/11
attacks in New York and Washington on the symbols of America's economic and
military might were siblings. The two terrorists who carried out the bombing of
the Madrid train in March 2004 were siblings of Moroccan origin. Two American
nationals of Chechen origin, namely Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and Tamerlan Tsarnaev,
carried out the bombing of the annual Boston Marathon in April 2013.
Examples
of within-family terrorism in Europe abound. The Charlie Hebdo attack in
January 2015 was staged by Cherif and Said Kouachi, two brothers of Algerian
origin. The attack left 12 people dead and 11 others injured. French police
killed the perpetrators of the attack two days later.
In
August 2016, Bulgaria handed Cherif Kouachi's brother-in-law, Mourad Hamyd,
over to French authorities. He was accused of having links with a terrorist
organization.
The
two brothers, Brahim and Salah Abdeslam, participated in a series of attacks in
Paris in November 2015. Brahim blew himself up inside a restaurant during the
attacks. Salah managed to flee to Brussels, but was arrested in March 2016. Belgian
authorities then handed him over to France to be tried in connection with the
attacks.
Salah
helped three suicide bombers move to Stade de France to carry out the attack
which left 130 people dead.
In
March 2016, Brussels was the scene of another terrorist attack that was carried
out by the two brothers, Khalid and Brahim el-Bakraoui. The attack targeted
Brussels International Airport and Maelbeek metro station. The attack left 34
people dead and 271 others injured.
Multiple reasons
A number of factors contributed to stoking
within-family terrorism as a phenomenon in Europe. These factors include the
following:
-
Tightened
supervision on recruitment methods
Some
European states tightened supervision on social media as a means of recruitment
for terrorist organizations, including Daesh. This terrorist organization
succeeded in recruiting a large number of youth through social media. This was
why terrorist organizations improvised within-family radicalization to ensure
the presence of a human supply that helps them compensate the members they lose
in the battlefield. Within family-radicalization was after all far from the
eyes of the security establishment.
-
Too
many ghettos
A
ghetto is an area or a slum occupied by a group of people who share the same beliefs,
ethnic origins, or social conditions. Terrorist organizations active in Europe used
social relations in recruiting new members, especially in ghettos or marginalized
and poor areas. Ghettos are spread like a belt around rich suburbs. They are
mostly occupied by the second and third generation of migrants. Most of the
residents of these ghettos have failed in receiving enough education and could
not integrate into European societies. This is why most of them are alienated
within these societies. Ghettos are usually good environments for extremist
ideas to take root and grow. Siblings form the terrorist nucleus and then these
siblings draw in relatives, friends and residents in the same ghetto. This
explains why complete terrorist cells are sometimes present in areas where
there are conflicts in countries like Syria and Iraq. There are also sleeper
cells made up of siblings in the same countries.
-
Difficult
to penetrate
Families
are not easy to penetrate, which is why they are good terrorist incubators. Nobody
outside the family circle can know what is happening inside this circle. This
makes it difficult for security agencies to discover terrorist cells made up of
siblings and family members.
-
Easing
recruitment
Family relations and friendship make
recruitment a facile matter. This is one reason why extremist groups are keen
on recruiting women. Women always have influence within families. Daesh did the
same, which was why there were women everywhere in areas where it fought.
-
Shared
values
In most cases, family members and siblings
share the same values. This makes it easy for siblings and family members to
adopt the same views. The same siblings and family members usually defend the
values they share ferociously. Psychologists believe that a sibling can easily
influence his/her other siblings. Relations between siblings are usually based
on obedience and coherence.
Conclusion
There
is not a shred of doubt that within-family terrorism poses threats to security
in the European Continent. This is especially so in the presence of exemplary
incubators for this type of terrorism. Islamophobia contributes to the presence
of these incubators. European governments also give the chance for terrorists
to use the freedoms available in European states to advance their own
interests.
Daesh
returnees also pose danger to security in Europe. These returnees bring with
them back home the radical ideals they learned in war zones and then pass them
onto their family members and acquaintances. This is even more dangerous in the
light of the policy followed by European governments to reintegrate Daesh
returnees into their own societies.
There
is a need for Europe to formulate a comprehensive vision for fighting
within-family terrorism in it. This vision should be based on the development
of marginalized and poor areas around the cities, bolstering citizenship rights
and offering psychological support to families whose members are radicalized by
terrorist groups.