Turkey’s Deportations Force Europe to Face Its ISIS Militants
As Turkey followed through on its threat to release
more Islamic State detainees last week, Western European nations were
confronted with a problem they had long sought to avoid: what to do about the
potential return of radicalized, often battle-hardened Europeans to countries
that absolutely do not want them back.
Faced with fierce popular opposition to the
repatriation of such detainees and fears over the long-term threat they could
pose back home, European leaders have sought alternative ways to prosecute them
— in an international tribunal, on Iraqi soil, anywhere but on the Continent.
But President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, made
more powerful by a sudden shift in American policy, is determined to foist the
problem of the captured European Islamic State fighters back on the countries
they came from.
Last week, Turkey sent a dozen former Islamic State
members and relatives to Britain, Denmark, Germany and the United States, and
Mr. Erdogan says hundreds more are right behind them.
“All of the
European countries, especially those with most of the foreign fighters, have
desperately been looking for the past year for a way to deal with them without
bringing them back,” said Rik Coolsaet, an expert on radicalization at the
Egmont Institute, a Brussels-based research group. “But now, European nations
are being forced to consider repatriation since Turkey is going to put people
on the plane.”
The sudden problem for Europe is a long-tail
consequence of President Trump’s precipitous decision last month to withdraw
American forces from northern Syria, which cleared the way for Turkey to take
control of territory as well as many of the Islamic State members who had been
held there in Kurdish-run prisons or detention camps.
The issue is further complicated by the fact that
nearly two-thirds of the Western European detainees, or about 700, are
children, many of whom have lost one parent, if not both.
Now that more of the former fighters are in Turkish
hands, Mr. Erdogan has not hesitated to use the threat of returning them as
leverage over European countries who have been deeply critical of his
incursion, and who have threatened sanctions against Turkey for unauthorized
oil drilling in the eastern Mediterranean off Cyprus.
The fate of the former fighters and their families
has become yet another point of contention between Turkey and Europe, which is
already paying Mr. Erdogan’s government billions of dollars to stem the flow of
asylum seekers from conflicts in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.
Turkey is already home to some three million
refugees from the Syria conflict, and Mr. Erdogan is determined to lighten his
country’s load. But his real intent remains unclear: Does he really plan to
send back all foreign fighters to Europe? Or is he opening the spigot, with the
threat of a flood to come, to wring concessions from Europe?
What is clear is that with limited military reach in
Syria, European nations are ever more vulnerable to Mr. Erdogan’s whims.
Turkish officials say that Turkey now holds 2,280 Islamic State members from 30
countries, and that all of them will be deported.
The problem is not Europe’s alone. On Friday, Turkey
deported an American it described as an Islamic State member, Muhammad Darwish
Bassam, to the United States. Last week, a federal judge in the United States
ruled that an American-born woman who joined the Islamic State in 2014 was not
an American citizen, potentially thwarting her return.
But the numbers and risks for Europe are far greater
than for the United States. More than 1,100 citizens of countries in Western
Europe are believed to be detained in northern Syria in territory once
controlled by the Islamic State, according to a recent study by the Egmont
Institute.
Their potential return has confronted European justice
systems with competing security and civil liberties demands as they attempt to
vet returnees, decide whether to detain them, and build cases on potential
crimes that often happened hundred of miles away on remote Syrian battlefields.
France, the Western European nation with the most
detainees in Syria, is getting ready to take back 11 former Islamic State
members. The Netherlands has also agreed to take back some of its citizens.
On Thursday, a 26-year-old man suspected of being an
Islamic State fighter was arrested after landing at London’s Heathrow Airport
on a flight from Turkey.
That same day, seven members of a German-Iraqi
family arrived in Berlin from Turkey, from which they had been deported after
several months in custody over suspected links to terrorism.
The father was detained, but the other family
members were allowed to return to their homes.
On Friday, a woman deported by Turkey was detained
upon arrival at Frankfurt Airport on suspicion of being a member of a terrorist
organization abroad. Federal prosecutors in Germany said the woman, a German
citizen identified only as Nasim A., left the country in 2014 and married an
ISIS fighter, whom she supported until Kurdish-led security forces detained her
this year.
A second woman was released after landing in
Germany, but will be tracked by experts on de-radicalization.
German officials said they believed more than 130
people left the country to join ISIS, 95 of whom were German citizens and had
the right to return to the country. Nearly a third of the Germans are under
investigation by federal prosecutors.
French officials said there had been no change in
French policy, which opposes repatriation from Syria.
But pressure has been building, and security experts
and some government officials have increasingly warned that the repatriation of
militants — and their processing in European courts and detention in prisons —
would be the only way to ensure Europe’s safety.
The deteriorating situation in northern Syria, some
experts say, further increases the need for an orderly repatriation to Europe.
Left in Syria, more detainees could fall into the
hands of Turkish forces or the Syrian government, which could use them as
bargaining chips with the West.
Others could run away and try to regroup, or be
taken back by Islamic State sleeper cells, as is feared in the case of some
women who recently escaped from a camp in the region.
“There are a lot of risks associated with the policy
of leaving them where they are,’’ said Anthony Dworkin, a fellow at the
European Council on Foreign Relations who has studied the Islamic State’s
foreign fighters.
The potential dangers and difficulties are vividly
demonstrated in the case of Tooba Gondal, a 25-year-old French citizen of
Pakistani origin who grew up and lived in London until she traveled to Syria in
2015. She is believed to still be in the custody of the Turkish authorities.
A mother of two, she does not speak French and had
spent most of her life in Britain, and although French intelligence services
knew of her case, it is unclear that they had expected her to come to France.
“Tooba Gondal
is a very notorious ISIS female recruiter, but until recently she wasn’t on the
radar of French intelligence services,” said Jean-Charles Brisard of the
Paris-based Center for Analysis of Terrorism, who was first to reveal that she
would be deported.
A former London university student, Ms. Gondal
became known in the British news media as an Islamic State “matchmaker.” She is
accused of persuading other young Western women, like the British schoolgirl
Shamima Begum, to marry Islamic State fighters.
She also posed with assault rifles in pictures on
social media, and praised the Paris terrorist attacks in November 2015.
In recent months, Ms. Gondal has pleaded to be taken
back to Britain, which had issued an expulsion order against her in 2018. She
declared in an open letter to The Sunday Times of London that she was a
“changed person” who wished to “face justice in a British court.” As a
non-British citizen but a French passport holder, she is now likely to be
deported to France.
France has already repatriated more than 250 Islamic
State fighters and their families from Turkey since signing a bilateral
agreement with the government there in 2014. But 400 French citizens are still
estimated to be detained in Syria, according to the Egmont Institute, and
France does not want them back.
Instead, France wants Iraq to try them, especially
the male fighters. French officials have led European negotiations with the
Iraqi government to set up trials in Iraq. But disagreements between Iraqi and
European officials — over legal matters like the death penalty and costs — have
prevented an accord.
“It is
legitimate that people who have committed terrorist acts should be judged
closest to the place where they committed those said terrorist acts,’’ Sibeth
Ndiaye, a spokeswoman for the French government, said at a meeting of the
Anglo-American Press Association.
The other French citizens expected to return home —
three Frenchwomen and their five children, all under 4 years old — were held in
the camp of Ain Issa, according to their lawyer, Marie Dosé.
She said the families escaped in mid-October when
the facility was abandoned by Kurdish forces. “They have risked their lives and
their children’s to join Turkey and be expelled to France,” Ms. Dosé said.
For more than a year, Ms. Dosé and other French
lawyers have fought to bring the mothers back with their children, as the women
argued that they wanted to be tried at home. Last year, when a French television
crew met one of the four women set to be deported, she said she wouldn’t leave
without her son.
“If he leaves, I’m leaving with him,” said Amandine
le Coz, a 29-year-old woman who grew up in a suburb near Paris. “He’s my life.”
In France and other European nations, the stories of
people like Ms. le Coz and Ms. Gondal have elicited little sympathy.
“There’s been more sympathy for vulnerable children,
but as you go up to adults, there’s a lot of pushback against women and there’s
even more pushback against male militants,’’ said Joana Cook, a researcher at
the International Center for the Study of Radicalization in London.
Dr. Cook, who has studied women and children who
have returned to their home countries from Syria, said there had been no known
incidents involving returnees.
Instead, terrorist cases, including the failed
attempt to ignite a car loaded with gas canisters near the Notre Dame cathedral
in Paris, involved women who had become radicalized at home and had never
stepped foot in Syria.
In France, about 100 people who returned from Syria
have already been judged and given sentences averaging 10 years, Mr. Brisard
said. Some of those serving the shortest sentences have already been released, he
said.
“They’ll be freed one day, that’s for sure,’’ Mr.
Brisard said. “But it’s preferable that they be incarcerated in French prisons
from where they can’t escape. And after they’ve served their sentences, it’s
preferable that they be tracked by a competent intelligence service. In Iraq or
Syria, I don’t have much faith in their intelligence services keeping track of
our jihadists.’’