Showing posts with label homegrown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homegrown. Show all posts

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Accused homegrown extremist indicted (AP)

WASHINGTON – A federal grand jury on Thursday indicted a man in a terrorism case for allegedly using the Internet to promote violence against Americans.

A moderator of a popular, internationally known Islamic extremist web forum, 22-year-old Emerson Winfield Begolly was accused of posting notes encouraging attacks in the U.S. targeting public buildings and military facilities, transportation systems, cell phone towers and water plants.

The case underscores the threat posed by homegrown extremists seeking to incite violence using the Internet, said Lisa Monaco, the Justice Department's assistant attorney general for national security.

Begolly was under investigation early this year when he allegedly bit two FBI agents who approached him and Begolly allegedly tried to grab a loaded 9 mm pistol in his jacket. He was indicted for allegedly assaulting federal agents and firearms-related charges and faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted of those charges.

In January, an FBI agent in Pittsburgh testified in court that Begolly had contact with a man who has pleaded guilty to threatening the creators of the animated "South Park" TV show for perceived insults to the prophet Muhammad.

According to the latest indictment, Begolly posted a comment online that praised the shootings at the Pentagon and the Marine Corps Museum in October 2010.

The indictment also alleged that Begolly posted links to a 101-page document on how to set up a laboratory and manufacture explosives.

Begolly, who is from New Bethlehem, Pa., was indicted in Alexandria, Va. He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison if convicted of solicitation to commit a crime of violence and 20 years in prison if convicted of distributing information about explosives and weapons of mass destruction.

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Man indicted in latest US 'homegrown terror' case (AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) – A US grand jury has indicted a 22-year-old man for allegedly recruiting Islamic extremists to kill Americans and commit attacks on targets within the United States, federal prosecutors said Thursday.

Emerson Winfield Begolly, of New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, was indicted by a federal grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia for allegedly soliciting Islamic extremists via the Internet, according to the Justice Department.

According to the two-count indictment, Begolly also was charged with posting bomb-making instructions online, in the latest of several troubling "home-grown terror" cases in which a US-born defendant pledges to wage "jihad" against the United States.

US law enforcement officials said Begolly was an active moderator of an Islamic extremist web forum, the Ansar al-Mujahideen English Forum (AMEF) known to promote and distribute jihadist propaganda.

The indictment charged that since July 2010, Begolly has placed a number of online postings encouraging attacks within the United States, including against such targets as police stations, post offices, synagogues and military facilities.

Among the allegations against him is that Begolly late last year posted links to a 101-page document that contains information on how to set up a laboratory and manufacture explosives.

"Emerson Begolly is accused of repeatedly using the Internet to promote violent jihad against Americans," US Attorney Neil MacBride said in a statement.

"These allegations demonstrate how young people in the United States can become influenced by -- and eventually participate in -- jihadist propaganda that is a serious threat to the safety of us all."

Begolly faces 30 years in prison if convicted of the charges. In February he was indicted for allegedly assaulting federal agents and for firearms-related charges in Pennsylvania, and faces life in prison if convicted on those charges.


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Thursday, June 30, 2011

US refocuses on home-grown terror threat (AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States vowed Wednesday to pursue the "utter destruction" of Al-Qaeda, while refocusing its counter-terrorism strategy to combat the threat of home-grown terror.

The new strategy comes on the 10th year of the US-led "war on terror," launched by former president George W. Bush after the deadly September 11 attacks on the United States.

It is a "pragmatic, not ideological" approach to counterterrorism that "formalizes" the administration's approach since January 2009, said John Brennan, President Barack Obama's top counterterrorism advisor.

The new strategy, developed after US commandos killed Osama bin Laden on May 2 in Pakistan, also reflects "the extraordinary political changes" sweeping the Middle East and North Africa, Brennan said.

"This is the first counterterrorism strategy that designates the homeland as a primary area of emphasis in our counterterrorism efforts," said Brennan, who is also deputy national security adviser for homeland security.

-- Al-Qaeda still in the US crosshairs --

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The principal focus is "Al-Qaeda, its affiliates and its adherents," said Brennan, speaking at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington.

"We aim to render the heart of Al-Qaeda incapable of launching attacks against our homeland, our citizens, or our allies, as well as preventing the group from inspiring its affiliates and adherents to do so," he said.

"This is a war -- a broad, sustained, integrated and relentless campaign that harnesses every element of American power," he said.

"And we seek nothing less than the utter destruction of this evil that calls itself Al-Qaeda."

With US forces pulling out of Iraq and preparing for a draw-down in Afghanistan, Brennan all but ruled out foreign adventures.

"If our nation is threatened, our best offense won't always be deploying large armies abroad but delivering targeted, surgical pressure to the groups that threaten us," he said.

President Obama, speaking at a press conference Wednesday, said that US military operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan have served to "severely cripple Al-Qaeda's capacities" and have "decimated some of the upper ranks of Al-Qaeda."

The terror network is "having a great deal of difficulty operating and financing themselves. We'll keep the pressure on," Obama said.

Brennan dismissed the new Al-Qaeda leader, Egyptian-born Ayman al-Zawahiri, as "an aging doctor who lacks bin Laden's charisma and perhaps the loyalty and respect of many in Al-Qaeda."

-- The "lone wolf" threat --

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The US strategy also takes into account the growing threat of domestic "lone wolf" attackers radicalized by online preachers.

This is "the first counter-terrorism strategy that focuses on the ability of Al-Qaeda and its network to inspire people in the United States to attack us from within," Brennan stressed.

The best known of these attackers is Major Nidal Hasan, the US Army psychiatrist charged with killing 13 people and wounding 32 more in a November 5, 2009 shooting rampage at the Fort Hood army base.

On Wednesday, three men arrested in a sting operation for planning to attack two New York synagogues and to shoot down US military planes were each sentenced to 25 years in prison.

On June 23, two US men were charged with plotting to attack a military center in the northwestern US city of Seattle with machine guns and grenades, allegedly hoping to kill more people than Hasan did at Fort Hood.

The new counter-terrorist strategy also focuses on threat from Al-Qaeda affiliates in places like Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and north Africa.

"As the Al-Qaeda core has weakened under our unyielding pressure," said Brennan, "it has looked increasingly to these other groups and individuals to take up its cause, including its goal of striking the United States."

Separately, Brennan said that Iran and Syria "remain leading state sponsors of terrorism."

"Hezbollah and Hamas are terrorist organizations that threaten Israel and our interests in the Middle East. We will therefore continue to use the full range of our foreign policy tools to prevent these regimes and terrorist organizations from endangering our national security," he said.

Regarding Pakistan, Brennan acknowledged that the relationship "is not without tension or frustration," but said that both sides were working to overcome differences.

"I am confident that Pakistan will remain one of our most important counterterrorism partners," he said.


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