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New DHS Counterterrorism Czar Refuses to Use Terms Radicalization, Jihadist, Islamist


Posted on November 21, 2011 by creeping

Sun Tzu he ain’t. Huffpo shills for Islam while doing what DHS does in its videos. via Counterterrorism Czar Resists Muslim Labels, As Critics Say Right-Wing Threat Looms Larger.

WASHINGTON — The federal government’s point man working to counter homegrown violent extremism and defend communities from terrorist attacks isn’t into labels.

“We’re not using ‘radicalization.’ Our focus is not to police thought but to prevent violence,” said John Cohen, recently named by Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano to head her agency’s program on countering violent extremism, in an interview with The Huffington Post. “The ultimate goal is to understand behaviors so we can better train law enforcement to understand the indicators and behaviors that forewarn of violence.”

Cohen said that in his briefings with lawmakers on Capitol Hill he tries to raise questions about the right approach. “Should we be using terms like’ jihadist’ or ‘Islamist?’” he asks. “What I do is talk in a very concrete operational way. Words are often interpreted differently by different people.”

Read it all, then put your head back in the sand where DHS wants it.

Posted on 21 Nov 11 by Creeping Sharia

Gunman’s background puzzles police in Norway


APBy KARL RITTER – Associated Press | AP – Sat, Jul 23, 2011

Divers search for bodies on the shore of the small, wooded island of Utoeya July 23, 2011. Click image to see more photos. (Reuters/Truls Brekke)Divers search for bodies on the shore of the small, wooded island of Utoeya July 23, 2011. Click image to see more …

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  • Smoke rises from the central area of Oslo Friday, July 22, 2011 after an explosion. Terrorism ravaged long-peaceful Norway on Friday when a bomb ripped open buildings including the prime minister's office and a man dressed as a police officer opened fire at a nearby island youth camp. (AP Photo/Scanpix, Jon Bredo Overaas) NORWAY OUT

    Smoke rises from the central area of Oslo Friday, July 22, 2011 after an explosion. …

STOCKHOLM (AP) — The 32-year-old suspected of gunning down scores of young people at a summer camp and setting off a bomb in downtown Oslo that killed at least seven is a mystery to investigators: a right-winger with anti-Muslim views but no known links to hardcore extremists.”He just came out of nowhere,” a police official told The Associated Press.

Seven people were killed in the bombing at the prime minister’s office and at least 85 were slain in the shooting spree on the island, police said Saturday. The warned the death toll could rise further as many people remained missing.

Public broadcaster NRK and several other Norwegian media identified the suspected attacker as Anders Behring Breivik, a blond and blue-eyed Norwegian who expressed right-wing and anti-Muslim views on the Internet. Police have the suspect in custody but have not confirmed his identity.

Norwegian news agency NTB said Breivik legally owned several firearms and belonged to a gun club. He ran an agricultural firm growing vegetables, an enterprise that could have helped him secure large amounts of fertilizer, a potential ingredient in bombs.

But he didn’t belong to any known factions in Norway’s small and splintered extreme right movement, and had no criminal record except for some minor offenses, the police official told AP.

“He hasn’t been on our radar, which he would have been if was active in the neo-Nazi groups in Norway,” he said. “But he still could be inspired by their ideology.”

He spoke on condition of anonymity because those details had not been officially released by police. He declined to name the suspect.

Neo-Nazi groups carried out a series of murders and robberies in Scandinavia in the 1990s but have since kept a low profile.

“They have a lack of leadership. We have pretty much control of those groups,” the police official said.

Breivik’s registered address is at a four-story apartment building in western Oslo. A police car was parked outside the brick building early Saturday, with officers protecting the entrance.

National police chief Sveinung Sponheim told public broadcaster NRK that the gunman’s Internet postings “suggest that he has some political traits directed toward the right, and anti-Muslim views, but whether that was a motivation for the actual act remains to be seen.”

He regularly posted on a Norwegian right-wing site called Document.no in 2009 and 2010, the editor of the site Hans Rustad said.

“He writes mostly about what Americans call the cultural war; focused on immigration, demography, identity, and politics in the broader sense,” Rustad wrote on the site on Saturday.

“His main enemy is not Muslims, but multiculturalists and what he calls cultural marxists.”

A Facebook page under Breivik’s name was taken down late Friday. A Twitter account under his name had only one Tweet, on July 17, loosely citing English philosopher John Stuart Mill: “One person with a belief is equal to the force of 100,000 who have only interests.”

Police were interrogating the man, first at the scene of the shooting, and later at a police station in Oslo.

“It’s strange that he didn’t kill himself, like the guys that have carried out school shootings,” the police official told AP. “It’s a good thing that he didn’t because then we might get some answers pointing out his motivation.”

He said there did not appear to be any links to international terrorist networks. The attack “is probably more Norway’s Oklahoma City than it is Norway’s World Trade Center,” he said referring to the 1995 attack on a federal building in Oklahoma City by domestic terrorists.

Investigators said the Norwegian carried out both attacks — the blast at the prime minister’s office in Oslo and the shooting spree at the left-wing Labor Party’s youth camp — but didn’t rule out that others were involved.

Authorities were questioning witnesses about reports of a second gunman, but the police official said it wouldn’t be impossible for one man to carry out the attacks on his own.

“He’s obviously cold as ice. But to get close to the government is easy. The streets are open in that area,” he said.

___

Associated Press writer Bjoern H. Amland in Oslo contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS death toll of 85 killed on island in third paragraph.)

Did Oslo Terrorist Anders Brejvik Have Links To British Extremists?


 July 25, 2011 08:15 AM EDT

comments: 1

 As Norway tries to recover from the shock terrorist attacks in Oslo on Friday, suspect Anders Brejvik is due to appear in court – with more and more information about his plans becoming public, including possible links to British extremists.

Friday’s attacks came as a huge shock to everyone, apart from Brejvik, who had been planning the attack in a 1,500 page document online. The document makes it clear that he wanted a large stage in which to make a statement – he even had his hair and make up done before being photographed, so the photographs projected around the World would make him look his best.

Anders Behring Breivik

Brejvik vowed to “take revenge” on “indigenous Europeans” who had betrayed their heritage by allowing Islam to take over. He claimed they would be punished for their “treasonous acts”.

The manifesto does reveal some clues for investigators trying to piece together Brejvik’s mental state – Brejvik was determined to get notoriety, even planning to allow himself to be arrested, and has ensured investigators have all the information they need on how he planned the attacks, and why.

It’s his reference to a UK mentor called Richard which has caused some alarm – Were British extremists involved in this attack somehow?

The English Defence League has posted a statement online denying any links with the terrorist, and said it condemned what he had done, according to the Metro.

“Terrorism and extremism of any kind is never acceptable and we pride ourselves on opposing these…We strongly oppose extremism and always reject any suggestion of us being either extremists or far-right, due to our great past record of dealing with anyone who holds such extreme views.”

Brejvik’s father has revealed his son cut him out of his life in 1995, and heard about his son’s arrest on the news. Brejvik dressed as a police officer after bombing Government buildings in Oslo, before open-firing on 14 to 18-year-old Labour supporters at a youth camp. At present, the death toll is thought to be around 90.

The World is anxiously waiting for Brejvik to appear in court – he has already admitted the crimes to investigators, but has denied any criminal guilt, and claimed he has not broken the law. Whether he will be able to speak at the hearing – and whether anything he says is released to the media – remains to be seen. As it is his desire to be heard and remembered, however, maybe censoring his message would be for the best – it is sure to be one hate, and despite his horrific crimes, everything possible should be done to prevent him from achieving the notorious status that he craves. More then 60,000 people have joined a Facebook page calling for the court to demand a closed court, to stop the media from being able to report on his trial.

Reports are now breaking that Polish police have arrested a man after discovering that Brejvik tried to buy explosives for the massacre from Poland, although as yet this is unconfirmed. It is also reported that Brejvik asked for permission to wear a uniform to court – it was not revealed what, although it has been reported that he owns a wide variety of military uniforms. Prosecutors have asked for eight weeks to prepare a case against him, and only one victim has been named so far – 51-year-old policeman Tront Berntsen, the stepbrother of the crown princess.

This morning thousands of people gathered to take part in a minutes silence for the victims, laying candles and flowers at a service lead by King Harald V and Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg.

Photo Source: The Metro

Norway Shootings: Terror on Utoya Island


 July 23, 2011 12:40 PM EDT

2 people recommend this | comments: 11

 They were just kids. The gunman in the Norway shootings on Utoya Island knew where he could find the future of the governing Labour Party. He approached the youth wing camp Friday, attended by about 700 young people, mostly teenagers.

He gained access to the island by acting as a police officer, camp guard, Simen Braenden Mortensen told the Norwegian newspaper Verdens Gang. “He gets out of the car and shows ID, says he’s sent there to check security, that is purely routine in connection with the terror attack (in Oslo).” A boat then carried him to the island.

An eyewitness to the Norway shootings said the youth felt relieved to see a police officer, since they had just gotten news of the Oslo bombing. “We then heard someone shout, ‘The police are here, we are now safe,'” Stine Renate Haheim told the BBC.

The tall, blond gunman wore a black uniform with red edges, official Adrian Pracon also told the BBC. He said the gunman resembled a Nazi.

The gunman rallied the kids and then began firing. Witnesses describe the scene as panic and chaos. Youth and officials not hit by bullets ran for cover. Campers hid where they could, some in the toilet areas, some in the underbrush. They sent texts begging for help but worried that ringing cell phones would give them away.

Others jumped in the water to escape. The gunman soon followed and shot at them. He pointed the gun at Pracon but spared him. Although police officials say the shooting lasted about 30 minutes, Pracon said the gunman returned about an hour later and resumed shooting. Bodies fell on him, and this time a bullet hit him in the shoulder. “Then he came closer, I could feel his breath, I could feel his boots, I could feel the warmth of the barrel,” he said.

By the time the Norway shootings ended, the gunman had killed 85 on Utoya Island. Police arrested a man at the scene. They have not released his name, but news agencies say he is 32-year-old Norwegian Anders Behring Breivik. Some reports describe Breivik, also a suspect in the Oslo bombing, as having right-wing extremist views.

In the first moments after the bombing, officials speculated that the attack may have an al-Qaeda connection. Breivik, however, reportedly has made anti-Muslim comments. The kids who stood in front of the gunman at Utoya Island only knew that the killer looked and spoke just like them.

Posted in:  news.gather.com