Islamic State announces expansion into Southeast Asia with attacks, threats
Washington Times | 31 January 2016
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — As Islamic State branches out from its base in
Syria and Iraq, fears are mounting here that Southeast Asia is emerging
as a new target of opportunity for the violent jihadi group.
In
some cases, Islamic State, also known as ISIS and ISIL, is supplanting
established radical Islamist groups — often with ties to the rival al
Qaeda — and in other cases is linking up with local jihadi groups that
have long battled governments in the region.
A relentless U.S.-led bombing campaign in Islamic State’s Middle East
stronghold has forced the group into a tactical retreat there, but has
also had the effect of steering many hard-line insurgents to return home
to their country of origin, where authorities fear their notoriously
harsh brand of warfare — and the lessons they learned in Syria — will
spread.
Just in January, Islamic State leaders claimed responsibility for a strike in Jakarta
that left seven people dead, and issued an open threat to Malaysia that
it would attack if the government pursued its harsh crackdown on Muslim
extremists.
The Katibah Nusantara, a unit of Southeast Asians who
fight for Islamic State in Syria, with roots dating back to the Soviet
occupation of Afghanistan, issued the warning last week to the
government in Kuala Lampur.
“If you catch us, we will only increase in number. But if you let us
be, we will be closer to our goal of bringing back the rule of the
caliph,” it warned Malaysian officials in a video. “We will never bow
down to the democratic system of governance as we will only follow
Allah’s rules.”
U.S. and Western intelligence analysts have long
feared the Islamic State would try to export its violent extremist model
beyond its Middle East base. In addition to spectacular Islamic
State-inspired attacks in places like Paris and California, the group
has established a major outpost in war-torn Libya and is said to be
seeking recruits and affiliates in countries such as Russia and
Afghanistan. Southeast Asia, with some of the world’s largest Muslim
communities and a history of domestic jihadi movements, is seen as a
particularly fertile recruiting ground.
“This
type of asymmetric warfare will continue and probably increase as more
and more Muslims will be radicalized by the global war on terror,” said Peter Maguire, a professor with the University of North Carolina Wilmington.
Hundreds
of militants were recruited from the Philippines, Malaysia, Cambodia,
Thailand and Indonesia — the world’s single most populous Muslim nation —
as Isalmic State began establishing its “caliphate” three years ago. In
Jemaah Islamiyah (“Islamic Congregation”), a radical Islamic terror
group that once operated cells across the region, Islamic State could
study an organization that was strikingly similar both tactically and
ideologically.
“Since July 2014, the
Islamic State has posted propaganda and recruiting videos aimed at
persuading Indonesians and Malaysians [to travel to] Syria with their
families,” the Soufan survey reported. “One video showed Malay-speaking
children training with weapons in Islamic State-held territory, while
two Malaysians were featured in another Islamic State video of the
beheading of a Syrian man.”
Jemaah Islamiyah linked up with al
Qaeda and unleashed a bloody bombing campaign throughout the 2000s,
claiming hundreds of lives in pursuit of their demands for a single
Muslim state across much of Southeast Asia, including parts of northern
Australia, with a caliphate at the helm. At its height the group claimed
some 5,000 fighters.
Most of its members have since been jailed
or killed, and surviving remnants are adopting a soft approach to the
new crop of jihadis while maintaining ties with al Qaeda and its
affiliate al Nusra.
The region’s security threats were not lost on
Secretary of State John F. Kerry, who late last month made a short tour
of Cambodia, Laos and China ahead of a summit between President Obama
and leaders of the 10-nation Association of South East Asian Nations
(ASEAN) to be held at Sunnylands, California, in mid-February.
U.S.
relations with Cambodia have been held back by human rights abuses and
Phnom Penh’s tilt toward China’s maritime ambitions in the highly
contested South China Sea, but Mr. Kerry found some common ground with
Prime Minister Hun Sen, the region’s longest-serving leader.
Mr.
Kerry said it was agreed that countering Islamic State and “violent
extremism was absolutely a top priority,” adding that Cambodia “had an
interest in having our teams, our experts, come in order to brief and
exchange ideas.”
The fears of Islamic State infiltration are more
pronounced here because Cambodia has too often attracted Islamic
militants in search of a place to hide.
Among them is the
Guantanamo Bay inmate Riduan Ismuddin. Also known as Hambali, the Jemaah
Islamiyah operative was the mastermind of the 2002 Bali bombings that
claimed more than 200 lives. Lately, at least one suspect in last year’s
Erawan Shrine bombing in Bangkok, one that left 20 people dead in the
heart of the Thai capital, was nabbed while hiding out in a Phnom Penh
red-light bar district.
Broader threat
But
the broader threats posed by Islamic militancy go much deeper,
particularly in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and, to a lesser
extent, the three provinces of southern Thailand.
In the wake of
the 9/11 attacks, Jemaah Islamiyah also established links with the Abu
Sayyaf Group, which has a history of kidnapping and ransoming of
foreigners in the southern Philippines dating back to the late 1990s.
In
November a leaked memo from the Malaysian police warned that Abu Sayyaf
had established cell networks across Malaysia in preparation for
attacks there.
This would represent a significant expansion of the
self-proclaimed jihadi group that, along with the Bangsamoro Islamic
Freedom Fighters, another Filipino terror group, has sworn allegiance to
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who has led Islamic State for almost five years.
Todd Elliott, a risk analyst with Jakarta-based
Concord Consulting, said given the close interaction of jihadis from
different countries within the Katibah Nusantara, it was possible that
Malaysian militants would become increasingly active at home and in
other parts of Southeast Asia, expanding Islamic State’s brand and its
prestige as it grows.
“Given the long presence of jihadism in
Malaysia, the conservative nature of Islam in Malaysia and the
involvement of several Malaysian citizens in [Jemaah Islamiyah], it is
likely that the emergence of ISIS has to some extent galvanized domestic
militant networks and their supporters,” Mr. Elliott said.
“Several
alleged plots foiled in Malaysia over the past year, including the
arrest of a potential suicide bomber earlier this month, increases the
likelihood that ISIS-inspired violence will occur in Malaysia sooner
rather than later,” he said.
Further, at least 19 veterans of
al-Baghdadi’s front lines have gone on trial in Indonesia for conspiring
with terrorists and face up to 20 years behind bars. Pledging
allegiance to Islamic State can also result in a person’s citizenship
being revoked.
Islamic State videos urging jihad in Southeast Asia
are common on social media, and Mr. Elliott said a recent nine-minute
video posted on the Internet had called for attacks on Indonesia’s
Presidential Palace and the Jakarta Police headquarters before it was
blocked.
Islamic State’s gains and its powerful social media
propaganda efforts have sown confusion in the region about which attacks
are locally planned and which are part of a global jihadi network. For
instance, the senior leadership of Islamic State quickly claimed
responsibility for the Jan. 14 attack in Jakarta on a Starbucks and a Western-style department store, but it is still not clear if the claim was true.
Police
investigations indicated forces behind that strike were tied mainly to
older domestic terrorist networks. And at least two suspects had served
time behind bars for terrorism-related offenses with links to Jemaah
Islamiyah and former rebels who fought for independence in the eastern
province of Aceh.
“The attack in Jakarta
demonstrates that local ISIS supporters have the capacity and
determination to carry out violence in the name of the global terrorist
group, but there are doubts the violence was purely an ISIS operation,”
he said.
His sentiments were similar to Indonesia’s national
police spokesman Anton Charliyan, who recently named Santoso, head of
the East Indonesian Mujahidin terrorist group known by its Indonesian
acronym MIT, as one of the most wanted terrorists in Indonesia.
MIT’s
base in Poso, on the far east island of Sulawesi, offers a close
proximity to like-minded groups in East Malaysia and the Southern
Philippines, cutting across a lawless zone of smugglers and rebels who
ply the Sulu and Celebes seas.
In 2005 the world was horrified by
the beheadings of three teenage Christian schoolgirls by Muslim
militants amid an outbreak of religious violence. More recently, MIT has
been receiving cash and assistance from Islamic State along with its
calls for attacks on Western targets.
“The Santoso group is part of the ISIS network,” Mr. Charliyan said.
There
is no shortage of well-equipped special forces, like Indonesia’s Densus
88, capable of dealing with imminent threats posed by Islamic State.
The biggest challenge is timely intelligence, and perhaps their biggest
weapon is ordinary people, who are fed up with the carnage.
That
resentment recently stirred the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), which was
established in the 1920s when Wahhabism — an austere Sunni brand of
Islam based in Saudi Arabia — was spreading its influence across the
Muslim world. Osama bin Laden was an adherent.
Nahdlatul Ulama
boasts a membership of 50 million Sunni Muslims across Indonesia who,
unlike bin Laden’s followers, are now conducting an anti-extremism
campaign and loudly denouncing Islamic State.
With Islamic State
largely still in its Syrian homeland, Mr. Kerry said he was optimistic
that the Sunnylands summit would provide ASEAN leaders with a chance to
discuss blocking Islamic State gains in Southeast Asia.
Others, however, were less sanguine.
“After
15 years of fighting on battlefields around the world, the West still
does not have a coherent long-term policy with an attainable political
objective,” said Mr. Maguire, the North Carolina researcher.
“There
are limits to the use of force, and we have reached them. The only real
solutions will be political, and until the West has the stomach to face
them, these types of attacks will become increasingly common around the
world,” he said.
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