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The
circus: How British intelligence primed both sides of the ‘terror
war’
Nafeez
Ahmed
27 February, 2015
Every
time there’s a terrorist attack that makes national headlines, the
same talking heads seem to pop up like an obscene game of
“whack-a-mole”. Often they appear one after the other across the
media circuit, bobbing from celebrity television pundit to erudite
newspaper outlet.
A
few years ago, BBC Newsnight proudly hosted a “debate” between
Maajid Nawaz, director of counter-extremism think-tank, the Quilliam
Foundation, and Anjem Choudary, head of the banned Islamist group
formerly known as al-Muhajiroun, which has, since its proscription,
repeatedly reincarnated itself. One of its more well-known recent
incarnations was "Islam4UK".
Both
Nawaz and Choudary have received huge mainstream media attention,
generating press headlines, and contributing to major TV news and
current affairs shows. But unbeknown to most, they have one thing in
common: Britain’s security services. And believe it or not, that
bizarre fact explains why the Islamic State’s (IS) celebrity
beheader, former west Londoner Mohammed Emwazi – aka “Jihadi
John” - got to where he is now.
A tale of two extremists
After
renouncing his affiliation with the Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir
(HT), Maajid Nawaz co-founded the Quilliam Foundation with his fellow
ex-Hizb member, Ed Husain.
The
Quilliam Foundation was set-up by Husain and Nawaz in 2008 with
significant British government financial support. Its establishment
received a massive PR boost from the release of Ed Husain’s
memoirs, The
Islamist,
which rapidly became an international bestseller, generating hundreds
of reviews, interviews and articles.
In
Ed Husain’s book - much like Maajid Nawaz’s tome Radical released
more recently to similar fanfare - Husain recounts his journey from
aggrieved young Muslim into Islamist activist, and eventually his
total rejection of Islamist ideology.
Both
accounts of their journeys of transformation offer provocative and
genuine insights. But the British government has played a much more
direct role in crafting those accounts than either they, or the
government, officially admit.
Government ghostwriters
In
late 2013, I interviewed a
former senior researcher at the Home Office who revealed that
Husain’s The
Islamist was
“effectively ghostwritten in Whitehall”.
The
official told me that in 2006, he was informed by a government
colleague “with close ties” to Jack Straw and Gordon Brown that
“the draft was written by Ed but then ‘peppered’ by government
input”. The civil servant told him “he had seen ‘at least five
drafts of the book, and the last one was dramatically different from
the first.’”
The
draft had, the source said, been manipulated in an explicitly
political, pro-government manner. The committee that had input into
Ed Husain’s manuscript prior to its official publication included
senior government officials from No. 10 Downing Street, the Joint
Terrorism Analysis Centre, the intelligence services, Foreign &
Commonwealth Office and the Home Office.
When
I put the question, repeatedly, to Ed Husain as to the veracity of
these allegations, he did not respond. I also asked Nawaz whether he
was aware of the government’s role in “ghostwriting” Husain’s
prose, and whether he underwent a similar experience in the
production of Radical.
He did not respond either.
While
Husain was liaising with British government and intelligence
officials over The
Islamistfrom
2006 until the book’s publication in May 2007, his friend Nawaz was
at first in prison in Egypt. Nawaz was eventually released in March
2006, declaring his departure from HT just a month before the
publication of Husain’s book. Husain took credit for being the
prime influence on Nawaz’s decision, and by November 2007, had
joined with him becoming Quilliam’s director with Husain as his
deputy.
Yet
according to Husain, Nawaz played a role in determining parts of the
text of The
Islamist in
the same year it was being edited by government officials. “Before
publication, I discussed with my friend and brother-in-faith Maajid
the passages in the book,” wrote Husain
about the need to verify details of their time in HT.
This
is where the chronology of Husain’s and Nawaz’s accounts begin to
break down. InRadical,
and repeatedly in interviews about his own deradicalisation process,
Nawaz says that he firmly and decisively rejected HT’s Islamist
ideology while in prison in Egypt. Yet upon his release and return to
Britain, Nawaz showed no sign of having reached that decision.
Instead, he did the opposite. In April 2006, Nawaz told Sarah
Montague on BBC
Hardtalk that
his detention in Egypt had “convinced [him] even more… that there
is a need to establish this Caliphate as soon as possible.” From
then on, Nawaz, who was now on HT’s executive committee,
participated in dozens of talks and interviews in which he vehemently
promoted the Hizb.
I
first met Nawaz at a conference on 2 December 2006 organised by
the Campaign Against Criminalising Communities (CAMPACC) on the theme
of “reclaiming our rights”. I had spoken on a panel about the
findings of my book, The
London Bombings: An Independent Inquiry,
on how British state collusion with Islamist extremists had
facilitated the 7/7 attacks. Nawaz had attended the event as an
audience member with two other senior HT activists, and in our brief
conversation, he spoke of his ongoing work with HT in glowing terms.
By
January 2007, Nawaz was at the front of a HT protest at the US
embassy in London, condemning US military operations in Iraq and
Somalia. He delivered a rousing speech at the protest, demanding an
end to “colonial intervention in the Muslim world,” and calling
for the establishment of an Islamic caliphate to stand up to such
imperialism and end Western support for dictators.
Yet
by his own account, throughout this very public agitation on behalf
of HT from mid-2006 onwards, Nawaz had in fact rejected the very
ideology he was preaching so adamantly. Indeed, in the same period,
he was liaising with his friend, Ed Husain – who at that time was
still in Jeddah – and helping him with the text of his anti-HT
manifesto, The
Islamist,
which was also being vetted at the highest levels of government.
The
British government’s intimate, and secret, relationship with Husain
in the year before the publication of his book in 2007 shows that,
contrary to his official biography, the Quilliam Foundation founder
was embedded in Whitehall long before he was on the public radar. How
did he establish connections at this level?
MI5’s Islamist
According
to Dr Noman Hanif, a lecturer in international terrorism and
political Islam at Birkbeck College, University of London, and an
expert on Hizb ut-Tahrir, the group’s presence in Britain likely
provided many opportunities for Western intelligence to “penetrate
or influence” the movement.
Dr
Hanif, whose doctoral thesis was about the group, points out that
Husain’s tenure inside HT by his own account occurred “under the
leadership of Omar Bakri Mohammed,” the controversial cleric
who left the group in 1996 to found al-Muhajiroun, a militant network
which to this day has been linked to every major terrorist plot in
Britain.
Bakri’s
leadership of HT, said Dr Hanif, formed “the most conceptually
deviant period of HT’s existence in the UK, diverting quite sharply
away from its core ideas,” due to Bakri’s advocacy of violence
and his focus on establishing an Islamic state in the UK, goals
contrary to HT doctrines.
When
Bakri left HT and set-up al-Muhajiroun in 1996, according to John
Loftus, a former US Army intelligence officer and Justice Department
prosecutor, Bakri was immediately recruited
by MI6 to
facilitate Islamist activities in the Balkans. And not just Bakri,
but also Abu Hamza al-Masri, who was recently convicted in the US on
terrorism charges.
When
Bakri founded al-Muhajiroun in 1996 with the blessings of Britain’s
security services, his co-founder was Anjem Choudary. Choudary was
intimately involved in the programme to train and send Britons to
fight abroad, and three years later, would boast to
the Sunday Telegraphthat
“some of the training does involve guns and live ammunition”.
Historian
Mark Curtis, in his seminal work, Secret
Affairs: Britain’s Collusion with Radical Islam,
documents how under this arrangement, Bakri trained hundreds of
Britons at camps in the UK and the US, and dispatched them to join
al-Qaeda affiliated fighters in Bosnia, Kosovo and Chechnya.
Shortly
before the 2005 London bombings, Ron Suskind, a Wall
Street Journal Pulitizer
Prize winning investigative reporter, was told by a senior MI5
official that Bakri was a longtime informant for the secret service
who “had helped MI5 on several of its investigations”. Bakri,
Suskind adds in his book, The
Way of the World,
reluctantly conceded the relationship in an interview in Beirut - but
Suskind gives no indication that the relationship ever ended.
A
senior terrorism lawyer in London who has represented clients in
several high-profile terrorism cases told me that both Bakri and
Choudary had regular meetings with MI5 officers in the 1990s. The
lawyer, who works for a leading firm of solicitors and has regularly
liaised with MI5 in the administration of closed court hearings
involving secret evidence, said: “Omar Bakri had well over 20
meetings with MI5 from around 1993 to the late 1990s. Anjem Choudary
apparently participated in such meetings toward the latter part of
the decade. This was actually well-known amongst several senior
Islamist leaders in Britain at the time.”
According
to Dr Hanif of Birkbeck College, Bakri’s relationship with the
intelligence services likely began during his “six-year reign as HT
leader in Britain,” which would have “provided British
intelligence ample opportunity” to “widely infiltrate the group”.
HT had already been a subject of MI6 surveillance abroad “because
of its core level of support in Jordan and the consistent level of
activity in other areas of the Middle East for over five decades."
At
least some HT members appear to have been aware of Bakri’s
intelligence connections, including, it seems, Ed Husain himself. In
one passage in The
Islamist (p.
116), Husain recounts: “We were also concerned about Omar’s
application for political asylum… I raised this with Bernie
[another HT member] too. ‘Oh no’, he said, ‘On the contrary.
The British are like snakes; they manoeuvre carefully. They need Omar
in Britain. More likely, Omar will be the ambassador for the khilafah
here or leave to reside in the Islamic state. The kuffar know that -
allowing Omar to stay in Britain will give them a good start, a
diplomatic advantage, when they have to deal with the Islamic state.
Having Omar serves them well for the future. MI5 knows exactly what
we’re doing, what we’re about, and yet they have in effect, given
us the green light to operate in Britain.”
Husain left
HT after
Bakri in August 1997. According to Faisal Haque, a British government
civil servant and former HT member who knew Ed Husain during his time
in the group, Husain had a strong “personal relationship” with
Bakri. He did not leave HT for “ideological reasons,” said Haque.
“It was more to do with his close personal relationship with Omar
Bakri (he left when Bakri was kicked out), pressure from his father
and other personal reasons which I don’t want to mention.”
Husain
later went on to work for the British Council in the Middle East.
From 2003 to 2005, he was in Damascus. During that period, by his own
admission, he informed on other British members of HT for agitating
against Bashar al-Assad’s regime, resulting in them being deported
by Syrian authorities back to Britain. At this time, the CIA and MI6
routinely cooperated with Assad on extraordinary rendition
programmes.
Husain
then worked for the British Council in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, from
late 2005 to the end of 2006.
Throughout
that year, according to the former Home Office official I spoke to,
Husain was in direct contact with senior Whitehall officials who were
vetting his manuscript for The
Islamist.
By November, Husain posted on DeenPort, an online discussion forum, a
now deleted comment referring off-hand to the work of “the secret
services” inside HT: “Even within HT in Britain today, there is a
huge division between modernisers and more radical elements. The
secret services are hopeful that the modernisers can tame the
radicals… I foresee another split. And God knows best. I have said
more than I should on this subject! Henceforth, my lips are sealed!”
Shortly
after, Maajid Nawaz would declare his departure from HT, and would
eventually be joined at Quilliam by several others from the group,
many of whom according to Nawaz had worked with
him and Husain as
“a team” behind the scenes at this time.
The ‘ex-jihadists’ who weren’t
Perhaps
the biggest problem with Husain’s and Nawaz’s claim to expertise
on terrorism was that they were never jihadists. Hizb ut-Tahrir is a
non-violent movement for the establishment of a global “caliphate”
through social struggle, focusing on the need for political activism
in the Muslim world. Whatever the demerits of this rigid political
ideology, it had no relationship to the phenomenon of al-Qaeda
terrorism.
Nevertheless,
Husain and Nawaz, along with their government benefactors, were
convinced that those personal experiences of “radicalisation”
and “deradicalisation” could by transplanted into the ongoing
“war on terror” - even though, in reality neither of them had any
idea about the dynamics of an actual terrorist network, and the
radicalisation process leading to violent extremism. The result was
an utterly misguided and evidence-devoid obsession with rejecting
non-violent extremist ideologies as the primary means to prevent
terrorism.
Through
the Quilliam Foundation, Husain’s and Nawaz’s fundamentalist
ideas about non-violent extremism went on to heavily influence
official counter-terrorism discourses across the Western world. This
was thanks to its million pounds worth of government seed-funding,
intensive media coverage, as well as the government pushing
Quilliam’s directors and staff to provide “deradicalisation
training” to government and security officials in the US and
Europe.
In
the UK, Quilliam’s approach was taken up by various centre-right
and right-wing think-tanks, such as the Centre for Social Cohesion
(CCS) and Policy Exchange, all of which played a big role in
influencing the government’s Preventing Violent Extremism programme
(Prevent).
Exactly
how bankrupt this approach is, however, can be determined from Prime
Minister David Cameron’s efforts to express his understanding of
the risk from non-violent extremism, a major feature of the coalition
government’s Orwellian new
Counter-Terrorism and Security Act. The latter establishes
unprecedented powers of electronic surveillance and the basis for the
“Prevent duty,” which calls for all public sector institutions to
develop “risk-assessment” profiles of individuals deemed to be
“at-risk” of being drawn into non-violent extremism.
In
his speech at the UN last year, Cameron explained that
counter-terrorism measures must target people who may not “encourage
violence, but whose worldview can be used as a justification for it.”
As examples of dangerous ideas at the “root cause” of terrorism,
Cameron pinpointed “conspiracy theories,” and most outrageously,
“The idea that Muslims are persecuted all over the world as a
deliberate act of Western policy.”
In
other words, if you believe, for instance, that US and British forces
have deliberately conducted brutal military operations across the
Muslim world resulting in the foreseeable deaths of countless
innocent civilians,
you are a non-violent extremist.
In
an eye-opening academic paper published last year, French terrorism
expert and Interior Ministry policy officer Dr Claire Arenes, noted
that: “By definition, one may know if radicalisation has
been violent only
once the point of violence has been reached, at the end of the
process. Therefore, since the end-term of radicalisation cannot be
determined in advance, a policy intended to
fight violent radicalisation
entails a structural tendency to fight any
formof
radicalisation.”
It
is precisely this moronic obsession with trying to detect and stop
“any form of radicalisation,” however non-violent, that is
hampering police and security investigations and overloading them
with nonsense “risks”.
Double game
At
this point, the memorable vision of Nawaz and Choudary facing off on
BBC Newsnight appears not just farcical, but emblematic of how
today’s national security crisis has been fuelled and exploited by
the bowels of the British secret state.
Over
the last decade or so - the very same period that the British state
was grooming the “former jihadists who weren’t” so they could
be paraded around the media-security-industrial complex bigging up
the non-threat of “non-violent extremism” - the CIA and MI6
werecoordinating Saudi-led
funding to al-Qaeda affiliated extremists across the Middle East and
Central Asia to counter Iranian Shiite influence.
From
2005 onwards, US and British intelligence services encouraged a range
of covert operations to support Islamist opposition groups, including
militants linked to al-Qaeda, to undermine regional Iranian and
Syrian influence. By 2009, the focus of these operationsshifted to
Syria.
As
I documented in written evidence to a UK
Parliamentary inquiry into Prevent in
2010, one of the recipients of such funding was none other than Omar
Bakri, who at the time told one journalist: “Today, angry Lebanese
Sunnis ask me to organise their jihad against the Shiites… Al-Qaeda
in Lebanon… are the only ones who can defeat Hezbollah.”
Simultaneously, Bakri was regularly in touch with his deputy, Anjem
Choudary, over the internet and even delivered online speeches to his
followers in Britain instructing them to join
IS and
murder civilians. He has now been detained and charged by Lebanese
authorities for establishing terror cells in the country.
Bakri
was also deeply involved “with
training the mujahideen [fighters] in camps on the Syrian
borders and also on the Palestine side." The trainees included
four British Islamists “with professional backgrounds” who would
go on to join the war in Syria. Bakri also claimed to have trained
“many fighters,” including people from Germany and France, since
arriving in Lebanon. Was Mohammed Emwazi among them? Last year, Bakri
disciple Mizanur Rahman confirmedthat
at least five European Muslims who had died fighting under IS in
Syria had been Bakri acolytes.
Nevertheless
in 2013, it was David Cameron who lifted the arms embargo to support
Syria's rebels.
We now know that most of our military aid went to al-Qaeda
affiliated Islamists,
many with links to extremists at home. The British government
itself acknowledged that
a “substantial number” of Britons were fighting in Syria, who
“will seek to carry out attacks against Western interests... or in
Western states”.
Yet
according to former British counterterrorism intelligence officer
Charles Shoebridge, despite this risk, authorities “turned a blind
eye to the travelling of its own jihadists to Syria,
notwithstanding ample video etc. evidence of their crimes
there,” because it “suited the US and UK’s
anti-Assad foreign policy”.
This
terror-funnel is what enabled people like Emwazi to travel to Syria
and join up with IS - despite being on an MI5 terror
watch-list.
He had been blocked by the security services from traveling to Kuwait
in 2010: why not Syria? Shoebridge, who was a British Army officer
before joining the Metropolitan Police, told me that although such
overseas terrorism has been illegal in the UK since 2006, “it’s
notable that only towards the end of 2013 when IS turned against the
West’s preferred rebels, and perhaps also when the tipping point
between foreign policy usefulness and MI5 fears of domestic
terrorist blowback was reached, did the UK authorities begin to take
serious steps to tackle the flow of UK jihadists.”
The
US-UK direct and tacit support for jihadists, Shoebridge said, had
made Syria the safest place for regional terrorists fearing drone
strikes “for more than two years”. Syria was “the only place
British jihadists could fight without fear of US drones
or arrest back home… likely because, unlike if similar
numbers of UK jihadists had been travelling to for example Yemen
or Afghanistan, this suited the anti-Assad policy.”
Having
watched its own self-fulfilling prophecy unfold with horrifying
precision in a string of IS-linked terrorist atrocities against
Western hostages and targets, the government now exploits the
resulting mayhem to vindicate its bankrupt “counter-extremism”
narrative, promoted by hand-picked state-groomed “experts” like
Husain and Nawaz.
Their
prescription, predictably, is to expand the powers of the police
state to identify and “deradicalise” anyone who thinks British
foreign policy in the Muslim world is callous, self-serving and
indifferent to civilian deaths. Government sources confirm that
Nawaz’s input played a key role in David Cameron’s thinking on
non-violent extremism, and the latest incarnation of the Prevent
strategy; while last year, Husain was, ironically, appointed to the
Foreign Office advisory group on freedom of religion or belief.
Meanwhile,
Bakri’s deputy Choudary continues to inexplicably run around as
Britain’s resident “terror cleric” media darling. His passport
belatedly confiscated after a recent pointless police arrest that
avoided charging him, he remains free to radicalise thick-headed
British Muslims into joining IS, in the comfort that his hate speech
will be broadcast widely, no doubt fueling widespread generic
suspicion of British Muslims.
If
only we could round up the Quilliam and al-Muhajiroun fanatics
together, shove them onto a boat, and send them all off cruising to
the middle of nowhere, they could have all the fun they want
“radicalising” and “deradicalising” each other to their
hearts content. And we might get a little peace. And perhaps we could
send their handlers with them, too.
- Nafeez
Ahmed PhD,
is an investigative
journalist,
international security scholar and bestselling author who tracks what
he calls the 'crisis
of civilization.'
He is a winner of the Project Censored Award for Outstanding
Investigative Journalism for his Guardian reporting on the
intersection of global ecological, energy and economic crises with
regional geopolitics and conflicts. He has also written for The
Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, The Scotsman,
Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz, Prospect, New Statesman, Le
Monde diplomatique, New Internationalist. His work on the root
causes and covert operations linked to international terrorism
officially contributed to the 9/11 Commission and the 7/7 Coroner’s
Inquest.
Imprisoned
British Terrorist Inspires Jihadists, Media Ignores Ties To
Intelligence
Kurt
Nimmo
13
February, 2017
Anjem
Choudary is back in the news again.
It’s
said the authorities are worried some of Choudary’s cohorts will
return from Syria to raise Wahhabi Salafist hell in Britain.
As
usual, something important was not mentioned: the British
intelligence “covenant of security” that has protected radical
Islamists.
After
Choudary was convicted of supporting the so-called Islamic State and
was sent to prison last August, I
wrote:
Along with Omar Bakri Muhammad, Choudary helped form the Islamist organization al-Muhajiroun.
Choudary’s cohort admitted in 1998 he works with British intelligence. “The British government knows who we are. MI5 has interrogated us many times. I think now we have something called public immunity,” said Omar Bakri Muhammad.
It’s rather interesting the BBC would report the British government has tried for 20 years to prosecute Choudary. It has spent at least that long enforcing a “covenant of security” protecting a number of radical Islamists and their imams, including Abu Hamza al-Masri and Abu Qatada.
Abu Hamza al-Masri began working for British intelligence the year before his colleague, Omar Bakri Muhammad. Hamza provided invaluable information to the British security services and helped the British detain two terror suspects. He told his aides he is “beyond the reach of British law.”
Hamza’s right-hand man was Haroon Rashid Aswat. He was pegged as the mastermind of the London 7/7 bombings. Like Hamza, Aswat is a British intelligence agent.
The connections between British intelligence and a number of prominent terrorists is legion, yet none of this makes its way into establishment news reports.
Obviously, the assets are not very intelligent—many of them invariably are brought up on terror charges and spend long periods of time in prison despite their dutiful service to British intelligence.
Slapping them in prison is good propaganda for the war on terror, designed to last generations, if not indefinitely.
Another case
BBC: " MI5 Offered Job to London Woolwich Suspect"
BBC: " MI5 Offered Job to London Woolwich Suspect"
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