Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. 24/7 Space News .




TERROR WARS
Analysis: Al-Qaida to attack Turkey?
by Stefan Nicola
Washington (UPI) Apr 21, 2008


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Experts are worried that Turkey will soon be hit by an al-Qaida-orchestrated terror attack. In November 2003 Istanbul was hit by a terror attack that targeted two synagogues, a British bank and the British consulate, killing more than 50 people and injuring 700 others.

Turkish security officials arrested Loai al-Saqa, a Syrian man who was later convicted as the key perpetrator behind the bombings; he received the order to attack from Osama bin Laden, officials said. Another 48 terrorist suspects were arrested and later convicted in connection with the attacks -- a surprisingly high level of support that had security experts fear more bombings.

But nothing much happened since then.

Nevertheless, Turkish security officials have been increasingly worried recently; over the past few months, they on repeated occasions arrested terror suspects; in January they were even engaged in a 12-hour gunfight with an al-Qaida cell that left five people dead, including one police officer. While no information surfaced about their plans, the cell had stashed away weapons and explosives in great style.

Gareth Jenkins, a British journalist and analyst based in Turkey, told German newspaper Die Welt that an al-Qaida attack in Turkey may be imminent.

"There have been much more arrests in connection with al-Qaida," he said. "In my opinion, it is to be feared that there will be a larger attack in Turkey soon."

Earlier this month in Istanbul, police arrested 45 terror suspects during raids in eight neighborhoods in the European part of Turkey's largest city; security officials said the group had planned a "major attack" in Istanbul.

Synagogues could be targeted again, observers say, but also Western institutions, first and foremost of course the Incirlik Air Base, where the U.S. Air Force has at least 5,000 service members stationed, with several hundred British and Turkish personnel attached.

Nevertheless, attacks are hard to predict, mainly because the terror situation in Turkey is rather obscure.

"In Turkey, terrorism comes from several different currents," Berndt Georg Thamm, a terrorism expert in Berlin, told United Press International in a telephone interview. "For one, we have the Kurdish terrorism of the PKK; then there are Islamist groups, like the Islamic Jihad Union, which originated among the Turkic people in Central Asia, but enjoy support inside Turkey; and thirdly, and this can't be denied -- there is al-Qaida, which with small cells has gained a foothold in Turkey."

Turkey, with its 80 million Muslims at the border with Europe, plays an important role for militant Islamists determined to create a "global caliphate," Thamm added.

Circles critical of the pro-Islam government of Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan say Ankara is pursuing a creeping Islamization of Turkey to demolish the tradition of constitutional separation of church and state first proclaimed by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

The secular elite have recently taken steps to stop that trend. On March 31 the Constitutional Court in Ankara decided to hear a case to outlaw Erdogan's Justice and Development Party and ban 71 of its senior party officials, including the premier, from politics for five years because they are threatening the constitution.

While that decision is highly controversial and was mainly linked to the government's decision to ease the head scarf ban at universities, some observers also fear that Erdogan's pro-Islam government makes it easier for terrorists to gain a foothold in Turkey.

"The current government has vowed to fight al-Qaida," Thamm told UPI. "But that doesn't mean that the struggle against Islamist currents outside Turkey's borders is led with the same intensity inside Turkey, where domestic groups are determined to undermine the country's separation of church and state."

.


Related Links
The Long War - Doctrine and Application






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TERROR WARS
Security From Chaos
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 18, 2008
There's safety (and security) in numbers...especially when those numbers are random. That's the lesson learned from a DHS-sponsored research project out of the University of Southern California (USC). The research is already helping to beef up security at LAX airport in Los Angeles, and it could soon be used across the country to predict and minimize risk. Here's how it works: Computer ... read more


TERROR WARS
NASA official envisions six-month stays on the moon

The Moon And The Magnetotail

Moondust In The Wind

NASA Sets Sights On Lunar Dust Exploration Mission

TERROR WARS
Mars Radar Opens Up A Planet's Third Dimension

Russia Continues Flight Simulation Experiments For Mars-500

Missions To Mars

Opportunity Continues Reading The Story In The Rocks

TERROR WARS
Russian Space Capsule Lands 260 Miles Away From Target Site

Electric Sail Invention Approaches Implementation

NASA's Marshall Center Readies Historic, Apollo-Era Test Stand For Testing Of Ares I

Roskosmos supports space tourism

TERROR WARS
China Launches New Space Tracking Ship To Serve Shenzhou VII

Three Rocketeers For Shenzhou

China's space development can pose military threat: Japan

Brazil To Deepen Space Cooperation With China

TERROR WARS
Expedition 16's Whitson Hands Over Command Of Station

Russia Needs Billions More To Complete It's ISS Segment

NASA Awards Space Station Water Contract To Hamilton Sundstrand

Russia to call for extending ISS use

TERROR WARS
Ariane 5 rocket lifts Brazilian, Vietnamese satellites into space

C/NOFS Satellite Built By General Dynamics Successfully Launched From Reagan Test Site

Its A Go For Arianespace's Second Ariane 5 Mission Of 2008

Orbital Awarded USAF Contract For Three Minotaur Space Launch Vehicles

TERROR WARS
Astronomers Listen To An Exoplanet-Host Star And Find Its Birthplace

New Rocky Planet Found In Constellation Leo

New Laser Technology Could Find First Earth-like Planets

Scientists Discover 10 New Planets Outside Solar System

TERROR WARS
Communication From Car To Car - DLR Brings Mobile Communications Network Into Operation

Tunable metamaterial zips 'terahertz gap'

Laser triggers lightning in a thunderstorm

Ball Aerospace GFO Satellite Begins Eleventh Year On Orbit




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement