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Al-Qaeda moving recruits into Iraq: Report
New York, Dec 06: Recent arrests of terror suspects has shown that al Qaeda and groups linked to it have established a network across Europe that is moving recruits into Iraq to join the insurgency against American and allied forces, a media report said quoting European intelligence and law enforcement officials.
New York, Dec 06: Recent arrests of terror suspects has shown that al Qaeda and groups linked to it have established a network across Europe that is moving recruits into Iraq to join the insurgency against American and allied forces, a media report said quoting European intelligence and law enforcement officials.
Over the past year, the officials estimate, the network of recruiters working in at least six European countries, Italy, Germany, France, Spain, Britain and Norway, has assisted hundreds of young men trying to get to Iraq.
The network provided high quality fake documents, training, money, and infiltration routes into the country, the 'New York Times' said quoting officials.
They told the paper that evidence indicated that the campaign to recruit young militants for Iraq had become better organized and coordinated in recent months. According to an investigating judge in Italy, the new network is building on an underground that helped smuggle fighters out of Afghanistan and Pakistan in the fall of 2001, when Taliban and Qaeda forces were routed by American-led allied troops, the report said.
But since the end of last year the flow of recruits, including young men from Europe and North Africa, has turned toward the new front in Iraq, the judge was quoted as saying.
"In August and September people were approaching the borders of Iraq, in Turkey and Syria," he said. "These people got very close and it's very easy for them to slip in."
The network provided high quality fake documents, training, money, and infiltration routes into the country, the 'New York Times' said quoting officials.
They told the paper that evidence indicated that the campaign to recruit young militants for Iraq had become better organized and coordinated in recent months. According to an investigating judge in Italy, the new network is building on an underground that helped smuggle fighters out of Afghanistan and Pakistan in the fall of 2001, when Taliban and Qaeda forces were routed by American-led allied troops, the report said.
But since the end of last year the flow of recruits, including young men from Europe and North Africa, has turned toward the new front in Iraq, the judge was quoted as saying.
"In August and September people were approaching the borders of Iraq, in Turkey and Syria," he said. "These people got very close and it's very easy for them to slip in."
Bureau Report