January 2, 2008:
Last Summer's failed
Islamic suicide bombing of a British airport, gave counter-terror officials
some hot leads. That resulted in a "good news-bad news" situation. Good news
was that investigators found dozens more Islamic radicals in Scotland and
northern England. The bad news was that investigators found dozens more Islamic
radicals in Scotland and northern England. One group that was publicly outed was
a gang of fifty British born criminals of Pakistani origin, who were running
various scams and passing on about $100,000 a month to a major Pakistani
Islamic terrorist organization (Jaish-e-Mohammed, or JEM). This outfit was
founded in 2001 by a radical cleric (Maulana Masood Azhar), who had just gotten
out of an Indian jail. That was arranged by his followers, who hijacked an
Indian airliner, and threatened to kill 155 passengers and crew if their guy
was not released.
JEM initially claimed that it was
fighting for the incorporation of Indian Kashmir into Pakistan. This border
dispute has been going on for sixty years, and several Islamic terror
organizations have been founded just to fight in Kashmir. But JEM went further
and began making terror attacks deeper inside India, including the Indian capital.
JEM has also branched out into Great Britain, where it has attempted several
major terror attacks.
Using criminal activities to raise cash
is a tricky undertaking. Captured al Qaeda documents constantly mention
terrorist "brothers" who have been led astray (taking some of the money with
them) by the gangster life. But this British crew, located in and around
Glasgow, has apparently been sending lots of cash back to Pakistan. So much of
the Glasgow cash was being moved that it caught the attention of the Western spies
who monitor Persian Gulf money laundering operations. Places like Dubai are
centers for all manner of shady dealings (for gangsters and terrorists). The
local authorities have long been tolerant of the gangsters as long as they
stayed clean while visiting. But the same is no longer true of the Islamic
radicals. Al Qaeda's large scale massacres of Moslem civilians in Iraq has
caused the terrorist group to take a big dip in its popularity ratings. The
blood money still moves through Dubai, but it now has to keep a very low
profile.