European police arrest over two dozen Muslims in anti-terror sweeps
By Robert Spencer / Jihad Watch
Trying
to thwart a jihad that they don’t admit exists. Europe has “2,000-5,000
radicalized Muslim extremists”? How did so many Muslims in Europe
succumb to this misunderstanding of Islam?
The European answer will be that they lacked jobs and were marginalized in society, and will start pumping the jizya into Muslim communities. When they realize that this won’t solve the problem, it could be too late.
“European police arrest over 2 dozen in anti-terror sweeps,” by Raf Casert and Angela Charlton, Associated Press, January 16, 2015:
The European answer will be that they lacked jobs and were marginalized in society, and will start pumping the jizya into Muslim communities. When they realize that this won’t solve the problem, it could be too late.
In a new Islamic State video, a jihadi declares:
“I say to all French people who think that the Islamic State won’t
arrive in Europe, with God’s help, we will arrive in Europe. We will
expand across all of Europe, to France, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland
and also the USA. I say to all my brothers that cannot immigrate and
join the Islamic caliphate, try to resist with all means, kill them,
slaughter them, burn their cars and homes. I say to my brothers, if you
see a police officer—kill him. Kill them all. Kill all infidels that you
see in the streets.”
And clearly some of those “radicalized Muslim extremists” in Europe are heeding the call.
“European police arrest over 2 dozen in anti-terror sweeps,” by Raf Casert and Angela Charlton, Associated Press, January 16, 2015:
BRUSSELS (AP) — French, German and Belgian police arrested more than two dozen suspects in anti-terrorism raids Friday, as European authorities rushed to thwart more attacks by people with links to Mideast Islamic extremists.
Rob Wainwright, head of the police agency Europol, told The Associated Press that foiling terror attacks has become “extremely difficult” because Europe’s 2,500-5,000 radicalized Muslim extremists have little command structures and are increasingly sophisticated.
Highlighting those fears, a bomb scare forced Paris to evacuate its busy Gare de l’Est train station during Friday morning rush hour. No bomb was found. A man also briefly took two hostages at a post office northwest of Paris, but police said the hostage-taker had mental issues and no links to terror.
Visiting the tense French capital, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met President Francois Hollande and toured the sites of last week’s terror attacks: the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and a kosher supermarket. Twenty people, including the three gunmen, were killed.
One of those Paris attackers had proclaimed allegiance to the Islamic State group, and French and German authorities arrested at least 14 other people Friday suspected of links to IS.