An investigation initiated by the American CIA and FBI in 2009 revealed that at least 100 Islamic extremists had infiltrated the U.S. military, and that some of these individuals had been in touch with Islamic radicals who had infiltrated military units in Spain, as well as Britain, France and Germany.The military is an attractive employment option for many young Muslims born in Spain, where the unemployment rate is stuck at 27%, and the jobless rate for individuals under 25 exceeds 60%. Often, a stint in the military opens doors for civilian jobs with national or local police or other security-related occupations.
The Spanish military is
quietly monitoring its Muslim soldiers in an effort to prevent the
spread of Islamic radicalism within its ranks, according to a classified
Defense Ministry document that has been leaked to the Spanish media.
The Spanish Army has also
been systematically replacing its Muslim soldiers with new recruits from
Latin America in an effort to reduce the potential for trouble in areas
of Spain that have a large Muslim population.
Spain abolished the draft
and transitioned to a professional military in 2002, but has been unable
to find enough native Spanish volunteer soldiers to fill the ranks—due
to a mix of apathy, pacifism and declining birth rates (Spain has a fertility rate of just 1.36 (2011), one of the lowest in the European Union).
Like other European countries
facing a similar dilemma, the Spanish Defense Ministry, in a desperate
search for soldiers, is increasingly relying on Muslim recruits. But the
push to boost Muslim enlistment has been a double-edged sword: while
Spain needs the extra manpower, it also worries that some Muslim
soldiers harbor extremist ideologies.
The leaked document, entitled, "Measures to be Applied to Military Personnel Identified as Showing Signs of Radicalism,"
was issued by the Deputy Chief of Staff of the Spanish Army, Lieutenant
General Jesús Carlos Fernández Asensio, on October 24, 2013.
The document—classified as "confidential" and published by the Madrid-based newspaper El País
on November 19—states that the Spanish Army has detected within its
ranks "the existence of personnel with clear indications of radicalism
(ideological, religious or criminal)…in their private and social lives."
The document continues:
"The conduct of these individuals constitutes a vulnerability for the institution of the Army and poses a potential threat to national security. In an effort to neutralize or at least reduce this risk, the Army has instituted a series of measures that will be applied by unit commanders on suspected military personnel to be determined at any given moment."
The measures include
revoking the security clearances of any soldiers suspected of
radicalism, and preventing such individuals from holding any job
position where they might pose a security risk in any form or may have
access to sensitive information.
The document lists more than a dozen jobs or locations that should be off limits to suspected radicals:
"Military police and other security-related units; the general staff headquarters; any premises where classified documents are handled; armories, arsenals and weapons depots; communications centers and locations housing information systems; job positions involving drivers, escorts and bodyguards, as well as those involving sharpshooters or the deactivation of explosives; or any other location determined by the unit commander."
Military units are also
charged with monitoring "everything related to a suspect's proselytizing
activities or actions, their level of radicalism and their public
activities (social media, Internet surfing, types of newspapers being
read, etc.)."
Units are, additionally,
responsible for keeping track of any civilian lawsuits or criminal
proceedings that may involve a suspected soldier "outside the scope of
the Armed Forces," as well as "any notices of plans by a suspect to
travel abroad."
The Defense Ministry
recommends the "application, as far as possible, of staff regulations
relating to psycho-physical fitness requirements, anti-drug enforcement
policies, as well as the disciplinary regulations of the Military Penal
Code." Such procedures would apparently provide the legal basis for
suspected radicals to be discharged from the Spanish military.
The document also proposes
the "development of an extraordinary rating system" for any soldier who
displays a "significant change in professional conduct." A negative
performance evaluation would be grounds for such a soldier to be
discharged.
Although the document does
not specifically define what is meant by the term "radicalism," it
almost certainly refers to Salafist Islam and the Spanish Defense
Ministry's concern about the increasing number of Muslim recruits within
the ranks of the military.
The military is an attractive employment option for many young Muslims born in Spain, where the unemployment rate
is stuck at 27%, and the jobless rate for individuals under 25 exceeds
60%. Often, a stint in the military opens the door to civilian jobs with
national or local police or other security-related occupations.
There are no official
statistics as to how many Muslims are serving in the Spanish armed
forces, which currently has 140,000 active duty service members and
5,000 reservists.
But the issue of Muslim
troops serving in the Spanish military is especially acute in the
Spanish exclaves of Ceuta and Melilla on the northern coast of Morocco,
which has long demanded that Madrid cede sovereignty of the territories
over to Rabat.
Muslims constitute approximately 30% of the Spanish troops stationed in Ceuta and Melilla, where the real unemployment rate tops 40%.
In July 2012 it emerged that
the Spain's National Intelligence Center (CNI) was investigating a tip
it received from the American Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that al-Qaeda operatives had infiltrated Spanish military units based both in Ceuta and Melilla, territories the Algeria-based Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) has long threatened to "reconquer" for Islam.
The alert resulted from an
investigation initiated by the CIA and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) in November 2009, after the U.S. Army psychiatrist,
Major Nidal Malik Hasan, an al-Qaeda sympathizer, fatally shot 13 people
and injured more than 30 others at Fort Hood in Texas. The
investigation found that at least 100 Islamic extremists had infiltrated the US military,
and that some of these individuals had been in contact with Islamic
radicals who had infiltrated military units in Spain, as well as in
Britain, France and Germany.
The carnage of the 2004 Madrid train bombings.
|
According to Spanish media reports,
CNI investigators began searching for Muslim soldiers with a
"non-classic" profile: individuals who show no special identification
with Islamic culture and even appear to be "Westernized," who drink
alcohol, smoke and eat without respecting the restrictions imposed by
the Koran, and who do not participate in religious services of the local
Muslim community.
As a result of the
investigation, the Spanish military has replaced dozens of Muslim
soldiers with recruits from Latin America. The mass discharges—due to
"lack of trust or dubious loyalty"—have only increased tensions with the
local Muslim community, who have distributed thousands of leaflets
denouncing the "persecution of Spanish soldiers of the Muslim faith."
Worries over possible
infiltration of radical Salafism in the Spanish military has dated back
to at least December 2006, when a police investigation named Operation
Dune (Operación Duna) dismantled a Salafi cell that allegedly planned to
carry out attacks using explosives stolen by Muslim soldiers in Ceuta.
The raid,
which involved more than 300 police, resulted in the arrest of 11
Salafists, including ten Spanish nationals, at least three of whom were
serving in the Spanish Army.
Since then, Spanish police have conducted more than 20 other raids across Spain in an effort to dismantle Salafist cells.
Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute. He is also Senior Fellow for European Politics at the Madrid-based Grupo de Estudios Estratégicos / Strategic Studies Group. Follow him on Facebook. Follow him on Twitter.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου