Islam group urges forest fire jihad

From The Age
AUSTRALIA has been singled out as a target for "forest jihad" by a group of Islamic extremists urging Muslims to deliberately light bushfires as a weapon of terror.
US intelligence channels earlier this year identified a website calling on Muslims in Australia, the US, Europe and Russia to "start forest fires", claiming "scholars have justified chopping down and burning the infidels' forests when they do the same to our lands".
The website, posted by a group called the Al-Ikhlas Islamic Network, argues in Arabic that lighting fires is an effective form of terrorism justified in Islamic law under the "eye for an eye" doctrine.
The posting — which instructs jihadis to remember "forest jihad" in summer months — says fires cause economic damage and pollution, tie up security agencies and can take months to extinguish so that "this terror will haunt them for an extended period of time".
"Imagine if, after all the losses caused by such an event, a jihadist organisation were to claim responsibility for the forest fires," the website says. "You can hardly begin to imagine the level of fear that would take hold of people in the United States, in Europe, in Russia and in Australia."
With the nation heading into another hot, dry summer, Australian intelligence agencies are treating the possibility that bushfires could be used as a weapon of terrorism as a serious concern.
Attorney-General Robert McClelland said the Federal Government remained "vigilant against such threats", warning that anyone caught lighting a fire as a weapon of terror would feel the wrath of anti-terror laws.
Adam Dolnik, director of research at the University of Wollongong's Centre for Transnational Crime Prevention, said that bushfires (unlike suicide bombing) were generally not considered a glorious type of attack by jihadis, in keeping with a recent decline in the sophistication of terrorist operations.
"With attacks like bushfires, yes, it would be easy. It would be very damaging and we do see a decreasing sophistication as a part of terrorist attacks," Dr Dolnik said. "In recent years, there have been quite a few attacks averted and it has become more and more difficult for groups to do something effective."
The internet posting by the little-known group claimed the idea of forest fires had been attributed to imprisoned Al Qaeda leader Abu Musab Al-Suri. It said Al-Suri had urged terrorists to use sulphuric acid and petrol to start forest fires.

Posted on 9:27 AM by Esmerelda Weatherwax
Comments
6 Sep 2008
Hugh Fitzgerald
The setting of fires in forests has been a staple of the Arabs in Israel. People around the world pay for a tree to be planted in the forests of Israel; Arabs burn, or try to burn, them down.
In the forest fires that swept over the American West last year, there were rumors -- I never saw any follow-up -- about similar activities by Arabs and Muslims. Authorities did not say a word, but that means little. It would not be out of collective character.
7 Sep 2008
Artemis
...warning that anyone caught lighting a fire as a weapon of terror would feel the wrath of anti-terror laws.
Which totally ignores the entire point that it is extremely unlikely that the authorities would catch anyone in the act of lighting a fire in the remote forest. This idiotic statement just points out the futility of relying on law enforcement to stop jihadis after allowing them into our countries.
It simply doesn't work that way.