Human intel thwarts al Qaeda in Europe

Washington Post:

The tip from Spain was only a vague warning. But it was enough for France's domestic intelligence agents to go to work, tapping phones, tailing suspects and squeezing informants. Before long, they rolled up a group of Muslim men in a provincial French town who, beneath a tranquil surface, were drawing up al-Qaeda-inspired plans to set off a bomb in the Paris subway.

The plot, described by a source with firsthand information, was one of 15 planned terrorist attacks by jihadist cells in France that have been thwarted in recent years, according to a count by the Central Directorate of Internal Intelligence (DCRI), France's main antiterrorism force. One was a bomb plot directed against the directorate's own headquarters.

The antiterrorism policing -- it is a not a "war," specialists here emphasized -- has been conducted for the most part in the dark, and in a style that sets France and other European countries apart from the United States. As U.S. officials seek to understand what may have led a Pakistani immigrant to try to blow up Times Square, and how he boarded an airplane at John F. Kennedy International Airport despite multiple computerized watch lists, Europe's specialists have pointed to their own approach as an example of how to proceed.

"You have got to be proactive," said Jean-Louis Brugui?re, who as an investigating magistrate handled many of France's major antiterrorism cases and now is a liaison to the U.S. Treasury Department on terrorist financing. "It is not a question of defense."

From the beginning, Brugui?re and other specialists said, the emphasis in Europe has been on domestic human intelligence rather than the computerized systems such as watch lists favored by U.S. security agencies. That has meant tedious hours of surveillance, patient listening-in on telephone conversations, careful review of bank records, and relentless recruitment of informants among Islamic zealots who are motivated to betray acquaintances by everything from fear of losing visas to a desire to clear the name of Islam in European minds.

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Intercepts on enemy communications, and reviewing bank transactions sounds like just the kind of stuff the NY Times jumped on the Bush administration for doing.

The fact is you do have to be proactive. The Obama administration has placed us on the strategic defensive where we are left to react to attacks rather than stopping them. This administration has been lucky in the ineptitude of the enemy, but that is not a strategy they can always count on.

We do need to be intercepting enemy communications with their operatives in the US. We need to be capturing enemy leaders and finding out what their plans are who they have sent on mass murder operations against non combatants.

To the extent that Europe has relied on lawfare, it has not worked out that well for them either.

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