September 26, 2024
There was a foiled ISIS-inspired terrorist plot seeking to "slaughter" Jews in New York City on the one year anniversary of last year’s Hamas attack in Israel. Muhammad Khan planned to travel to New York to carry out a mass shooting at a Brooklyn Jewish center.
Most people think ISIS has disappeared, but ISIS has actually expanded and grown worldwide.
ISIS Khorasan operates in Afghanistan and Pakistan and is responsible for the attack on the Crocus City Hall music venue near Moscow in March.
Individuals and small cells inspired by ISIS have carried out attacks in France, Germany, Netherlands and Belgium.
Their plan to attack a Taylor Swift concert this year in Austria was thwarted.
There was even a possible ISIS-inspired attack in Ireland in August.
Canada, too, been targeted many times.
ISIS was formed by al-Qaeda in Syria and al-Qaeda in Iraq. The two "regional" al-Qaeda groups merged and began calling themselves the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria = ISIS.
ISIS created a caliphate which included parts of Iraq and Syria and they carried out horrific crimes: beheadings, drownings, burning people alive, mass executions, sexual slavery and slave markets.
The caliphate was dissolved in 2019, but ISIS itself did not dissolve -- it expanded into new territories and calls itself the Islamic State.
ISIS continues to regularly carry out attacks in Syria and Iraq but they have also formed new cells in West Africa, Central Africa, East Africa, Mozambique, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, India and Central Asia.
These cells have killed thousands over the last several years.
Al-Qaeda, too, is also alive and well and often joins forces with ISIS cells throughout Africa to achieve their goals. Their goals are identical so they often join forces in attacks and plots.
ISIS continues to publish an online propaganda and recruiting magazine called Rumiyah. It often includes appeals to “lone wolves” in the West to use knives and vehicles to kill westerners.
Al-Qaeda also has an online recruiting magazine called Inspire. It is published by al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Many international and domestic extremists have been influenced by the magazine and have even used its bomb-making instructions in their attempts to carry out attacks.
Al-Qaeda's home base is Afghanistan and Pakistan.
There are large bases in Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Algeria, Mauritania, Mali, and Niger.
They have a large presence in Syria, Iraq, Egypt, Sudan and Burkina Faso.
They are very active in Uganda, Kenya, Chad, CAR, Nigeria and Guinea-Bissau.
Al-Qaeda's most recent affiliate operates in India and Bangladesh.
Al-Qaeda's main source of funding comes from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, primarily via the Muslim Brotherhood.
Al-Qaeda's drug and arms route was established in the late 1990s. It ran from Afghanistan to Somalia, then across North Africa to Mali where jihadists would connect to the drug connection in South America were they'd buy drugs and weapons.
The drugs help fund and arm jihadists.
This route is now being used by jihadists to enter the U.S. illegally through Mexico.
Al-Qaeda's top affiliates and branches:
Muslim Brotherhood:
Many Muslim Brotherhood members belong to al-Qaeda simultaneously and the groups respond to each others calls for mercenary fighters. This is because in 1988, Ayman Zawahiri, a Muslim Brotherhood member, co-founded al-Qaeda. Muslim Brotherhood and al-Qaeda have identical goals: jihad and enforce Islamic Law on the world.
Hamas:
The Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and an official affiliate of al-Qaeda.
Al-Shabab:
Based in Somalia and in East Africa, they officially declared union with al-Qaeda in 2012. Al-Shabab announced it seeks to make the entire horn of Africa under al-Qaeda leadership.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula:
The union of al-Qaeda’s branches in Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
ISIS:
Al-Qaeda in Iraq intensified their campaign in Iraq from Oct. 2004 - Feb. 2014. In Feb. 2014, al-Qaeda in Iraq declared itself the Islamic State in Iraq. Months later, it merged with al-Qaeda in Syria to become ISIS.
Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent:
Founded in September 2014 in India, now extremely active in Bangladesh where they are destroying Hindu temples and attacking non-Muslims.
Ansar al-Islam:
Al-Qaeda's branch in Egypt.
Ansar al-Sharia:
Al-Qaeda's branch in Libya.
Jihadist training camps are created not only of an al-Qaeda core base, but by members of branches and affiliate groups.
Al-Qaeda also relies on proxy training facilities of terrorist groups like Taliban and ISIS.
According to some estimates, there are about 40 training camps in and around Pakistan. Once trained, these fighters are then dispersed as mercenary fighters to fight for Islam where needed, including in the West.
Many are being funneled through the South and Central American jihadi network system and are entering the U.S. via the open border.
Below maps:
Left: ISIS announced it's territory goals in 2014 and has been slowly taking territory.
Right: Countries with declared presence of al-Qaeda and ISIS.
There was a foiled ISIS-inspired terrorist plot seeking to "slaughter" Jews in New York City on the one year anniversary of last year’s Hamas attack in Israel. Muhammad Khan planned to travel to New York to carry out a mass shooting at a Brooklyn Jewish center.
Most people think ISIS has disappeared, but ISIS has actually expanded and grown worldwide.
ISIS Khorasan operates in Afghanistan and Pakistan and is responsible for the attack on the Crocus City Hall music venue near Moscow in March.
Individuals and small cells inspired by ISIS have carried out attacks in France, Germany, Netherlands and Belgium.
Their plan to attack a Taylor Swift concert this year in Austria was thwarted.
There was even a possible ISIS-inspired attack in Ireland in August.
Canada, too, been targeted many times.
ISIS was formed by al-Qaeda in Syria and al-Qaeda in Iraq. The two "regional" al-Qaeda groups merged and began calling themselves the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria = ISIS.
ISIS created a caliphate which included parts of Iraq and Syria and they carried out horrific crimes: beheadings, drownings, burning people alive, mass executions, sexual slavery and slave markets.
The caliphate was dissolved in 2019, but ISIS itself did not dissolve -- it expanded into new territories and calls itself the Islamic State.
ISIS continues to regularly carry out attacks in Syria and Iraq but they have also formed new cells in West Africa, Central Africa, East Africa, Mozambique, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, India and Central Asia.
These cells have killed thousands over the last several years.
Al-Qaeda, too, is also alive and well and often joins forces with ISIS cells throughout Africa to achieve their goals. Their goals are identical so they often join forces in attacks and plots.
ISIS continues to publish an online propaganda and recruiting magazine called Rumiyah. It often includes appeals to “lone wolves” in the West to use knives and vehicles to kill westerners.
Al-Qaeda also has an online recruiting magazine called Inspire. It is published by al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Many international and domestic extremists have been influenced by the magazine and have even used its bomb-making instructions in their attempts to carry out attacks.
Al-Qaeda's home base is Afghanistan and Pakistan.
There are large bases in Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Algeria, Mauritania, Mali, and Niger.
They have a large presence in Syria, Iraq, Egypt, Sudan and Burkina Faso.
They are very active in Uganda, Kenya, Chad, CAR, Nigeria and Guinea-Bissau.
Al-Qaeda's most recent affiliate operates in India and Bangladesh.
Al-Qaeda's main source of funding comes from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, primarily via the Muslim Brotherhood.
Al-Qaeda's drug and arms route was established in the late 1990s. It ran from Afghanistan to Somalia, then across North Africa to Mali where jihadists would connect to the drug connection in South America were they'd buy drugs and weapons.
The drugs help fund and arm jihadists.
This route is now being used by jihadists to enter the U.S. illegally through Mexico.
Al-Qaeda's top affiliates and branches:
Muslim Brotherhood:
Many Muslim Brotherhood members belong to al-Qaeda simultaneously and the groups respond to each others calls for mercenary fighters. This is because in 1988, Ayman Zawahiri, a Muslim Brotherhood member, co-founded al-Qaeda. Muslim Brotherhood and al-Qaeda have identical goals: jihad and enforce Islamic Law on the world.
Hamas:
The Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and an official affiliate of al-Qaeda.
Al-Shabab:
Based in Somalia and in East Africa, they officially declared union with al-Qaeda in 2012. Al-Shabab announced it seeks to make the entire horn of Africa under al-Qaeda leadership.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula:
The union of al-Qaeda’s branches in Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
ISIS:
Al-Qaeda in Iraq intensified their campaign in Iraq from Oct. 2004 - Feb. 2014. In Feb. 2014, al-Qaeda in Iraq declared itself the Islamic State in Iraq. Months later, it merged with al-Qaeda in Syria to become ISIS.
Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent:
Founded in September 2014 in India, now extremely active in Bangladesh where they are destroying Hindu temples and attacking non-Muslims.
Ansar al-Islam:
Al-Qaeda's branch in Egypt.
Ansar al-Sharia:
Al-Qaeda's branch in Libya.
Jihadist training camps are created not only of an al-Qaeda core base, but by members of branches and affiliate groups.
Al-Qaeda also relies on proxy training facilities of terrorist groups like Taliban and ISIS.
According to some estimates, there are about 40 training camps in and around Pakistan. Once trained, these fighters are then dispersed as mercenary fighters to fight for Islam where needed, including in the West.
Many are being funneled through the South and Central American jihadi network system and are entering the U.S. via the open border.
Below maps:
Left: ISIS announced it's territory goals in 2014 and has been slowly taking territory.
Right: Countries with declared presence of al-Qaeda and ISIS.
An American Woman Living in Egypt: Life during an Islamic takeover is available at Amazon or order it from any place that sells books.
Introduction to Cheri's book
Jacket Back of Cheri's book
Introduction to Cheri's book
Jacket Back of Cheri's book
Re: Terrorists entering the U.S. via Mexico
30000-illegals-from-countries-with-high-terrorist-concerns-have-crossed-into-the-us
military-intel-confirms-jw-reporting-muslim-terrorists-entering-u-s-via-mexico/
7700-terrorist-encounters-in-usa-in-1-year/
fbi-data-reveal-7700-terrorist-encounters-usa-one-year-border-states-targeted/
thousands-of-middle-eastern-illegal-immigrants-busted-at-border/
24-illegal-muslims-from-bangladesh-entered-us
illegal-bangladeshi-muslims/
texas: bangladeshi-migrant-apprehensions-in-laredo-sector
cases: -border-terror/
Are-terrorists-crossing-the-US-Mexico-border-Excerpts-from-the-case-file
More on al-Qaeda
ayman-al-zawahiri
state.gov/documents
world/asia/al-qaeda-kidnap-threat/.
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP)
Nusra Front
al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS)
al_qaeda_opens_branc.php.
org/sgp/crs/terror/
al-qaeda -guidelines-for-jihad
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)
al-Shabab
More
man-arrested-isis-inspired-plot-slaughter-jews-nyc
roots-of-violent-islamist-extremism-muslim-brotherhood.html
al-qaeda-the-many-faces-of-an-islamist-threat.html
30000-illegals-from-countries-with-high-terrorist-concerns-have-crossed-into-the-us
military-intel-confirms-jw-reporting-muslim-terrorists-entering-u-s-via-mexico/
7700-terrorist-encounters-in-usa-in-1-year/
fbi-data-reveal-7700-terrorist-encounters-usa-one-year-border-states-targeted/
thousands-of-middle-eastern-illegal-immigrants-busted-at-border/
24-illegal-muslims-from-bangladesh-entered-us
illegal-bangladeshi-muslims/
texas: bangladeshi-migrant-apprehensions-in-laredo-sector
cases: -border-terror/
Are-terrorists-crossing-the-US-Mexico-border-Excerpts-from-the-case-file
More on al-Qaeda
ayman-al-zawahiri
state.gov/documents
world/asia/al-qaeda-kidnap-threat/.
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP)
Nusra Front
al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS)
al_qaeda_opens_branc.php.
org/sgp/crs/terror/
al-qaeda -guidelines-for-jihad
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)
al-Shabab
More
man-arrested-isis-inspired-plot-slaughter-jews-nyc
roots-of-violent-islamist-extremism-muslim-brotherhood.html
al-qaeda-the-many-faces-of-an-islamist-threat.html