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Ribal Al-Assad: 'foreign fighters in Syria still major issue'

Wednesday, 3 September 2014

Iraq and Syria: Who are the foreign fighters?

BBC NEWS

International attention given to foreign fighters within the ranks of Islamic State (IS) is largely focused on militants from Europe and the United States.

These Western fighters have had a high media profile, especially since the beheading of two US journalists by a suspected British jihadist.

Yet recent studies show that most foreign militants in Syria and Iraq are Arabs.

The New York-based Soufan Group and the London-based International Centre for the Study of Radicalization suggest that the total number of foreign fighters in Syria at present is between 11,000 and 12,000, with only about 3,000 of them from the West.

Of the remainder, Tunisians make up the largest group (estimated at about 3,000), followed by those from Saudi Arabia (about 2,500) and Morocco (1,500).

Tunisia 'incubator'

Arab media stress that the true figures could be much higher than these estimates.

Tunisian media sources, quoting a PEW/CNN report, point to the fact that their country has become the main "incubator" of "terrorists" fighting in Syria.

Since the overthrow of Tunisian President Ben Ali in 2011, the country has seen a low-level insurgency involving Islamist militants. Several opposition politicians have been assassinated, and dozens of militants and soldiers have been killed.

Tunisia has also suffered from the chaos in neighbouring Libya and the presence of militants there.

According to a report attributed to the Syrian military, almost 54,000 foreign combatants from 87 different countries have come to the country since the start of the civil war. Thousands of them are said to have been killed.

The report, first published by Tunisian daily newspaper al-Chourouk and widely circulated in the Arabic media, says the study was compiled by an unnamed Syrian military research centre.

It says Chechens top the list of foreign fighters with 14,000 combatants, of which 3,691 have been killed. Besides Chechens, the largest groups of fighters are thought to be Saudis, Lebanese, Libyans, Iraqis and Tunisians.

Saudi fighters are estimated at 12,000, with 3,872 reported killed and 2,689 said to have disappeared, including seven women.

Out of 9,000 Lebanese involved with jihadis in Syria, about 2,904 have lost their lives, including four women.

According to Maghreb analysts quoted by al-Chourouk, Libyans and Tunisians are mainly fighting under the IS banner, while Algerians and Moroccans are with al-Nusra Front.

It is not known how many Chechens or Saudis are fighting alongside IS.

Room to radicalise

Like their Western counterparts, Arab jihadis appear to rely on both online and offline radicalisation and recruitment techniques.

In the immediate aftermath of the Arab Spring in 2011, the newly-found freedoms in countries such as Tunisia, Egypt and Libya allowed Islamists and jihadis alike to openly promote their ideologies.

This was done through handing out pamphlets, public talks and conferences as well, as via recorded videos and content shared online, radicalisation in mosques and schools, and mainstream media.

The Syrian conflict provided a narrative to help galvanise the recruitment process.

And when the Muslim Brotherhood was removed from power in Egypt, the space available for radical clerics tightened, leaving social media and personal networks to fill the gap.

Responding to the news, ODFS Director, Ribal Al-Assad said:

"I am still very concerned about the number of foreign fighters in Syria; recent reports indicate that sufficient action is still not being taken by the international community to combat this problem.

Although many countries in the West have put appropriate safeguards in place to stop their nationals from traveling to the region, nations in the Arab speaking world still need to do much more.

Not only do Arab nationals compose the largest group of foreign fighters in Syria but some gulf countries are home to Clerics who use Satellite TV and the internet to indoctrinate young people and incite violence.

These Clerics need to be stopped and their vehicles of communication shut down.

It is an unfortunate fact that the MENA region is home to a large number of young disaffected people with little opportunity who can be easily drawn into a life of extremism and violence. We must present them with an alternative if we are ever to stop them falling victim to the Islamist rhetoric.

As I have said many times before, in order to successfully do this we must ensure that the international community puts an end to the extremist message - the conflict in Syria and the region will only stop once this has been achieved."

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