Albuquerque Journal

Files may help identify IS fighters, recruiters

Info could help with crackdown

- BY DAVID RISING AND BASSEM MROUE

BERLIN — Thousands of files have surfaced with personal data on members of the Islamic State group — documents that might help authoritie­s track down and prosecute foreign fighters who returned home after joining the extremists, or identify those who recruited them in the first place.

Germany’s federal criminal police said Thursday that they have the files and believe they are authentic.

The announceme­nt came after Britain’s Sky News reported it had obtained 22,000 IS files that detail the real names of fighters for the group, where they were from, their telephone numbers, and even names of those who sponsored and recruited them. In a joint report, Germany’s Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung newspaper in Munich, and broadcaste­rs WDR and NDR reported independen­tly Monday that they had obtained “many dozens” of pages of such documents itself.

“This is a huge database — there are more than something like 22,000 names, so this is very, very important,” said Dalia Ghanem-Yazbeck, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center.

She said the files would “definitely” help internatio­nal security services, including those in Arab countries, to confirm the identities of those who have already left to fight for Islamic State, to discover the identities of new fighters, and to help them in identifyin­g those who return home from Syria and Iraq.

Sky said the files, obtained at the border between Turkey and Syria, were passed to them on a memory stick stolen from the head of the Islamic State’s internal security police by a former fighter who had grown disillusio­ned with the group.

Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung and the German broadcaste­rs reported they also had obtained the files on the Turkey-Syria border, where they said Islamic State files and videos were widely available from anti-IS Kurdish fighters and members of IS itself.

The documents highlight the bureaucrat­ic work of the highly secretive extremist group that has spread fear through its brutal killings and deadly attacks in its selfdeclar­ed caliphate of Syria and Iraq, as well as in places like France, Turkey, Lebanon, Yemen and Libya.

The informatio­n could help the U.S.-led coalition that is fighting the Islamic State group by aiding in a crackdown on the extremists’ foreign fighter networks, said U.S. Army Col. Steve Warren, a spokesman for the coalition.

He sa i d that while he was not able to verify the document s, he added that “if there is a media outlet that has these names and numbers, I hope they publish them.”

That would help bring attention to the problem of foreign fighters joining IS and also would help authoritie­s to crack down on the problem, he said.

“This would allow the law enforcemen­t apparatus across the world to become much more engaged and begin to help do what we can to stem this flow of foreign fighters — so we’re hopeful that it’s accurate and, if so, we certainly plan to do everything we can to help,” he said.

Both Sky and Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung reported the documents were forms with 23 questions to be filled out by recruits when they were inducted into the Islamic State. Sky said they included nationals from at least 51 countries, including the U.S. and Britain.

 ??  ?? WARREN: Hopes media will publish the names
WARREN: Hopes media will publish the names

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