Officials: U.S. wants to know how ISIS recruited 3 Denver teens
November 13, 2014 -- Updated 1444 GMT (2244 HKT)
Investigators have
studied Twitter and other social media activities of the Colorado girls,
particularly the eldest, who was active online discussing her gradual
turn to conservative Islam.
The case has yielded a
trove of evidence that shows how ISIS is using Westerners already among
its fold to directly communicate with new recruits via social media, the
officials said.
The FBI is homing in on specific online recruiters, including some believed to be in Turkey, and others in Syria and Iraq.
.
What are female jihadis looking for?
These recruiters help
provide how-to guides for Westerners who are inclined to travel and join
the ISIS fight, the officials said. A law enforcement official said the
recruiters were giving the teenage girls a road map of how to make it
from Denver to Syria.
"It's alarming that
American youths are being radicalized to such a degree they're willing
to jump into the great unknown," one official said.
Even after identifying
those recruiters, however, the next step remains difficult: trying to
find a way to arrest them. Most are thought to be out of reach of U.S.
law enforcement.
Last month, a girl of Sudanese descent and two girls of Somali descent skipped school in the Denver area and flew to Germany with plans to continue to Turkey, authorities said.
The girls, 17, 15 and
15, wanted to join ISIS, the militant Islamist group, authorities said.
One of their parents noticed his daughter's passport missing and
contacted authorities, who stopped the three girls in Germany and sent
them back to the United States.
About 2,000 Westerners have gone to fight in Syria, though not all for ISIS, a CIA source told CNN last month.
ISIS recruitment efforts have posed a challenge to the FBI and other agencies trying to find a way to stop such recruitment.
Unlike past
radicalization cases, the FBI hasn't found a U.S. recruitment network
connecting ISIS to recruits. Instead they're finding, as in the Colorado
case, more diffuse connections.
U.S. officials said
friends of the Colorado teens noticed them change from seemingly
carefree westernized high-schoolers to devout Muslims who rejected old
friends and the regular cares of girls their age.
But no one called attention to it until after the girls disappeared and became the subject of news stories.
Officials said that
while these teens decided to travel "on their own," and were not forced
into anything, this case reflects the larger phenomenon of American
teens being lured to fight with ISIS through social media.
UK spy chief Robert Hannigan has said
ISIS and other extremist groups use such platforms as Twitter, Facebook
and WhatsApp to reach their target audience in a language they
understand,
Their methods include
making use of popular hashtags for other stories in the news, such as
Ebola or the World Cup, to disseminate their message, he said. They
create slick videos and have learned that showing the full extent of
their brutality turns people off, he said, hence their posting of videos
of beheadings that stop short of showing the moment of death.
No comments:
Post a Comment