The Islamic Terrorist Threat in Canada Written by: Lt. Col. (ret.) Jonathan D. Halevi
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper was severely criticized for stating two years ago, a decade after 9/11, that the biggest security threat to Canada is Islamic terrorism. In an interview with CBC News, Harper said: “There are other threats out there, but that is the one that I can tell you occupies the security apparatus most regularly in terms of actual terrorist threats.” “The major threat is still Islamicism.”1 Public Safety Canada’s annual Public Report on the Terrorist Threat to Canada in 2012 acknowledged that no attacks occurred within Canada in 2012, but the likelihood of terrorism within Canada has increased in the past year due to external radical influences, particularly al-Qaeda and its affiliates, as well as from Canadian individuals travelling abroad to participate in Jihadi terrorist activity.2 The Canadian government is accused by some of its detractors of fanning Islamophobia and falsely highlighting the threat of “Islamic terrorism” on political and ideological grounds. They maintain that Muslim terrorists do not represent true Islam, that they misinterpret Islam, and are a small minority within the general Muslim population in Canada. How serious is the threat of homegrown Islamic terrorism in Canada? Are we witnessing an ever-increasing trend as asserted by the government and the security apparatuses, or are these simply marginal individuals as government critics allege? In order to examine this question, we shall introduce the facts that are not in dispute. Since July 2012 there have been several reported cases of Canadian citizens involved in terrorist activity, or suspected of participating in terrorism, or enlisting with semi-military groups, some of which are affiliated with al-Qaeda in Syria. Here is a detailed list of those individuals: July 2012 – Hassan El Hajj Hassan, holding dual nationality, Canadian and Lebanese, Hizbullah activist, member of the terrorist cell that bombed an Israeli tourist bus in Bulgaria. July 2012 – William Plotnikov, 23, Canadian of Russian descent. Converted to Islam and joined a terrorist group in Dagestan. Killed in gun battle with Russian security forces. November 2012 – Hussam Samir al-Hams, Canadian of Palestinian descent, enlisted with Hamas’ alQassam Brigades. Killed during IDF operation in Gaza. 1
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/harper-says-islamicism-biggest-threat-to-canada-1.1048280
2
http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/trrrst-thrt-cnd/index-eng.aspx