Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World
by Stewart Bell ISBN: 0470834633
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism Around the World by Michelle BedardCold Terror is a frightening book, and I am genuinely afraid for
the safety of Stewart Bell who is Canada's leading reporter on
national security and terrorism. He has bravely produced an important
book warning Canada, and indeed the Western World, about "the
terrorists who use Canada as a base; the carnage they cause around
the world; and the political leaders in Ottawa who let it all
happen." This is a timely and well researched book which exposes
the world's deadliest terrorist organisations and how they have
used Canada as a base. The powerful Canadian Islamic Congress has
already labelled Bell as being "anti-Islamic"; and he has
to date survived numerous threats by the secretive terror networks
operating inside Canada. I am certain that this book will further
intensify dangerous focus on the author's life. He is a brave man
who takes us not only into the secret working of the Armenian and
Sikh groups of the 1980s but to the present day Tamil Tigers,
Hezbollah and Al Qaeda. Bell has also followed the trail of terror
travelling deep into Sri Lanka, Israel and Afghanistan to report
on the carnage caused by Canadian terrorism. Indeed the trail has
already led us from the 1985 Air India bombing to the assassination
of Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi of India in 1991; the 1993 World
Trade Centre bombing in New York; and the assassination of Sri
Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa in 1993. The 1995 bombing
of the Egyptian Embassy in Islamabad; the 1998 blasting of the U.S.
Embassy in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam; and the horrific 2002 Bali
night club bombings add to the gruesome list of bloody consequences.
More and more roads to terrorism start and finish in Canada, and
Bell gives full details of some of the terrorists who have taken
advantage of Canada's liberal immigration and refugee policies. The
first two chapters of this terrifying treatise deal with the domestic
wars that characterised the early days of Canadian terrorism. In
these two chapters the extraordinary stories of two Canadian Sikhs:
Talwinder Singh Parmar and Ajaib Singh Bagri are discussed with the
events that led to the Air India disaster in 1985 when 329 people
died. The second chapter deals with Marickavasagar Suresh-the
notorious Canadian leader of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(known as the LTTE or Tamil Tigers)-certainly one of the world's
deadliest terrorist groups, and the only one to have assassinated
two world leaders: Rajiv Gandhi of India and Sri Lankan President
Ranasinghe Premadasa.
Bell's third chapter examines the Canadian activities of Middle
East terrorist groups, focusing on Hezbollah. In it Bell recounts
the unnerving story of how Mahmoud Mohammed Issa Mohammed, a member
of The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)- known
as "Triple M" had somehow slipped through the CSIS (Canadian
Security Intelligence Service) security barrier and settled in
Ontario with his family, despite having taken part in a deadly
assault on an El Al passenger plane in Athens in 1968.
The final four chapters of Bell's book deal with the rise of the
Canadian Al Qaeda network. Bell provides terrifying details of Fateh
Kamel and the organisation of a base for Algerian extremists in
Montreal; and the poisonous Kassem Dahar, a now imprisoned theatre
owner in Western Canada who is almost certainly tied to one of the
most important branches of the Canadian Al Qaeda network, the
Egyptian wing. An important chapter is devoted to the Almed Said
Khadr Canadian family who have exploited CIDA (The Canadian
International Development Agency)-the humanitarian aid arm of the
Canadian government, to raise money to finance the formidable Al
Qaeda terrorist force in the mid 1990s as well as world-wide jihad
violence. Curiously, the then Prime Minister, Jean Chretien, was
the key influence in Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto's 1996 decision
to free Khadr, then imprisoned in Pakistan, without charges, allowing
his safe return to Toronto where he continued to his Afhganistan
involvement with the Taliban regime.
In a final chapter entitled "White Meat"-the Al Qaeda
code name for Americans-Bell recounts the story of the two brothers
Mohammed and Abdulrahman Jabarah who operated their radical Islamic
group in support of Al Qaeda out of St. Catherines in Ontario.
Abdulrahman was killed by Saudi security authorities following an
attempt on a housing complex in Riyadh. However his elder brother,
now imprisoned by CSIS agents and brought back to Canada in 2002,
decided to give full details about the extent of Al Qaeda's terrorist
operation in Canada rather than face criminal charges for terrorism,
extradition, and a lengthy prison term. Thus "one of the most
dangerous terrorists to emerge from Canada became one of its most
valuable contributions to the war on terrorism."
Canada has a new Prime Minister now, Paul Martin, who was re-elected
with the narrowest of minority governments earlier this summer. He
succeeds Prime Minister Jean Chretien whose nave liberal regime
never displayed any understanding of the terrorist threat in Canada.
However Paul Martin's own record is far from unblemished. As Finance
Minister, he "oversaw heavy cuts to Canada's military and
intelligence capabilities and, when asked to defend his government's
approach to counterterrorism, he repeatedly shut down the debate
by calling his critics racists. In fact Martin, hungry for votes,
supported and attended a FACT (Federation Association of Canadian
Tamils) dinner in Toronto despite being warned by CSIS (the Canadian
Security Intelligence Service) that FACT was an LTTE (Tamil Tiger)
front. The Liberal Government's plan in Canada is "to fight
Al Qaeda with humanitarian aid." Prime Minister Chretien
repeated this theory to the United Nations as recently as September
2003, arguing that, to fight terrorism, the world had to "reduce
the growing disparity between rich and poor. Global security and
stability today depend on greater equity." This, as Bell points
out, is a ridiculously nave approach. Islamic fanaticism is not
about money. Far from it. "Osama bin Laden is not poor. He
is worth $300 million. He could have spent it on the poor. Instead
he used it to finance jihad. The 9/11 hijackers were middle class,
university educated professionals. They were not short of cash, nor
were they motivated by poverty. They were driven by hatred and the
twisted ideology of radical terrorism."
Bell's conclusion to Cold Terror gives further serious warning-particularly
to those nations that are most open and least attuned to the terrorist
threat. He feels that they will become the most likely havens just
as Canada is today-a country that "takes in immigrants and
refugees from all over the world-many of them from zones of
conflict." An RCMP intelligence report, concerned with the
recruitment of terrorists from within Canadian ethnic communities,
alarmingly notes that "17 percent of Canada's population is
foreign born, as opposed to 9 percent in the United States"-making
Canada much more vulnerable to harbouring terrorist activities than
other developed nations. "Canada" the author feels "has
tried to smother terrorism with kindness . The mistakes that
contributed to the "made in Canada" bombing by militant
Sikhs in British Columbia in the 1980's are now being repeated with
the Tamil Tigers, Hezbollah and Al Qaeda."
Stewart Bell's book Cold Terror is a demand for immediate action.
Every responsible resident of Canada, America, Britain and in fact
the Western World, should read this meticulously researched warning
and learn the truth about the imminent danger facing them from
Canadian based terrorists. And I include Britain with intent because
the recent lenient government immigration policy there may well
have already spawned a safe haven for terrorists in that country
as well.
Bell's book, if nothing else, is a chilling indictment of Canadian
government policies and its irresponsible attitude towards harbouring
terrorist organisations.
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