太子探花

ISIL uses child to kill in video

WASHINGTON — The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL, released a video Wednesday of an Israeli Arab teenager about to be executed. He allegedly confessed to being a mole for Mossad, the Israeli spy agency.

If the age of the 19-year-old executed in the video isn鈥檛 shocking enough, the age of the killer is: The trigger of a semi-automatic handgun is pulled at point-blank range by a 13-year-old French boy. After shooting him in the head, the unnamed boy pumps several more shots into the limp body of the victim.

The killing is presided over by Sabri Essid, the half-brother of Mohamed Merah, the perpetrator of the shooting spree that targeted French soldiers and Jewish civilians in Montauban and Toulouse, in the Midi-Pyr茅n茅es region of France, in March 2012.

Intelligence sources say Essid was arrested in late 2006 by U.S. forces on the Iraqi-Syrian border. He and Thomas Barnouin, both French nationals, were identified as members of the so-called “Toulouse network.” Essid spent about four years in Fleury-Merogis prison, near Paris.

He is out of prison and is standing next to the young shooter in the video.

ISIL and its sympathizers bragged about its 鈥淐ubs of the Caliphate鈥 program in recent online video postings, showing children as young as 6聽or 7 involved in training camps. The children are trained in firearms use and other military tactics before being dispatched to guard borders and facilities.

But the youngsters are not just fighting with ISIL; they are dying. According to ISIL defectors, they are used as human shields and suicide bombers.

Another 13-year-old, Abu Bakr al-Faransi, who traveled from a restive part of Strasbourg, in eastern France, to Syria with his family, was killed in mid-January while guarding a frontier post in Syria.

The lure of ISIL is confounding to some experts.

鈥淚 understand why Iraqis are participating — because for them, it鈥檚 the most important, most powerful source to fight the Shiite regime,鈥 said Petra Weyland, a lecturer at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies in Bavaria, Germany.

In an interview on the sidelines of the Marakesh Security Forum in February, Weyland admitted, 鈥淚 still don鈥檛 understand the phenomenon; I think it鈥檚 too new.鈥

She says she believes the draw for Europeans is not the same as for Middle Easterners. The driving force in Europe she said, is 鈥渢he Salafi environment, which is very, very, very attractive and it鈥檚 still gaining popularity.鈥

Salafism is a brand of Sunni Islam that condemns theological innovation and promotes practices that date back to the earliest times of Islam.

But prominent members of the Islamic community are warning against being deceived by the promises of radical jihadists.

鈥淎l-Qaida, ISIS and their ideological allies kill more Muslims than people of any other faith,鈥 said Corey Saylor, of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR).

CAIR, said Saylor, 鈥渋s a natural enemy of such violent extremists. CAIR and most Muslims worldwide understand that ISIL鈥檚 plain-old-wrong version of Islam is similar to Westboro Baptist鈥檚 sickening interpretation of Christianity.鈥

J.J. Green

JJ Green is WTOP's National Security Correspondent. He reports daily on security, intelligence, foreign policy, terrorism and cyber developments, and provides regular on-air and online analysis. He is also the host of two podcasts: Target USA and Colors: A Dialogue on Race in America.

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