Revealed: The secret emails helping to smuggle Britons into the war zone
3 minute read
British
militants are using a sophisticated ‘dead letter box’ system to smuggle
their way into Syria and Iraq to fight for Islamic State.
Terrorist
handlers are employing ‘silent’ email addresses that never actually
send messages, but instead contain instructions in the ‘drafts’ folder.
Would-be fighters are then moved from Europe undetected across the Turkish border to training camps in Syria.
Trail to terror: One man crosses the porous
border between Turkey and Syria. An estimated 500 Britons have travelled
to Syria and Iraq to fight and more than 250 are thought to have
returned to the UK
Turkish
authorities believe up to 20 Britons are currently waiting in safe
houses or hotels for the signal to cross over into Syria.
They
are among around 100 foreign militants that Turkey says are suspected
of being in a network of IS buildings waiting to be told they should
move on.
Intelligence
officers warn there has been an alarming increase in the number of
‘volunteers’ travelling from the UK since the IS proclaimed it has
established a caliphate stretching from Syria into Iraq.
With more
than 250 extremists said to have returned to the UK – 200 of them to
London – anti-terror specialists are involved in an exhaustive operation
to examine the entry records of all Britons entering Turkey with a £20
visa bought on arrival.
They
are cross-checking those who have left, how long they stayed and
whether they have overstayed the 90-day period of their visa, in a bid
to identify who may be in Syria, and who may have returned to the UK.
Some
are said to be trading passports with fellow fighters of similar age
and appearance to use when leaving Turkey, in order to confuse the
security services.
Threat: An IS fanatic waves the terror group's
flag in Raqqa, Syria. The group uses sophisticated system allows
handlers to pass on information to recruits without leaving an
electronic hallmark
Intelligence
agencies have learned would-be jihadists waiting in safe houses are
given a password to a free email address, which they access once a day
to find instructions left for them as draft messages.
Recruits
are told they must never send any emails from the account, but merely
read the drafts, then delete them. The sophisticated system allows
handlers to pass on information without leaving an electronic hallmark.
According
to officials in Ankara, the passwords are changed on a regular basis to
ensure the users are not tracked – and in case any new recruits are
actually sleeper agents for the security services.
Radical: Abdel-Majed Abdel Bary from London is among the Britons thought to be fighting in Syria
An
estimated 500 Britons have travelled to Syria and Iraq to fight. Some
believe the figure could be twice as high when including residents who
are also foreign nationals.
Communications
monitoring and analysis by specialists both inside Iraq and at GCHQ,
the Government’s spy headquarters in Cheltenham, is said to have
provided further evidence relating to Britons joining the IS jihad.
A
year ago, potential recruits would travel to Syria from the UK to
Turkey, often either as tourists on holiday packages to Istanbul or
Ankara. Now they are travelling via one or two other countries in a bid
to avoid suspicion at air and sea ports.
Militants
are told to travel to central European countries such as Germany,
Hungary, Serbia or Bosnia, wait a few days and then travel on,
preferably by road or train, to Turkey.
News
of IS’s complicated methods emerged amid reports that murdered
journalist James Foley was waterboarded during his time as the
jihadists’ prisoner.
The
American’s captors – believed to be British – appeared to model their
technique on that of the CIA, which waterboarded three terrorism
suspects captured after the September 11.
The
torture involves captives having water poured over their noses and
mouths until they feel as if they are suffocating, or being plunged
beneath the water in a bath.
Yesterday
Home Secretary Theresa May announced the terror threat to the UK has
been raised from substantial to severe meaning a terrorist attack in
‘highly likely’, as David Cameron unveiled plans to strip terror
suspects of their passports.
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