EuropeSyria

Hundreds of European Fighters Joined Syria Rebels

syrian-rebelsHundreds of Europeans have travelled to Syria since and joined the rebels there, the most comprehensive study of European foreign fighters to date has found.

A year-long survey by King’s College London of more than two hundred posts on extremists-linked websites and hundreds of Arab and western press reports found that up to 600 individuals from 14 countries including the UK, Austria, Spain, Sweden and Germany had taken part in the conflict since it began in 2011.

The largest contingent, the study found, came from the UK, with estimates of fighters running between 28 and 134.

Based on their populations, the figures for Belgium, the Netherlands and Ireland, with about 200 fighters between them, made these countries the most significant, the lead researcher, Prof Peter Neumann from the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation (ICSR) at King’s College, said.

European fighters made up to between 7% and 11% of the foreign contingent in Syria, which ranged between 2,000 and 5,500 people. The researchers also said there were likely to be at least 110 named Europeans engaged in fighting currently.

They found that between 30 and 92 fighters were from France, between 14 and 85 from Belgium and between five and 107 from the Netherlands. Other nations in the study included Albania, Finland and Kosovo.
“No one has really mapped it out across all of Europe,” Neumann said. “We’ve brought all these figures together … it’s a compilation of the open source data. We can say with certainty now that hundreds of Europeans have joined the fight in Syria.”

Neumann said the figures, though relatively small, showed how fast international extremists had been mustered in response to the conflict.
“The mobilization of this conflict is more significant than any of the recent conflict we have known about,” he said.

“The numbers are still quite small in terms of the overall percentage but in absolute numbers I think it is higher now than any other conflict since Iraq. But Iraq went on for years and years. But here we have in the space of a year effectively – since early 2012 – you can already speak of thousands of [foreign fighters]. In Iraq that took two or three years to reach that point so it is really significant.”

In February, the team discovered a post detailing the death of Ibrahim al-Mazwagi – a 21-year-old British-raised Libyan who had been killed in fighting in Syria.
A photo of Mazwagi, who has been recorded as the first Briton killed fighting in Syria, showed him wearing the team shirt of his university American football team, the Hertfordshire Hurricanes.
The team coach Jim Messenger said Mazwagi stopped playing a year ago after he went to fight first in Libya before moving on to Syria.

In the research for a forthcoming publication, The Syrian Jihad: How Al-Qaida Survived the Arab Spring, the ICSR team also uncovered 249 foreign fighter death notices, of which eight were for Europeans.
Neumann said the notices were an important source of information as extremist groups, like most conventional military outfits, detailed their dead. “It sends an important message to people who are thinking of getting involved … that no one gets forgotten.”

Neumann said that in light of the findings it was wrong for the UK government to focus on Mali and the Sahel region.
Recently the prime minister, David Cameron, said al-Qaida-linked groups in the Sahel represented an “existential terrorist threat” to UK interests.

Neumann said: “We have been so preoccupied with Mali … the real story is Syria because people aren’t going to the Sahara. If you put yourself in the mind of a extremist, you want to fight in the heart of the Arab world.”

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