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What do the New Zealand stabbings tell us about terrorism?

In a world where everyone has concluded that the only threat to the West comes from the ‘far right’, a series of stabbings in New Zealand reminds us this is not 100% accurate.

I have always found the ‘news cycle’ fascinating. 

We collectively seem incapable of maintaining interest in one particular item for very long, preferring to move on to the next big ‘story’. It is as if we are fascinated for a short while by thing A before – ‘squirrel!!’ – we move on to thing B.

A recent violent incident in New Zealand brought all this to the fore. On September 3 a Somali Kiwi named Ahamed Aathill Mohamed Samsudeen took a knife from a store in Auckland and went on a stabbing spree, wounding seven people before he was shot dead by police.

Here is where it gets interesting.

The man, who had been in NZ since 2011 was a radicalised Islamist extremist who had unsuccessfully to leave his adopted homeland to join Islamic State (ISIS). He was known to the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS – an agency I have had many dealings with) and NZ police as early as 2016. He was initially arrested at Auckland airport in 2017, believed to be on his way to Syria. He was actively under surveillance, although the suspect was ‘surveillance conscious’ and surveillants had to maintain a certain distance to be ‘effective’. Authorities had tried to get him put away when it became clear he was planning an act of terrorism in NZ, having failed in his quest to leave to join ISIS, but were told by the court that was not enough to keep him incarcerated.

As a result, seven people are recovering from a traumatic stabbing.

There are three aspects of this story worth elaborating on. 

Firstly, while the incident received a lot of media coverage in NZ, and around the world, for a few days, it almost immediately fell off the radar as ‘squirrel!! – something else took its place. This was very unlike the 2019 massacre of Muslims in Christchurch, on NZ’s South Island, which is still being talked about.

I know what many of you will say. The cold-blooded murder of 51 people at prayer by a white supremacist obviously and justifiably deserves more coverage and attention than the ‘mere wounding’ of seven white people, and in that you are probably right.

Memorial to those lost in Christchurch (Photo: Bernard Spragg. NZ on flickr, CC PMD 1.0)

To me, however, this difference in resulting media fascination reflects something more worrisome, something I have been commenting on for years. It is clear, at least the way I see it, that many in the West have ‘moved on’ from the terrorist threat posed by Islamist extremists and are now convinced the only one of note is that from the far right (usually termed Right-Wing Extremism – RWE).

This shift in our gaze flies in the face of the simple fact that the vast, vast, vast majority of actual attacks in the world today, including in most Western nations, are still carried out by jihadis: if you don’t believe me follow me on Twitter (@borealissaves) where I cover terrorism daily.

It is as if we are being told “Nothing to see here folks, move on!”  Why on earth would the media do this?  And no, I am not a conspiracy theorist suggesting some nefarious plot to hide the truth: I am just curious why something so obvious is being ignored. Do YOU have any ideas as to why?

RELATED: Borealis discuses the Christchurch attack and the threat of RWE

Secondly, in the wake of the attack there was an immediate focus, not on the victims, but on the mental state of the terrorist. Many weighed in that he was ill, that he was not criminally responsible for his actions as a result. I found this most curious. Whether he was indeed psychologically damaged is a matter beyond my ken, but when in the past we did see the odd RWE attack and everyone jumped on the mental illness bandwagon they were accused of dismissing the seriousness of the action because the perpetrator was white. If it was wrong then why is it not wrong now? Is it because the attacker was a Muslim? Why are we ignoring the fact that 99% of terrorists are, at least nominally, ‘Muslim’ (they may not practice normative Islam but it IS a form of Islam). Btw this could be linked to a movement to stop using the phrase ‘Islamist extremism’ and replace it with the anodyne and meaningless dribble IMVE (ideologically motivated violent extremism).

Lastly, we need to turn to the question of who was responsible for this incident – beyond the knife-wielder that is.  As always, when people are hurt or killed in an event of this nature, there is a hue and cry of ‘intelligence failure!’  If Samsudeen was able to stab six innocent Kiwis the fault clearly lies at the feet of NZSIS and the police.

Except that NZSIS knew of him five years ago, had him under surveillance and efforts were made to have him out away BEFORE he tried to act on his violent ideology.  It was the NZ COURT, not the NZSIS/police, which said that intelligence pointing to plans to launch an attack was insufficient to hold him in custody (WTF??). The NZ PM, Jacinda Ardern, has pledged to look into amending legislation to remedy that (ya think?): after the stabbings she said “This was a violent attack…It was senseless, and I’m so sorry it happened.”  If anything, this was a LEGAL failure, not an intelligence one.

Conclusion

In the end, we have yet another terrorist spree by an Islamist terrorist in a Western nation and it is by the grace of god that no one died. This is in keeping with 99%+ of all such attacks around the world. No matter what the media tells you, jihadis still constitute THE #1 terrorist threat on our blue planet.

Best not to forget that.

Read More About Islamist Extremism

By Phil Gurski

Phil Gurski is the President and CEO of Borealis Threat and Risk Consulting Ltd. Phil is a 32-year veteran of CSE and CSIS and the author of six books on terrorism.

2 replies on “What do the New Zealand stabbings tell us about terrorism?”

Phil, you have raised not just an interesting question but quite a disturbing one as well. The fact that such complete disregard is a systemic phenomenon suggests something more than a specific cause or a singular disorder at work. When Islamic terrorism first began to dominate the world screen several decades ago I detected an unease throughout Canadian society at the fact that such terrorism was directly linked to a religion. That anxiety arose from logical fears that deep behind the unopened “curtains” of history lurked numerous ”skeletons” belonging to the various churches in Canada. Indeed, the sexual abuses uncovered in the 1980’s in the Roman Catholic Church in Newfoundland led to not only additional revelations of still more such abuses there but soon spread to like revelations in other churches and related organizations. In our own time we have witnessed the stunning revelations of the abuses heaped upon the indigenous peoples by the Christian churches. At the same time the Christian Churches, to this point, have largely escaped any well-deserved censures due to the paucity of academically produced works on those same organizations. The study of Church history in Canada is still In its infancy. When the forensic lens is focused on a particular Religion and/or Church, then It becomes natural for the remainder to assume a defensive posture by either ignoring their guilt by smudging the lens or redirecting it elsewhere. It is my personal view that such behavior as allowing Islamic extremism to flourish “below the radar” is part of the phenomenon I have outlined above.

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