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Viewing cable 05PARIS482, JUDGE BRUGUIERE DISCUSSES ONGOING TERRORISM
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
05PARIS482 | 2005-01-27 09:09 | 2010-11-30 16:04 | SECRET | Embassy Paris |
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 PARIS 000482
SIPDIS
STATE FOR S/CT
E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/26/2014
TAGS: PREL PINR PTER FR
SUBJECT: JUDGE BRUGUIERE DISCUSSES ONGOING TERRORISM
CHALLENGES
REF: 04 PARIS 8760 AND PREVIOUS
Classified By: POLITICAL MINISTER COUNSELOR JOSIAH ROSENBLATT, FOR REAS
ONS 1.4 B/D
¶1. (S) Summary: During a January 24 lunch hosted by the
Ambassador, top terrorism investigating judge Jean-Louis
Bruguiere discussed a number of ongoing investigations he was
leading and also commented on a variety of terrorism-related
issues. He believed that 2005 would be a dangerous year,
given the expertise demonstrated during terrorist attacks in
2004, and thought in particular that Europe and Asia would be
targeted. End summary.
¶2. (SBU) Bruguiere heads the Paris-based section of
investigating judges that focus on terrorism issues. He and
fellow investigating judge Jean-Francois Ricard concentrate
on international and Islamic terrorism, while the other
investigating judges examine Basque, Corsican and
Breton-related terrorism. Bruguiere is by far the most
visible and media-savvy of the terrorism investigating
judges. Just in the past month, he has been the subject of
extensive profiles in Le Monde, a French center-left daily
newspaper, and the Financial Times.
---------------------
INTERNATIONAL THREATS
---------------------
¶3. (S) Bruguiere said he believed both Europe and Asia were
front-line targets for terrorism in 2005. One essential
problem with the European Union response, said Bruguiere, was
that different countries had different institutional
approaches to dealing with terrorist threats, despite the
fact that many EU states had open borders via the Schengen
agreement. He cited Germany and the Netherlands as two
countries whose legal and administrative institutions made
them difficult partners, despite their political will.
Bruguiere speculated that those countries with direct
experience of terrorism, such as the U.S., Spain, France and
the U.K., had more fully developed their counter-terrorism
capabilities. Potential terrorists knew which countries
offered comparatively greater protections, and they took
advantage of these opportunities within the EU, said
Bruguiere.
¶4. (S) Al-Qaida-linked terrorists demonstrated their ability
to strike within Europe not only during the Madrid bombings,
but also during the 2004 Istanbul bombings, said Bruguiere.
He noted that British financial and diplomatic institutions
were targeted in Istanbul at the exact time that President
Bush was in the U.K. Bruguiere also mentioned his ongoing
concern with the Caucasus and Chechnya. He believes that
al-Qaida terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has an extensive
network in the region. The Caucasus, said Bruguiere, are
only "a three-hour flight to Paris." In order to combat this
mosaic of threats, Bruguiere said European countries needed
to undertake two key actions: further sensitize their
populations and strengthen the crackdown on informal
financial networks, especially neighborhood storefronts and
Pakistani-origin hawalas.
¶5. (S) Bruguiere also cited Asia as a particular area of
concern. He and Ricard had discovered a Japan-based network
after arresting and interrogating French citizen and longtime
Japanese resident Lionel Dumont. Bruguiere said he believed
terrorism in Asia would target financial centers. He was
particularly concerned by the Pakistani-based terrorist
organization Lashkar-i-Tayyiba.
-----------------------
DOMESTIC INVESTIGATIONS
-----------------------
¶6. (S) Bruguiere and Ricard's investigation into French
nationals going to fight in Iraq (reftel) led to several
arrests in the morning of January 24, Bruguiere said
(additional reporting septel). He said their investigation
had found juveniles as young as 13 trying to reach Iraq.
Their investigation had not revealed formal recruitment
networks, said Bruguiere, but rather a number of autonomous
attempts to go on jihad to Iraq. The most common route for
those trying to reach Iraq was through Syria and its many
madrasas and other prayer centers. He noted that the
conflict in Iraq has emerged as a powerful recruitment tool
for terrorism.
¶7. (S) Responding to a question regarding false documents,
Bruguiere said that the market for French passports was quite
strong, but that French police were increasingly able to
detect false papers when they came across them. Passports
from Maghreb countries were also in demand, said Bruguiere,
because holders of such passports were given visa-free entry
rights to Middle East countries, especially Syria. Bruguiere
said he remained confident regarding the ongoing trial of
Djamel Beghal and four of Beghal's associates. (The "Beghal
network" is accused of plotting to bomb the U.S. Embassy in
Paris.) Bruguiere said he had heard from prosecutorial
sources that Beghal's defense was not going well.
¶8. (C) Bruguiere praised U.S.-French counter-terrorism
cooperation, and said he looked forward to continuing the
strong relationship his office had with USG interlocutors.
Leach