Muslim leaders, for their part, have blamed “Islamophobia”. “Germany says Islamic terrorism still a threat,” by David Rising for the Associated Press, July 1 (thanks to JCB):
BERLIN (AP) “” Germany’s top security official said Friday that the terrorist threat to the country hasn’t decreased and the number of radicals continues to grow, even with the death of Osama bin Laden.
Security officials saw no reason to lower Germany’s threat level following the death of the al-Qaida leader, said Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich, presenting the annual report by Germany’s domestic intelligence agency.
“The Islamist terrorist threat is widely varied and has not concentrated on a single leader of al-Qaida for a long time,” he said.
“We have had a general threat situation in Germany and Europe that has not changed for two years, but there are no concrete dangers.”
Though there have been several unsuccessful or foiled attacks by Islamic radicals in Germany, the first fatalities attributed to a Muslim extremist came this year in March when a 21-year-old Kosovo-born ethnic Albanian allegedly gunned down two U.S. airmen outside Frankfurt’s airport.
Overall, the number of people in Germany linked to radical Islamic groups rose to 37,470 in Germany in 2010, up from 36,270 the year before, according to the report from the Office for the Protection of the Constitution.
Most of those “” 31,370 “” were connected to Turkish groups, nearly all of them in Milli Gorus, a group whose founder advocates creating an Islamic state in Turkey.
Most worrying was the increase in numbers in “Salafi” groups that espouse an ultraconservative interpretation of Islam and have been especially successful at recruiting young people, said Heinz Fromm, who heads the domestic intelligence agency.
He noted that the suspect in the March killing of the two U.S. airmen outside Frankfurt’s airport had allegedly been inspired by watching Salafi videos online.
“Not every Salafi is a terrorist but almost every terrorist that we are aware of has had contact with a Salafi,” Fromm said….
And where are Salafis getting their material from? They are not making it up, but seeking to imitate Muhammad and his first generation of followers to the letter, as even this prior media report on Salafism in Germany acknowledges: “Salafism is a strict adherence to the Koran and the earliest principles of Islam.” They must have gotten a bad batch of decoder rings.