The New Observer
April 29, 2016
The European Police network has “lost track” of more than 2,000 ISIS fighters who have returned to Europe from Syria, EU Counter-terrorism Coordinator Gilles de Kerchove has admitted.
Speaking before an EU interior ministers’ meeting in Luxembourg, De Kerchove also said that there were “significant gaps” in their intelligence.”
Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the architect of the attacks in Paris.
The nonwhites—all legal residents of Europe, granted access to that continent by race-denying governments—all left to go and join ISIS.
“There are still significant gaps in the information being fed to Europol,” De Kerchove’s report said, referring to data on “foreign terrorist fighters who travel abroad and are then at risk of returning to their countries of origin to carry out more attacks.”
The European police organization’s database included the names of “only” 2,956 foreign fighters even though official estimates indicate that roughly 5,000 EU citizens have traveled to Syria to fight for ISIS.
More than 90 percent of the names found in the database were submitted in 2015 by just five of the 28 EU member states, he added.
“Another database—the European Information System—contained just 1,615 names, he continued.
“The Paris and Brussels attacks seem to indicate that some, if not most, of the attackers were known to police [and] there also seem to be links to several other member states.”
What De Kerchove did not say—but which is obvious from his report—is that the European state intelligence agencies were all well aware of the terrorist danger posed by these nonwhite invaders—but refused to do anything about them.
To make matters worse, they then allowed thousands of these already identified terrorists back into Europe, either through legal channels, or, as shown by the Paris and Brussels attacks, through the Angela Merkel-created fake refugee invasion of 2015.
The final insult, as revealed by De Kerchove, is that they now do not even know where thousands of these nonwhites are, or what they are planning.
“This gap between the numbers means that some EU Member States do not feed all their information into common databases,” De Kerchove admitted.
“Thus, dangerous individuals are able to get away with it without being detected.”
In Germany, for example, Die Welt newspaper reported, the authorities estimate that there are a minimum of “800 dangerous returnees.”