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Right: the emblem of Army of the Nation, Jerusalem . The inscription reads: “There is no other God but Allah and Muhammad is the Prophet of Allah” (the Shahada ). The flagpole is a sniper rifle held by a hand emerging from an open book (probably the Quran). Left: some of the group's masked, armed, and uniformed operatives at a press conference in Khan Yunis (source: the group's website, January 2008). |
Overview
1. Following the Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip (June 2007) and against the backdrop of the fast process of Islamization,1 there has been an increase in the propaganda (and, at times, operative) activities of small Islamic groups associated with Al-Qaeda and the global jihad (see Appendix for details). One of those terrorist groups is Army of the Nation, Jerusalem ,2 which operates in the northern and southern Gaza Strip. Such terrorist groups, in fact, are the vanguard force of the global jihad vis-à-vis Israel .
2. The Army of the Nation group was officially established some two years ago. According to Abu Hafs, one of the group's leaders, it operated in secret for several years before its establishment (Al-Ayyam, January 12). The group, which considers all Muslims to be part of the greater nation of Islam, defines itself as a purely Islamic organization, and thus avoids embracing Palestinian national characteristics. Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, on the other hand, portray themselves as Islamic organizations but also wish to achieve national Palestinian goals. Bayt al-Maqdis, the last component of the group's name, comes from the name of the city of Jerusalem as it appears in Islamic texts and is probably meant to emphasize the group's Islamic aspect ( Jerusalem being the third most important place for Islam, after the cities of Mecca and Medina in the Arabian Peninsula ).
3. Recently, one may observe in the Gaza Strip a process in which groups associated with the global jihad are becoming publicly active. This process reflects the trend of religious Islamic extremism currently prevailing on the Palestinian scene, and particularly in the Gaza Strip. The ideology of the global jihad penetrates into the Gaza Strip mostly through Internet websites associated with global jihad groups. The spread of extremism is also accompanied by terrorist activity aimed both against Israel as well as Palestinian and Western elements in the Gaza Strip, perceived by radicals as offensive to Islam.
4. The breach of the Palestinian-Egyptian border fence and the mass pouring of Palestinians to Sinai and back to the Gaza Strip make it easier, in our assessment, for global jihad elements based in the Sinai Peninsula to strengthen their hold of the Gaza Strip. It should be mentioned that recently, Abu Abd al-Rahman al-Ansari, the group's information chief in the Gaza Strip, called upon jihad warriors across the globe to take advantage of the breached border in order to get to the Gaza Strip (the global jihad associated Al-Hisba forum, January 24). Strengthening the hold of global jihad elements in the Gaza Strip poses a challenge to the Hamas movement, which still prefers not to suppress the activity of global jihad elements in the Gaza Strip by force.
Overview of the group's ideology
5. Most of the information about the group is based on interviews with Abu Hafs al-Maqdisi, who refers to himself as one of the group's leaders. In the interviews, in which he frequently uses Islamic terminology, he emphasizes two main principles espoused by the group:
a. Liberating the land and the holy places through armed struggle: “…the Army of the Nation considers itself part of the jihadic Islamic movement, whose goal is to establish the rule of Allah in Palestine and liberate the lands of Al-Isra' and Al-Mi'raj,3 to take up jihad as way to pull the nation out of its humiliation and backwardness…” (Al-Ayyam, January 12, 2008).

The beloved Palestine is crying—they killed my sons, burned my land,
and defiled my holy places (the group's website)
b. Replacing the “infidel secular democracy” and moving closer to Islam by instating Islamic religious law. “We come from a purely Islamic worldview and consider ourselves to be part of the Muslims across the globe, including America, India, and China; if Palestine should be liberated, our war of jihad will continue until the law of Allah is imposed in the entire world” (interview granted by Abu Hafs al-Maqdisi, one of the group's leaders, to Al-Ayyam). 4
6. According to Abu Hafs al-Maqdisi, the group has “thousands of operatives” from the Gaza Strip, Judea and Samaria , and even Israel . He says that most of the group's operatives are warriors who acquired combat experience while being members of the terrorist-operative wings of the various Palestinian terrorist organizations, such as the Al-Quds Brigades of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), and Fatah's Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades. We believe that the number of operatives mentioned by Al-Maqdisi is exaggerated. It may be assumed that most of them are located in the Gaza Strip, which currently serves as a convenient setting for the activity of global jihad elements.
7. A propaganda clip released by the group has similar characteristics to propaganda clips of global jihad organizations. The clip, aiming to encourage the recruitment of youngsters, shows some 35-40 of the group's operatives as they undergo military training and sing songs of jihad. The training includes small arms, machine guns, rocket launchers, and bombs. Parts of the clip were filmed in Beit Hanoun, in the northern Gaza Strip (CBN, November 8, 2007).

A frame from the clip showing Army of the Nation operatives on military training
(found on the group's website since July 2007, one month after the Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip)
8. The group's operatives describe themselves as “jihadic salafis”,5 whose goal is to instate the rule of Islam across the entire globe. They declare that their purpose is to kill Jews (particularly by attacking the State of Israel), Americans, and Christians, and to die as martyrs. The group claimed responsibility for several incidents of rocket fire on western Negev population centers, such as the Al-Qa'qa rocket6 fired on Sderot (Maan News Agency, November 20, 2007).
Propaganda
9. On January 9, 2008, Army of the Nation held a press conference in Khan Yunis in which it revealed itself for the first time to inter-Arab media. At the press conference, Army of the Nation spokesmen protested against President Bush's visit to the Middle East and even threatened to assassinate him. In a show of strength, Army of the Nation operatives paraded in uniform and with Kalashnikov rifles and RPG-7 launchers. The operatives wore black headbands with the text “Jaysh al-Ummah” or red headbands (symbolizing blood, i.e., willingness for martyrdom) with the inscription “‘ Asbat al-Mawt” (the [red] headband of death).7

Army of the Nation operatives at a press conference in Khan Yunis (the group's website)

Typical uniform worn by Army of the Nation operatives (the group's website)
Army of the Nation’s Internet website
The homepage of the group's website (www.alamanh.net). The large text on the bottom reads: “The Jihadic Bayt al-Maqdis Network”. The Internet is used as an important means of conveying messages and spreading the ideology of global jihad organizations. |
10. Similarly to other terrorist groups associated with the global jihad, Army of the Nation operates a website at www.alamanh.net. Among other things, the website provides information on the group's concepts and worldviews, ideological articles, pictures, and clips. The website also publishes claims of responsibility for the group's activities, including launching RPG rockets, mortar bombs, and Al-Qa'qa rockets on Sderot and other Israeli towns and villages. According to Abu Hafs, the website was opened about a year ago but was shut down by the Americans. The website promises that a forum for web surfers will be opened soon. The website is serviced by a company based in Cairo .

Claims of responsibility for shooting attacks that appear on the group's website
11. Due to the importance of the Internet as a means for reports, conveying messages, and spreading ideology, the group intends to develop its website. Published recently on the first page of the website was a wanted ad, inviting people from all Muslim countries to become reporters for the website. According to the ad, candidates should be:
a. Sunni Muslims reflecting the overall Islamic consensus.
b. Knowledgeable in Islamic law and culture.
c. Able to provide accurate, faithful reports.
Army of the Nation's holiday poster
A holiday poster produced by Army of the Nation on the occasion of the month of Ramadan. The title reads: “Army of the Nation sends its best wishes to the Muslim nation and to the people of murabitun8 [i.e., the Palestinian people] as the blessed month of Ramadan is upon us” |
Appendix
Other terrorist groups associated with the global jihad that operate in the Gaza Strip
Army of Islam
12 . In the course of the past year, there has been an increase in the activities of groups associated with the global jihad in the Gaza Strip. The most visible example for the penetration of an ideology of a terrorist group associated with the global jihad is the Army of Islam, headed by Mumtaz Dughmush, which is in fact an Al-Qaeda branch in the Gaza Strip.
13. Since the official announcement of its establishment (June 2006), the Army of Islam adopted ideological worldviews and patterns of action associated with the global jihad. Among the group's most prominent actions is the terrorist attack in Kerem Shalom (June 2006) which led to the killing of two IDF soldiers and the abduction of IDF soldier Gilad Shalit. The group won international attention following the abduction of British journalist Alan Johnston (March 2007) and his release following pressure exerted by Hamas (July 2007). 9

Mumtaz Dughmush (right) with one of his operatives
(Hamas forum, January 24, 2007)
Other groups
14. Lately, a group calling itself “Fath al-Islam in the Land of Ribat ”10 claimed responsibility for firing on Kibbutz Yad Mordechai (the global jihad's Ana al-Muslim forum, January 12). It is a terrorist group operating in Lebanon and is a branch of the global jihad. It was headquartered in the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in northern Lebanon , where it was suppressed by the Lebanese army (September 2007). Recently, it started claiming responsibility for terrorist attacks perpetrated from the Gaza Strip (mostly firing rockets and mortar shells). Other minor groups that operate in the Gaza Strip and are associated with the global jihad are Abu Rish Brigades—Sword of Islam and The Jerusalem Jihad Warriors Movement.
15. It should be noted that not only Israeli sites are targeted by groups associated with the global jihad in the Gaza Strip, but also sites in the Gaza Strip associated with the West. For some time, groups associated with the global jihad have been attacking Internet cafés across the Gaza Strip. Furthermore, during President Bush's visit in Israel and in the Palestinian Authority (January 9-11, 2008), a group calling itself “Army of the Believers—the Al-Qaeda Organization in Palestine ” claimed responsibility for two attacks on the American International School in Gaza .11