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Tags: LIGNET | Britain | anti-terrorism | counseling | Argentina | oil
England's Anti-Islamist Counseling Program 'Curing' Terrorists?
A French special police force prepares to enter an apartment in the 17th arrondissement of Paris where a man said he wanted to do 'like Mohamed Merah,' the killer of Toulouse, according to police sources. (Thomas Coex/AFP/Getty Images)

England's Anti-Islamist Counseling Program 'Curing' Terrorists?

By    |   Tuesday, 24 April 2012 01:26 PM EDT

Andy Polk, director of LIGNET’s London office, said this week that while the United States and the U.K. cooperate in preventing home-grown terrorism, the U.K. has more experience with radical ideologies, and a more effective way of dealing with would-be terrorists.

“The British have an intervention system,” said Polk. “So when they find someone who’s vulnerable or who is radicalizing, there’s actually a program that they can put them into, they can have a counselor who challenges world views.”

The counseling of aspiring terrorists is part of the U.K.’s counter-terrorism strategy, called CONTEST, which was brushed up and stepped up following the 2005 subway bombings in London that killed 52 and wounded 700. This was Britain’s wake-up call, and France, following the shootings of school children last month by French Algerian Mohammed Merah, is now looking to the U.K. as a model to combat home-grown terrorism.

The United States is looking to Britain also, says Polk, and considering a counseling program that could steer young American Muslims away from violent action.

Click here to read the full story and watch the interview with senior analyst Andy Polk at LIGNET.com.


Argentina: Oil Company Seizure May Doom Economy

Argentina seized the private oil company YPF last week from Spanish energy conglomerate Repsol in a brazen move designed to win popular approval for the government. But the seizure, which The Wall Street Journal called simply a “theft,” will hurt Argentina for years to come, scaring off foreign investment that is desperately needed to further develop the country’s oil and gas sector. So what was Argentina thinking?

Click here to read the full analysis from top intelligence experts at LIGNET.com.






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2012-26-24
Tuesday, 24 April 2012 01:26 PM
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