Tibi calls on Israeli Arabs not to join Islamic State that ‘distorts Islamic religion’

“Stay with us...We want you here to live in order to build an open and strong society and not to die for a group that commits crimes.”

MK Ahmed Tibi (UAL - Ta'al) in the Knesset. (photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)
MK Ahmed Tibi (UAL - Ta'al) in the Knesset.
(photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)
Ta’al Party chairman MK Ahmed Tibi has called on Israeli Arab youth not to join Islamic State.
“This group distorts the Islamic religion, whose members did and do more damage to Islam than Islamophobes in the West,” Tibi told The Jerusalem Post on Saturday night, saying he had made the same statement at a gathering of the joint Arab list in Nazareth earlier in the day.
“Stay with us,” Tibi said he told the group, adding, “We want you here to live in order to build an open and strong society and not to die for a group that commits crimes.”
Tibi’s comment came after Islamic State said on Thursday it is holding an Israeli Arab who had posed as a foreign fighter in order to spy for the Mossad, an account denied by Israel and by the man’s family, who said he had been kidnapped.
In an interview published by Islamic State’s online English-language magazine, Dabiq, Muhammad Musallam, 19, said he had joined the insurgent group in Syria so as to report to the Israelis on its weapons caches, bases, and Palestinian recruits.
After his conduct aroused the suspicion of Islamic State commanders, Musallam he allegedly broke cover by phoning his father in Jerusalem, leading to his capture.
“I say to all those who want to spy on Islamic State, don’t think that you’re so smart and that you can deceive Islamic State. You won’t succeed at all,” he said, according to Dabiq. “Stay away from this path. Stay away from helping the Jews and the murtaddin (apostates). Follow the right path.”
Musallam’s father, Said, denied his son was a spy, saying he went missing after traveling as a tourist to Turkey.
Muhammad then phoned home, saying he had been abducted to neighboring Syria, but could buy his way out, his father said.
“He said, ‘Dad, I need $200 or $300 so they will let me go,’” Said Musallam told Reuters. Before he could send the money, he said, another man phoned to inform him Muhammad had escaped his captors, but had been seized by Islamic State.
An Israeli security official said Musallam traveled to Turkey on October 24 in order to fight for Islamic State in Syria.
“He went on his own initiative, without his family’s knowledge,” the official told Reuters. Asked whether his statement constituted a denial that Musallam was an Israeli spy, the official said: “You can understand it that way, yes.”
Worried that members of its 20-percent Arab minority might travel to Syria or Iraq to join Islamist insurgent groups and then return radicalized and battle-ready, Israel has stepped up monitoring and prosecution of suspected would-be volunteers.
Turkey draws many Israeli Arab holidaymakers.
It is also a major conduit for foreigners who slip across the border to help insurgents trying to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Muhammad Musallam worked as an Israeli firefighter, his family said. A friend of his who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity said Musallam had posted pro-Islamic State messages on social media. Reuters could find no social media accounts under Musallam’s name.
In the first conviction of its kind, Israel in November jailed Ahmed Shurbaji, an Arab citizen who returned voluntarily after spending three months with Islamic State in Syria.
He received a relatively light term of 22 months in return for cooperation with security services that would likely “help the State of Israel defend itself against this organization in various ways,” the court said, in a possible allusion to information he provided about Islamic State.
A source in the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) said Israeli Arabs returning from Syria are routinely questioned for intelligence on jihadi groups.
Shurbaji had phoned an Israeli security official from Syria to broker a deal. The Shin Bet source said such communications with Israeli Arabs who wanted to return from Syria had sometimes been handled by Ayoob Kara, an Israeli Druse politician and former army officer close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Contacted by Reuters, Kara said he is aware of Musallam’s case and does not believe he was a Mossad spy.
While declining to discuss Musallam in detail, Kara said he knows of several young Israeli Arabs who had gone to Syria to aid refugees or for the thrill of available women or booty, only to be kidnapped and exploited by insurgents like Islamic State.