One of the most disturbing things about this morning’s counter-terrorism raids in Melbourne is the profile of the suspects, who were allegedly planning a Mumbai-style machine-gun attack on Australian Army barracks.

They were, The Australian reports, construction workers and taxi drivers of Somali and Lebanese descent, living in suburban Melbourne.
Combine this with the admission of Anglo-Australian terrorist Shane Kent that he was part of a terrorist organisation and it’s clear terrorists don’t look like anything in particular and could be living in your street.
It’s now clear that racial profiling – using ethnicity to determine whether someone is likely to commit a certain type of crime – is an increasingly blunt tool for authorities seeking to avert an attack by “home-grown” terrorists.
Not only that, but a focus on people of certain ethnicities could give intelligence agencies a blind spot when they are busy looking for the types of people they think are likely to be extremists.
As Cameron Stewart writes in The Australian today:
The extraordinary plot, revealed exclusively by The Australian today, shows how easily the toxic philosophies of militant Islam can infect the minds of those who are susceptible to its call, wherever in the world they may be.
How can racial profiling continue to be of any use if police need to apply it to – oh, let’s see where we’re up to – younger and older Indonesian Muslims (Jemaah Islamiah), East Africans (al-Shabaab), Lebanese and other Eastern Mediterraneans (Hezbollah and al-Shabaab), young Middle-Eastern Muslims (al-Qaida), young Pakistanis (Lashkar-e-Toiba) and lost, young white Australians like David Hicks or Shane Kent (potentially any of the above).
Take this from a neighbour of one of the suspects in these latest raids, who spoke to Melbourne’s Herald Sun this morning:
Emily Howard, 21, lives about four doors away from where one of the warrants was executed in View St, Glenroy.
She said it was scary to think something like this could be happening in her own street.
Ms Howard said she didn’t hear any police sirens or noise during the raid.
The first she heard of it was this morning when her boyfriend told her after seeing it on TV.
“I thought it was a joke,” she said. “To think someone in your street could do something like that. It’s just horrible.”
She said she had lived on the “quiet” street for 15 years.
Two weeks ago, I was in Bali when top western hotels were attacked in Jakarta. Within hours there were soldiers with machine guns and sniffer dogs outside the hotel, and the Australian Government had changed its travel advice on Indonesia, urging people not to travel there.
“Whatever,” was our reaction. The holiday proceeded with no extra precautions, just the occasional conversation at breakfast about risk. It is far more unsettling to wake up to the news that your neighbours could be planning mass murder.
A number of people – police haven’t yet said precisely how many – were arrested when police started knocking on doors after 4am this morning, executing 19 search warrants across Melbourne.
For all those that were held and now may be charged, it is as close to a certainty as you can get that there is another group of radicals who have at least thought about how they might slaughter some infidels.
But chalk this one up as a massive win for the good guys.
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