| 
            
			 Confirmation that Islamic Sate, currently the most successful of 
			the region's jihadi groups, is extending its influence to Egypt will 
			sound alarm bells in Cairo, where the authorities are already facing 
			a security challenge from home-grown militants. 
			 
			A senior commander from the Sinai-based Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis, which 
			has killed hundreds of members of the Egyptian security forces over 
			the last year, said Islamic State has provided instructions on how 
			to operate more effectively. 
			 
			"They teach us how to carry out operations. We communicate through 
			the internet," the commander, who asked to remain anonymous, told 
			Reuters. 
			 
			"They don't give us weapons or fighters. But they teach us how to 
			create secret cells, consisting of five people. Only one person has 
			contact with other cells." 
			 
			Militant groups and the Egyptian state are old foes. Some of al 
			Qaeda's most notorious commanders, including its current leader 
			Ayman al-Zawahri, are Egyptian. 
			
			   
			 
			One Egyptian president after another has crushed militant groups but 
			they have always resurfaced. 
			 
			The success of Islamic State in seizing large parts of Syria and 
			Iraq has raised concerns in Egypt, where authorities are battling 
			Ansar as well as militants who have capitalized on the chaos in 
			post-Gaddafi Libya to set up over the border. 
			 
			Islamic State became the first jihadi group to defeat an Arab army 
			in a major operation after steamrolling through northern Iraq in 
			June almost unopposed by the Iraqi military. 
			 
			MILITANT THREAT 
			 
			Unlike al-Qaeda, which specializes in hit and run operations and 
			suicide bombings, Islamic State acts like an army, seizing and 
			holding territory, a new kind of challenge for Western-backed Arab 
			states. 
			 
			Army offensives have squeezed Ansar, forcing its members to flee to 
			other parts of Egypt, the commander said. But it still poses a 
			security threat. 
			 
			President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has expressed concerns about 
			militants over the Libyan frontier. Security officials say these 
			groups are inspired by Islamic State, an offshoot of al Qaeda 
			notorious for beheadings and mass executions, most recently of 
			American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff. 
			 
			Sisi, who as army chief toppled Islamist President Mohamed Mursi 
			last year after mass protests against his rule and then cracked down 
			on his Muslim Brotherhood, has restored some political stability. 
			 
			But militant groups still present a major challenge. Security 
			officials say thousands of Egyptian militants have joined Islamic 
			State's jihad in Iraq and Syria and authorities are concerned they 
			could return home to fight the government. 
			 
			That would pile pressure on Egyptian security forces who have failed 
			to end a campaign of bombings and shootings which killed hundreds of 
			soldiers and police since Mursi's fall.
 
			
			   
			 
			Egyptian security officials say leaders of Islamic State and Ansar 
			have established contacts. Meanwhile, militants based in Libya have 
			also forged ties with Ansar, creating a complex web. 
			 
			HEADLESS CORPSES 
			 
			Ansar recently said it had beheaded four Egyptians, accusing them of 
			providing Israel with intelligence for an air strike that killed 
			three of its fighters. 
			 
			Four headless corpses were found in the Sinai Peninsula. It was the 
			first time that any decapitations had been made public in Egypt, a 
			strategic U.S. ally which has a peace treaty with Israel and 
			controls the Suez Canal, a key global shipping route. 
			 
			
            [to top of second column]
  | 
            
             
            
			  
			In a video on Twitter, armed men in black masks stood over the 
			kneeling captives as one of the militants read out a statement. 
			Minutes later, the four men had their heads cut off. 
			 
			The Ansar commander, who said his group had contacted Islamic State 
			for advice, described the beheadings as a clear message that anyone 
			cooperating with the group's enemies would face a similar fate. "The 
			beheadings had a purpose," he said. The violence suggested a new 
			level of radicalism in Egypt, where security crackdowns, political 
			violence and street protests have hammered the economy since the 
			"Arab Spring" uprising ousted President Hosni Mubarak in 2011. 
			 
			"Ansar and Islamic State definitely have ties but there are no 
			Islamic State members in Egypt," said a security official. 
			 
			"There is definitely coordination between Ansar, the militants in 
			Libya and Islamic State leaders." 
			 
			The security official said Egyptian authorities have handed airport 
			officials lists of Egyptians who went abroad to wage jihad. 
			 
			"There are some people who we know are coming back to carry out 
			attacks so we arrest them. The same goes for others who come back to 
			visit their families," he said. 
			 
			"There is a third type who comes back to recruit. We just watch him 
			until the time is right to move in." 
			  
			  
			 
			The movement of Ansar militants from the Sinai to towns and cities 
			outside the peninsula could make it more difficult for intelligence 
			agencies to track the group. 
			 
			"We have trouble working in Sinai. It's easier elsewhere," said the 
			Ansar commander, adding that fighters were benefiting from advice 
			provided by Islamic State. 
			 
			"They are teaching us how to attack security forces, the element of 
			surprise," he said. "They told us to plant bombs then wait 12 hours 
			so that the man planting the device has enough time to escape from 
			the town he is in." 
			 
			The commander said bombings not carried out by Ansar suggested new 
			militant groups had appeared in Egypt, adding that there is a flow 
			of militants both ways across the Libyan border. 
			 
			"There are others operating in Egypt. We don't know anything about 
			them," he said. "We have individuals who went to Libya. We lost 
			contact." 
			 
			Asked about pressure from Egypt's military, one of the biggest in 
			the world, the commander said security offensives had created new 
			enemies for the state. 
			 
			"Every time one of us is killed, two or three others join. Usually 
			relatives of those who are killed." 
			 
			(Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Giles Elgood) 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			   |