Islamist
Terror Threat As Strong As Ever, Dutch Intelligence Warns
by Abigail R. Esman
Special to IPT News
November 14, 2018
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It has become
"the new normal," a structural part of 21st-century
life. And the jihadist threat against the West is just as strong now as
ever.
These are the conclusions of "The Legacy of Syria: Global Jihad Remains A Threat to
Europe," a new report from the Dutch intelligence agency, Algemene
Inlichting en Veiligheids Dienst (AIVD). Indeed, according to its report,
the demise of the Islamic State has proved to be just a hiccup in the
ongoing efforts to found a caliphate in the Middle East. Thousands of ISIS
sympathizers still walk freely in the streets of Europe and across the
West, and "as a result of the conflict in Syria, the [global jihadist]
movement has grown and professionalized." Hence, while there have been
fewer ISIS-driven attacks since the fall of the Caliphate, the AIVD does
not expect the trend to last.
Rather, both through propaganda and the international interactions made
possible through the internet, jihadists are increasingly able to organize
attacks, particularly as ISIS becomes an underground movement. Further,
jihadists have recently turned to more "everyday" kinds of
weaponry, such as cars or trucks and knives, attacking in public spaces
that are much harder to protect, from the London Bridge to the Ramblas in Barcelona to plazas outside of railway stations in the Netherlands.
The media and even counterterrorism experts tend to refer to those who
execute such attacks as "lone wolves." Not so, according to the
AIVD. ISIS has shown itself to be extremely proficient at inspiring
potential jihadists, even among those who have never fought in the Islamic
State or even had direct contact with ISIS members. Hence, says the agency, though so-called "lone
wolves" may have prepared and executed their attacks on their own,
"they are indeed part of a (virtual) jihadist network."
That network also may often include others who are not directly
connected with ISIS. But some ISIS leaders continue to actively pursue
sympathizers via social media, encouraging them to attack, reviewing
potential targets, and providing advice along the way, states the report. Such
efforts appear to be part of the final plans ISIS spokesman Abu Mohamed
al-Adnani announced before his death in 2016, when "he declared the
duty to perform terrorist attacks above the duty to come to the so-called
Caliphate," the AIVD says.
And it's not just ISIS. al-Qaida is resurgent, and working to reclaim
its place as the leader of global jihad. Indeed, the AIVD warns, it would
be a mistake to think that al-Qaida is no longer a serious player in the
"jihadist-terrorist threat."
"Al Qaida is larger and more widespread geographically than before
the terror attacks in the US," thanks to a wide network of affiliate
groups, the report states. And even as it strengthens its presence and
activities in Syria, it continues to view attacks against the West as a crucial
part of its mandate. Under the charismatic new leadership of Osama bin
Laden's son, Hamza, al-Qaida is hoping to appeal, as ISIS did, to
sympathizers worldwide, particularly Western Muslims who would be prepared
to wage jihad at home.
Hamza has become an important figure, the AIVD believes, in part because
he has never criticized ISIS, as other al-Qaida leaders have. The hope for
al-Qaida is that he will therefore be able to recruit former,
"disillusioned," ISIS members to bring them to the al-Qaida camp.
Not that the name much matters – al-Qaida, ISIS, Jabat al-Nusra,
whatever. "For a number of jihadists, the jihadist idea is the binding
factor, and the value of the jihadist 'brand name' less important," says the report. It should be noted that for the
victims of such attacks, the brand name doesn't much matter, either.
The AIVD also finds that a 2017 call by ISIS leaders to take a more
active role has been effective. In May, for instance, France24 reported that, "Over the last four years in
France, 22 women who had not been abroad to join the IS group have
been arrested over their involvement in plans to carry out 12 terrorist
attacks on home soil." And in the UK, two British
members
of an all-female cell with ISIS ties received life sentences last August
for plotting a terrorist attack.
Not to be overlooked either are the returnees – men and women and even
children – who are returning to Europe from the failed Caliphate. Though
some returnees are incarcerated, hundreds of them are due to be released in
the next two years.
The danger these returnees pose is significant, and not just because of
their capacity, through their military and battle training, to wage attacks
in the West. Also of concern is their hero status among jihadist
sympathizers and wannabes. "These jihad veterans can, with their
status and experience, expand existing networks [and] strengthen and build
new (transnational) networks," the AIVD warns.
And finally there are the so-called "cubs of the caliphate,"
children who were either brought to the Islamic State by their Western
parents or were born there, and also are now returning. Such children can
not only inspire schoolmates once they begin attending (or return to)
schools in their land of origin, but older children will likely, like the
"jihad veterans," have formed bonds with others their age in
other countries. Again, the possibility of transnational jihadist ties
could form a threat in the long term.
Hence, says the AIVD, "the attractiveness of the jihadist ideology
is expected to remain, even without any further catalyst such as the
conflict in Syria. Because of this, global jihadism, both in the short- and
long-term, will continue to form a threat."
Abigail R. Esman, the author, most recently, of Radical State: How Jihad Is Winning Over Democracy in
the West (Praeger, 2010), is a freelance writer based in New
York and the Netherlands. Follow her at @radicalstates.
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