The Phnom Penh Post

Attacks ‘mask weakening’ of IS

- Michel Moutot

THE steady drip of jihadist attacks in Europe, including the slaying of a policeman on Paris’s world-famous Champs Elysees on Thursday, might give the impression Islamic State is thriving – but experts say that’s wrong.

Under the pressure of the internatio­nal coalition in Iraq and Syria as well as improved efforts by intelligen­ce services, IS has seen its ability to mount complex, group attacks weaken.

So, it has fallen back on encouragin­g – or simply claiming – assaults executed by people experts term “losers”.

While a large-scale strike remains a possibilit­y, “the deadly tenacity of Daesh [IS] against France poorly masks a continuing degradatio­n of its ability to strike our nation,” Jean-Pierre Filiu, a researcher at Paris’s Sciences Po university, wrote on his blog on Friday.

IS jihadists have claimed deadly attacks in London, Berlin, Nice and now the bloodshed on the Champs Elysees. But none had the logistical complexity of the 2015 assault on Paris that killed 130 people and the 2016 strike on Brussels airport and undergroun­d train system.

“It seems Daesh has reorganise­d its European networks after major blows struck against it in France,” Filiu added.

Filiu pointed to security services hitting “critical mass” after collecting data essential to thwarting plots.

At the same time, coalition airstrikes in IS territory in Iraq and Syria have killed or forced into hiding many organisers of the attacks.

Turkey’s shutting down the migrant route to Europe has also made it much harder for followers of Islamic State to move within striking distance of targets like Paris and London.

On Thursday, 39-year-old Frenchman Karim Cheurfi pulled out an automatic weapon and opened fire on a police van just a few hundred metres from the iconic Arc de Triomphe.

Islamic State claimed the perpetrato­r as one of its “fighters” and a note praising IS was found near his body.

It was the first deadly jihadist attack in France since July.

The attack that killed five people outside the Houses of Parliament in London last month, and others carried out by individual­s, “are above all indication­s of IS’s disintegra­tion”, radicalisa­tion expert Farhad Khosrokhav­ar wrote last month.

These events serve to terrorise the public, “but they are symbolic last stands, which mark the end of a jihadist state that followers . . . want to be endless but which is coming to an end”, he said.

Into the void left by the smashing of organised rings, have stepped “rather unstable, even marginal, individual­s who police have trouble linking to Daesh,” Olivier Roy, a specialist in political Islam, wrote last month.

The jihadists, though, are only too happy to take credit for these crimes in order to appear a group with global reach.

“The only ones left are losers,” he wrote.

Yet those attackers come with another dimension of dangers because they often act alone, making them harder to detect. They also do not need anything more than a vehicle or a knife to kill.

 ?? MOHAMMED SAWAF/AFP ?? Iraqi government forces hold an Islamic State flag as they advance in the village of Badush some 15 kilometres northwest of Mosul during the ongoing battle to retake the city’s west on March 8.
MOHAMMED SAWAF/AFP Iraqi government forces hold an Islamic State flag as they advance in the village of Badush some 15 kilometres northwest of Mosul during the ongoing battle to retake the city’s west on March 8.

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