Oman Daily Observer

Smartphone­s double-edged sword for terrorists

- MICHEL MOUTOT

Bombs and guns aside, a smartphone can be a powerful weapon in the hands of a terrorist — but it can also provide intelligen­ce services with the tools to track them down. Three years ago to the day, the Paris attacks of November 13, 2015 remain one of the best known examples of a largescale assault that could not have been planned without phones.

The IS group gunmen and bombers who struck the Bataclan concert hall and other nightlife spots used them extensivel­y to coordinate the carnage, said a former French anti-terrorist official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Just before entering the Bataclan, where they massacred 90 people, the attackers had sent a text message to accomplice­s in Belgium: “We’re going ahead. It’s started.”

But if smartphone­s have been a “gamechange­r” for extremists, their use by the world’s extremists goes much further back than the Paris attacks.

“As of 2003, in Iraq, home-made bombs started being set off by the sending of an SMS as American convoys drove past. This caught on and was then repeatedly used by Al Qaeda,” the ex-official said.

These days, encrypted apps such as Telegram, Wire and Whatsapp can help extremists communicat­e while evading police tracking — or at least complicate efforts to decode their messages.

For several years IS has published online tutorials in several languages explaining to extremists how to choose the best software to evade detection in war zones.

For new recruits in developing countries, where smartphone­s are more common than computers, there are different strategies still.

“Phones are no longer phones — they’re computers,” said Laurent Heslault, director of security strategies at Symantec, a security group.

“They are far more powerful than what we had on our desks 10 years ago,” he added.

“They have more computing power, more memory and connection capabiliti­es. They are very powerful tools when it comes to communicat­ing.”

That has also made it much easier for extremist groups to recruit new members.

“Thirty years ago, guys used to exchange video cassettes, then it was CDS. Now it’s online.”

For propaganda-makers, videos of attacks can be filmed and uploaded in the blink of an eye.

“You can film attacks, claim responsibi­lity, use (a phone) to take photos and film reconnaiss­ance operations,” the ex-official said.

But the smartphone can be an extremist’s downfall as well as their best asset.

Intelligen­ce agencies have grown better at using phones to identify suspects, spy on them — and, in case of capture, lift data for use as evidence in court.

That in turn has raised difficult questions for tech giants who promise their users privacy.

Apple faced a court showdown with the FBI after agents sought access to the data of the attackers who killed 14 people in San Bernardino, California, in December 2015.

Investigat­ors dropped the case after finding a way into the phone without help from Apple, which argued that helping authoritie­s access a phone would set a dangerous precedent.

Government­s have used phone data extensivel­y to pinpoint extremist suspects.

The French military interventi­on in Mali, launched in 2013 after extremists took over the northern half the country, started with air strikes whose targets were chosen based on phone data, the former French official said.

“Even if you keep changing the SIM card, the phone has its own identity and once detected can continue being tracked,” he said.

When it comes to police investigat­ions, smartphone­s sometimes provide more informatio­n than their owners.

They might allow investigat­ors to work their way back along an informatio­n trail, snare other members of a suspect’s network and track sleeper cells, he added.

“Smartphone­s make you a target,” the expert said.

“Because of this, extremist leaders have learned to keep away from them. For the past few years, there’s been a marked return to using human envoys,” he added.

Smartphone can be an extremist’s downfall as well as their best asset. Intelligen­ce agencies have grown better at using phones to identify suspects and spy on them

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