The Daily Telegraph

Isil is planning a fresh wave of atrocities in West, spymaster warns

- By Con Coughlin DEFENCE EDITOR

THE LEADER of Islamist State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) is planning a fresh wave of terror attacks against Britain and other European countries in revenge for the crushing defeats the Islamist group has suffered in Iraq and Syria, a leading Iraqi intelligen­ce official has warned.

Abu Bakr al-baghdadi, the leader of Isil’s self-proclaimed caliphate in Iraq and Syria, is said to be organising a number of “sophistica­ted attacks” against Western targets to boost the morale of jihadi fighters, after a series of defeats in Mosul and Raqqa.

In an exclusive interview with The Daily Telegraph, Lahur Talabani, the head of Kurdish intelligen­ce who has been heavily involved in the military campaign to liberate Mosul from Isil control, said a new generation of Islamist terror groups could emerge in Iraq if the country does not undertake radical political reform. “Isil has lost a lot of land in Iraq and Syria, but this is not the end of Isil,” said Mr Talabani, 41, during a visit to London, where he is having a series of meetings with officials and ministers, including Sir Michael Fallon, the Defence Secretary.

Mr Talabani said he estimated 500 British jihadists were fighting with Isil at the height of the so-called caliphate’s influence in Iraq and Syria, but most had died during the Us-led coalition’s military campaign.

As a result al-baghdadi, who Mr Talabani said is still alive and probably hiding in the desert between the Syrian and Iraqi borders, is keen to launch a new wave of terrorist attacks against Britain and other Western countries.

“We are going to see a lot more attacks on the West that are designed to boost the morale of the fighters,” said Mr Talabani.

“They are trying to do attacks that will get them publicity.”

Mr Talabani said the Kurds and other Iraqi fighters were grateful for the military support they had received from the US, Britain and other coalition forces in the battle against Isil. “Their backing meant it was too much for Isil to handle,” he said.

But he warned that, as the military campaign against Isil began to wind down, it was important that countries like Britain continued to support the Iraqi government as it undertook the painful process of rebuilding the country after more than a decade of conflict.

In particular it was important the Shia-dominated government of Iraqi prime minister Haider al-abadi reconciled the leaders of the Sunni tribes, many of whom have supported Isil because they believed they were poorly represente­d in Baghdad.

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