The Sunday Telegraph

Rise of the lone wolf: the lost souls seeking an ideology to help them punish the world

- By Raffaello Pantucci Raffaello Pantucci is director of Internatio­nal Security Studies at the Royal United Services Institute

There is no perfect profile of a terrorist. This is one of the main findings in the growing body of literature around terrorism. Terrorists and those radicalise­d towards extremist ideologies come in all shapes and sizes. Yet, one of the key features that has appeared to distinguis­h terrorists from mass murderers is that they have been motivated more clearly by an ideology than by personal reasons.

Increasing­ly, this line is becoming harder to draw. The last two cases to afflict Europe – the massacres in Nice and Munich – highlight this difficulty, with both cases appearing to contain elements of both.

Unfortunat­ely it is still too early to know categorica­lly what was going on in Nice and Munich. While the early coverage around both focused on the fact that the Nice murderer was operating alone, and the speculatio­n around the Munich shooter that he may have been motivated by some violent Islamist ideology, instead we are now seeing confusing indicators of other directions.

French authoritie­s have arrested five others in connection with the Nice attack, while it appears the Munich shooter may have had a fixation with mass shootings and was probably inspired more by Anders Breivik than Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

But what both cases appear to have in common is disturbed young men who are angry at the world around them. In both cases, stories have emerged of potentiall­y confused sexuality, confused religious identity, anger management issues and family disputes. Rather than being ideologica­lly committed terrorists, they may simply have used the method of a terrorist attack – under whatever ideology – to excise personal demons. This appears to be an increasing­ly common phenomenon.

It is difficult to know exactly why this is happening. Certainly, the phenomenon of “lone wolf ” terrorists is on the increase and groups such as Isil and al-Qaeda have urged their adherents to adopt this methodolog­y for some time. But in many of these cases it is not clear the lone wolves have totally bought into the ideology they claim to be fighting for.

Man Haron Monis, the Australian­Iranian who held up a coffee shop in Sydney in 2014, was only a recent convert to Sunni Islam and brought the wrong flag with him to his allegedly Isil-inspired attack. Omar ‘In many cases it is not clear the lone wolves have totally bought into the ideology they claim to be fighting for’ Mateen, the shooter who killed 50 at an Orlando nightclub, apparently claimed some allegiance to al-Qaeda, Hizbollah and Isil – competing groups.

But it is possible the noise surroundin­g groups such as Isil is drawing lost souls towards it. It is almost impossible to turn on the television without hearing about Isil, terrorism or political violence. If you are a socially awkward individual with violent tendencies and are seeking some sort of meaning in your life, then the methodolog­y of a lone wolf spree under the banner of such a group may be appealing. It will provide you with a way to punish the world around you while also giving meaning to your act.

Given the manner in which Isil and other groups push out their message of violence and offer a very low bar for entry, it is very easy to latch on to the ideology – as you may loosely understand it.

There is also a copycat element to such attacks. This is nothing new – the murder of Lee Rigby in 2013 by Michael Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale has generated numerous copycat incidents. The same week, Alexandre Dhaussy, a recent convert to Islam and known to authoritie­s more for his petty crime than his violent Islamist links, stabbed soldier Cédric Cordier in La Défense in Paris.

In August 2014, Brusthom Ziamani, a young man who had fallen into the orbit of violent extremists after he was thrown out of his family home, was arrested on his way to carry out an attack emulating the Rigby murder.

In January 2015, Zack Davies launched a machete attack on an Asian man at a Tesco in Wales while shouting “white power”, saying it was to avenge Rigby. Later investigat­ion showed Davies was an isolated, paranoid young man who was obsessed with the far Right and claimed to have been inspired by Jihadi John videos.

The profile of what we consider a terrorist attack is increasing­ly hard to define, in the same way that the specifics of what terrorists look like is ever harder to grasp. Fundamenta­lly, a terrorist is someone motivated by a political ideology rather than personal anger – but this line is becoming blurred. The profile of the average terrorist is melding with that of a mass killer, presenting authoritie­s with an almost impossible task to prevent every attack.

 ??  ?? Machete attacker Zack Davies: a far-Right obsessive inspired by Jihadi John videos
Machete attacker Zack Davies: a far-Right obsessive inspired by Jihadi John videos
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