The Sunday Telegraph

Islamic State claims it ‘dealt strong blow to Russia’ with attacker selfie

- By Sophia Yan

ISLAMIC STATE published a photo of the four attackers it said had “dealt a strong blow to Russia with a bloody attack” yesterday, in a post detailing how it planned and conducted the assault on a Moscow concert hall that claimed more than 130 lives.

In the picture, which was released on Islamic State’s official news agency Amaq, the four men are wearing black baseball caps and face scarfs and are pointing to the sky with one finger.

The gesture has become associated with Islamic State and refers to the Muslim belief that there is only one Allah. In the background is an Islamic State poster with the group’s name in black and white.

The men carried out “an intensive monitoring operation” before the attack, according to the statement. They were armed with machine guns, knives and bombs and sought to inflict as much damage as possible on the “large crowd of Christians”. The group claimed that it had killed or injured at least 300 people in total. It said the motive was “the raging war between the Islamic State and countries fighting Islam”. Russian media reported that the attack suspects were from Tajikistan, a Muslim Central Asian country – formerly part of the Soviet

Union – that borders Afghanista­n, where Islamic State is active.

Although the post did not attribute the attack to a specific branch of IS, the US believes it was conducted by members of the Islamic StateKhora­san (IS-K). American security sources, including a senior counterter­rorism official, have confirmed as such to The New York Times. IS-K is an offshoot of the terror group active in Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Iran. Earlier this month, the top US general in the Middle East said IS-K could attack US and Western interests outside of Afghanista­n “in as little as six months and with little to no warning.” Just weeks ago, the US embassy in Moscow issued a warning of a potential terror attack by “extremists,” advising US citizens to avoid large gatherings, including concerts.

By yesterday, US officials were

privately admitting the alert had been partially based on recent intelligen­ce indicating the IS-K branch of the terror group was active inside Russia.The US also warned that it had “informatio­n about a planned terrorist attack in Moscow – potentiall­y targeting large gatherings, to include concerts”. It linked that intelligen­ce to IS-K.

The group is named after an old term for the Khorasan region that included parts of Iran, Turkmenist­an and Afghanista­n, where it is still based. It emerged in eastern Afghanista­n in late 2014 and quickly establishe­d a reputation for extreme brutality. In its earliest days, the group had widerangin­g priorities, including toppling the Pakistani government, punishing the Iranian government for supporting the Shia Muslim world, and to “purify” Afghanista­n, including by pushing out the Taliban as the main jihadi movement, according to the Wilson Center, a US think tank.

The group’s priorities have expanded in recent years to include the US government, which has said its ability to develop intelligen­ce against extremist groups in Afghanista­n such as IS-K has been reduced since the withdrawal of US troops from the country in 2021.

IS-K has a history of attacks, including against mosques, inside and outside Afghanista­n. Earlier this year, the US intercepte­d communicat­ions confirming the group carried out twin bombings in Iran that killed nearly 100 people. IS-K has claimed responsibi­lity for a bombing in Iran during a memorial procession for Qassem Soleimani, the revered Iranian commander killed in a US drone strike in 2020. Iran described it as the worst attack it had experience­d in decades.

In September 2022, IS-K militants claimed responsibi­lity for a deadly suicide bombing at the Russian embassy in Kabul.

The group was also responsibl­e for a massive attack on Kabul’s internatio­nal airport in 2021 that killed 13 US troops and scores of civilians during the chaotic Western evacuation from the country.

Before the US withdrew from Afghanista­n, IS-K targeted American military personnel. After the US drawdown in 2021, it has become more difficult for Washington to gather intelligen­ce about the group.

While the attack by IS-K in Russia on Friday was a dramatic escalation, experts said the group has opposed Putin in recent years.

Colin Clarke, a counterter­rorism analyst at the Soufan Group, said: “ISIS-K has been fixated on Russia for the past two years,” frequently criticisin­g Putin in its propaganda.

“ISIS-K accuses the Kremlin of having Muslim blood in its hands, referencin­g Moscow’s interventi­ons in Afghanista­n, Chechnya and Syria.”

Michael Kugelman of the Washington-based Wilson Center said that IS-K “sees Russia as being complicit in activities that regularly oppress Muslims.”

He added that the group also counts as members a number of Central Asian militants with their own grievances against Moscow.

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 ?? ?? Standing in front of an Islamic State sign, the men each hold up one finger in a gesture that is now synonymous with the group
Standing in front of an Islamic State sign, the men each hold up one finger in a gesture that is now synonymous with the group

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