Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

IS claims responsibi­lity for New Year’s nightclub attack

- By Lori Hinnant and Dusan Stojanovic

ISTANBUL >> The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity Monday for a mass shooting at an Istanbul nightclub that killed 39 people, most of them foreign tourists from Muslim countries who were ringing in the new year. It was the first claim of its kind for IS in Turkey.

The group said Christian revelers were targeted in response to Turkish military operations against IS in northern Syria. The claim came after an IS propaganda video urging attacks on Turkey, which is home to an airbase used in the U.S.led effort against IS in Syria and Iraq.

Turkish authoritie­s never confirmed the authentici­ty of the Dec. 22 video that purported to show Turkish soldiers who were burned alive, but access to social media was temporaril­y restricted in what appeared to be an effort to curb its circulatio­n.

The nightclub assailant, armed with a long-barreled weapon, killed a policeman and a civilian early Sunday outside the Reina club before entering and firing at some of the estimated 600 people inside. The establishm­ent is frequented by famous locals, including singers, actors and athletes.

The Islamic State group boasts of having cells in Turkey, regularly issues propaganda in Turkish and is believed to have hundreds of Turks in its ranks. But until now, the main act of aggression it had claimed in Turkey was the March 2016 killing of a Syrian journalist and an attack on riot police in the province of Diyarbakir, which Kurdish militants also claimed.

For some analysts, the claim of responsibi­lity signaled a shift in IS strategy in Turkey, a predominan­tly Muslim nation.

“It’s a new phase,” security analyst Michael Horowitz said. “What we saw before was an undeclared war, and now we’re entering an open war.”

The IS claim said only that the attacker was a “soldier of the caliphate” who struck to “let infidel Turkey know that the blood of Muslims that is being shed by its airstrikes and artillery shelling will turn into fire on its territorie­s.”

Early Turkish media reports suggested the Istanbul nightclub gunman was probably from either Uzbekistan or Kyrgyzstan and may have been part of the same cell that staged the airport attack.

Authoritie­s obtained the fingerprin­ts and a basic descriptio­n of the gunman and are close to identifyin­g him, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said Monday after a weekly cabinet meeting. He confirmed eight people have been detained in connection to the attack.

By attacking as the nation was celebratin­g the new year, the group indicated that it intends to continue being a “scourge” against Turkey in 2017, Kurtulmus said.

Initially, IS activity in Turkey appeared designed to stoke tensions with the country’s ethnic Kurds and reflected events in Syria. The first dramatic attack came July 2015, when a suicide bomber hit a rally of activists in the border town of Suruc, at a time when Kurdish fighters in Syria where under siege just across the border in Kobane.

The worst IS-linked attack to rock Turkey came just months after, in October 2015, when twin suicide bombings killed 102 people at a peace rally in the capital, Ankara.

In 2016, IS was blamed by analysts and Turkish authoritie­s for a wider range of attacks, including the June attack on Istanbul Ataturk Airport that killed 45 people and two other deadly bombings against tourists in Istanbul. IS was also suspected of directing an attack by a suicide bomber — possibly as young as 12 — that killed more than 50 people at an outdoor wedding in the city of Gaziantep.

A member of NATO, Turkey launched an offensive to northern Syria in August in a bid to clear a strategic border area of IS militants and contain the gains of Kurdish fighters. In October, Turkish-backed Syrian forces took the symbolical­ly important town of Dabiq, which is central to IS propaganda. Turkish jets regularly bomb IS in the then town of Al-Bab, and Ankara wants to play a role in dislodging IS from its bastion in Raqqa.

“Islamic State is sending a strong message to the Turkish government that it will pay in blood for the offensive in northern Syria,” Anthony Skinner, an analyst with the Verisk Maplecroft security firm, wrote in an email to The Associated Press.

Many analysts also see IS latest attack on Turkey as a sign of growing desperatio­n.

The group has been threatened in al-Bab, Raqqa and Mosul in Iraq and “needs to reassert itself,” said Horowitz, director at the intelligen­ce analysis firm Prime Source.

The aggression on Turkey, he added, is in line with the group’s practice of equating mass-casualty terrorism attacks with heavy bombings and airstrikes on IS-held territorie­s.

In its claim, IS said the nightclub attack was aimed at Christians celebratin­g a pagan holiday, suggesting a symbolic choice of target that can be justified to radical Sunni Muslim supporters as punishment of sinners. But in reality, many of the victims hailed from majority-Muslim nations in the Middle East.

Max Abrahms, a Northeaste­rn University political scientist, said IS understand­s that civilian attacks can be counterpro­ductive in countries where it has abundant support and has avoided conflict with authoritie­s in Turkey and Saudi Arabia. To him, the change of tact in Turkey reflects that IS is “desperate” in the wake of losses in Syria and Iraq.

“There’s no question that Islamic State is suffering in an irreversib­le way,” Abrahms said. So the group “is keen to commit as many attacks as possible these days and is much more likely to claim credit for them in order to signal that it has continued capability to mount operations around the world.”

 ?? CCTV — HABERTURK NEWSPAPER VIA AP ?? This image taken from CCTV provided by Haberturk Newspaper Monday shows the man identified by police as the main suspect in the New Year’s Day terror attack at an Istanbul nightclub, earlier that night before the attack. The attack at the nightclub in...
CCTV — HABERTURK NEWSPAPER VIA AP This image taken from CCTV provided by Haberturk Newspaper Monday shows the man identified by police as the main suspect in the New Year’s Day terror attack at an Istanbul nightclub, earlier that night before the attack. The attack at the nightclub in...

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