San Antonio Express-News

Report: al-Qaida, Iran militias still a threat

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WASHINGTON — Foreign terrorist groups and their affiliates had a bad year in 2017 as the United States and other countries fought back against the Islamic State, but al-Qaida and Iranian-backed militias remain deadly threats, according to an annual government terrorism report that was released Wednesday. There were 8,584 terrorist attacks around the world in 2017, a 23 percent decline from 2016, according to the State Department report. As a result, more than 18,700 people were killed, about a quarter of whom were the perpetrato­rs themselves. That death toll represente­d a 27 percent drop from the previous year, the report said. Much of the reason for the decline was improved security in Iraq, according to Ambassador Nathan Sales, the State Department’s coordinato­r for counterter­rorism. Still, more than half of all terrorist attacks worldwide took place in just five countries: Afghanista­n, India, Iraq, Pakistan and the Philippine­s. And 70 percent of all deaths from terrorist attacks occurred in a different, if overlappin­g, set of five countries: Afghanista­n, Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia and Syria. Security in Afghanista­n continued to worsen as a result of coordinate­d attacks by the Taliban, including its affiliated Haqqani network, the report noted. Some of the attacks were planned and launched from safe havens in Pakistan, a source of continuing irritation in relations between Washington and Islamabad. Although North Korea, Syria and Sudan are designated as state sponsors of terrorism, the report highlighte­d Iran as a top threat. The Trump administra­tion has made its tough approach to Iran a central tenet of its foreign policy. President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the Iran nuclear deal this year, and his top administra­tion officials have excoriated Tehran at almost every opportunit­y. The report said Iran is underminin­g government­s and U.S. interests in Afghanista­n, Bahrain, Iraq, Lebanon and Yemen.

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