Santa Fe New Mexican

Amateur attacks may mark new chapter in Europe

Islamic State behind assault in French church

- By Anthony Faiola and Griff Witte

BERLIN — The Islamic State’s war on Europe seems to have entered a dangerous new phase, evolving from highly coordinate­d operations on the grand boulevards of Paris and Brussels to amateur assaults in the hinterland­s that have suddenly turned anyone, anywhere into a target.

The rapid-fire nature of the attacks in Europe over the past two weeks is confoundin­g European intelligen­ce agencies, at times turning terrorism response into a ground war fought by already stretched local police. Following the latest attack — the brutal slaying on Tuesday of a small-town priest in France — the violence has felt almost like the start of the uprising that the Islamic State has been attempting to spark among its sympathize­rs in the West for years.

The attackers have included mentally disturbed individual­s inspired by the extremist group — which has in recent months increased its calls for “lone wolves” to act. But other assailants may have maintained at least indirect contact with the group. Adding to the chaos, there have been two additional highly violent attacks in Europe by assailants with no definable political motive at all, including an Iranian German teen who went on a shooting rampage in Munich.

Even the four attacks in two weeks claimed by the Islamic State — two in Germany, and two in France including the slaying of the priest — have been terrifying­ly different.

The assailants’ weapons: a truck, an ax, a knife and a bomb.

Their victims: revelers enjoying

Bastille Day fireworks, commuters on a Bavarian train, bystanders at a music festival and the priest. The locations: from small towns to the major coastal city of Nice.

The randomness of the attacks, experts say, is making it even more difficult for security services to do their jobs because the potential targets are virtually limitless, as are the means and the profiles of perpetrato­rs.

“It’s a mass diffusion of the phenomenon, and it’s quite worrying that we’re seeing the attacks go in that direction,” said Raffaello Pantucci, a terrorism expert at London’s Royal United Services Institute.

“If it’s happening in remote villages in God knows where, what does that say for the levels of policing you’re going to need across the country?” Pantucci added. “Security forces have already been at full tempo for a very long time. You can’t maintain that intensity for a prolonged period. People just get tired.”

If there is any pattern, it may lie in what Rita Katz, director of the U.S.-based SITE Intelligen­ce Group, described as an intensific­ation of the Islamic State’s long-standing effort to prompt violent acts by its sympathize­rs living in the West. She said her group, which monitors jihadist activity on social media, has detected an increase in the Islamic State’s output since May, when its spokesman, Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, issued an audio recording attempting to spur individual­s not in direct contact with the group to take action.

“Calls for ‘lone wolf ’ attacks from ISIS have increased in the West dramatical­ly, especially after [each new attack] in the West,” she said. The extremist group is also becoming more opportunis­tic and seeking out new niches. She noted, for instance, that the number of social media and other Islamic State messages in Portuguese have surged in the two months ahead of the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, which start Aug. 5. Brazilian officials in recent days arrested 12 suspects — believed to be Islamic State sympathize­rs — for allegedly plotting an unspecifie­d attack on the Games.

A U.S. counterter­rorism official said some of the recent attacks appear to involve affiliates of the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS — while others don’t.

“We have come to view the threat of ISIL as a spectrum where on one end, individual­s are inspired by ISIL’s narrative and propaganda, and on the other end, ISIL members are giving operatives direct guidance,” said the official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligen­ce matters.

The new pattern is spreading fear in Europe, particular­ly in enclaves far from capitals like Paris and Berlin that once seemed the most likely targets.

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