Macron: IS responsible for Russia concert attack
Putin doesn’t mention terror group, suggests Ukraine involved
MOSCOW – France on Monday joined the United States in saying intelligence indicated the Islamic State was responsible for an attack on a concert hall outside Moscow that killed 137 people, while Russia continued to suggest that Ukraine was to blame.
In the deadliest attack inside Russia in two decades, four men burst into the Crocus City Hall Friday night, spraying people with bullets during a concert by Soviet-era rock group Picnic. Alongside the dead, 182 were wounded.
Four men, at least one a Tajik, were remanded in custody on terrorism charges. They appeared separately, led into a cage at Moscow’s Basmanny district court by Federal Security Service officers.
The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the attack, a claim that the United States has publicly said it believes, and the militant group has since released what it says is footage from the attack. U.S. officials said they had warned Russia of intelligence about an imminent attack earlier this month.
“The information available to us ... as well as to our main partners, indicates indeed that it was an entity of the Islamic State which instigated this attack,” French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters, referring to the Islamic State’s affiliate in Afghanistan, known as Isis-khorasan or ISIS-K.
“This group also tried to commit several actions on our own soil,” he said during a visit to French Guiana.
France raised its terror alert to its highest level on Sunday following the shooting in Moscow.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has not publicly mentioned the Islamist militant group in connection with the attackers, who he said had been trying to escape to Ukraine.
Putin said some people on “the Ukrainian side” had been prepared to spirit the gunmen across the border. Ukraine has denied any role in the attack, and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has accused Putin of seeking to divert blame for the attack by mentioning Ukraine, something Macron said was a mistake.
“I think that it would be both cynical and counterproductive for Russia itself and the security of its citizens to use this context to try and turn it against Ukraine,” he said, adding that France had offered cooperation to help find the culprits.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, earlier called into question U.S. assertions that the Islamic State, which once sought control over swaths of Iraq and Syria, was behind the attack.
Two U.S. officials said on Friday that the United States had intelligence confirming the Islamic State’s claim of responsibility.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Russia could not comment on the Islamic State claim while the investigation was ongoing, and would not comment on the U.S. intelligence, saying it was sensitive information.
Putin said 11 people had been detained, including the four suspected gunmen, who he said had fled the concert hall and made their way to the Bryansk region, about 210 miles southwest of Moscow, to slip across the border to Ukraine.