USA TODAY US Edition

Why U.K. is a target

Lack of pattern has officials in NYC and elsewhere on alert

- Oren Dorell @orendorell USA TODAY

ISIS is directing followers

In the United States, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said Sunday that his city was on high alert, with critical response units in “particular­ly prominent” locations.

The Islamic State, also known as ISIS, claimed responsibi­lity for Saturday night’s attack in London that left seven people dead and wounded dozens. ISIS also claimed responsibi­lity for the previous two British attacks.

British Prime Minister Theresa May said while the recent attacks were not directly linked, “terrorism breeds terrorism.”

“We can’t say there’s an uptick in focus on England, because what we’re looking at now is a micro trend,” said Michael Pregent, an adjunct fellow at the Hudson Institute in Washington. “These were three different attacks.”

Saturday night’s attack began when a van plowed into pedestrian­s on London Bridge then stopped in Borough Market, where three men got out and stabbed people. The three attackers were shot dead by police. On May 22, a suicide bomber at the Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, killed 22 people and injured 59. The bomber was identified as British-born Salman Abedi, 23.

On March 22, Khalid Masood, 52, rammed his car into pedestrian­s on Westminste­r Bridge, killing five people, and he then fatally stabbed a policeman outside Parliament. Masood was shot dead by police. The Islamic State claimed Masood as a “soldier,” though police later said he had no links al- Qaeda, ISIS or any other extremist group.

The attacks each show a different level of sophistica­tion, Pregent said. Masood used a low-tech knife, while Abadi used a well-made bomb in a vest and had recently returned from Libya, where his relatives have ties to the Islamic State, according to investigat­ors.

The London Bridge attack involved “three individual­s who agreed to kill and be killed, all three wearing (fake) suicide vests,” Pregent said. “That would indicate more of a cell.”

The difference­s among the attacks indicates they probably are not directly related, Pregent said.

Mia Bloom, a professor of communicat­ions and Middle East studies at Georgia State University, said terrorist groups have been wanting to get Muslims “off the fence” in European countries, including Britain, which they contend have an anti-Muslim bi- as. And that push has intensifie­d since last month’s attack at the concert, Bloom said.

“In ISIS chat rooms there has been a strong push to attack,” Bloom said. “Ever since Manchester, there have been memes about attacking in London. They actually had instructio­ns about ramming with trucks.”

Bloom said the recent online messages have been in line with the teachings of American-Yemeni cleric Anwar al-Awlaki who taught English-speaking followers that if they could not join the war in the Middle East they should act locally. Awlaki was killed in Yemen in 2011.

As U.S.-led forces continue to take ISIS territory in Iraq and Syria, the militants “need to project a sense of still being in control,” Bloom said.

Andrew Parker, head of the British domestic intelligen­ce agency MI5, warned in 2015 that several factors were contributi­ng to an “unpreceden­ted level of threat” to British citizens from ISIS, largely from Syria’s ongoing civil war.

Britain has a large well of 23,000 radicalize­d Muslims, intelligen­ce officials told the British Sunday Times.

“It isn’t surprising that ISIS has claimed responsibi­lity” or that attacks are happening in Britain, said Thomas Joscelyn, a terrorism analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, a think tank in Washington. “They’ve been putting effort into this for the better part of three years. We don’t know the precise reason we’re seeing successful plots now.”

 ?? ANDY RAIN, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ??
ANDY RAIN, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

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