Analysts fear homegrown terror threat
WASHINGTON: US and French intelligence officials are leaning towards an assessment that the Paris terror attacks were inspired by al-Qaeda but not directly supervised by the group, a view that would put the violence in a category of homegrown incidents that are extremely difficult to detect and thwart.
Although one of the two brothers who carried out the attack at the Charlie Hebdo newspaper is believed to have travelled briefly to Yemen in 2011, where he met an al-Qaeda leader, US intelligence officials are not convinced that the Paris attacks were directed from abroad, despite a claim of responsibility by al-Qaeda’s Yemen affiliate.
The claim seems hastily put together and “opportunistic”, as two senior officials put it, one French and the other American, both declining to be named in order to discuss sensitive intelligence.
Investigators also are not convinced that Amedy Coulibaly, who killed five people in Paris in separate incidents, coordinated in advance with Cherif and Said Kouachi, who killed 12 in the attack on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper.
If those assessments hold, they would place the attacks on a continuum of violence by disaffected individuals who have become sympathetic to al-Qaeda, the Islamic State (IS) group or their ilk — yet are not involved in the sort of international conspiracy that lends itself to relatively easy detection.
The links to al-Qaeda run a gamut, analysts say, from the disturbed Muslim convert in Oklahoma who beheaded a former co-worker at a meat-packing plant in September, to the ideologically committed brothers in Paris who attacked the satirical newspaper.
The Oklahoma man had no connection to any terror group, while the Kouachi brothers are believed to have consulted with al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen.
On Wednesday, an Ohio man was arrested and charged with plotting to kill government officials inside the US Capitol. The FBI said the man spoke of his desire to support the IS.
Other such cases in the US include the 2013 Boston marathon bombings, the 2010 attempted Times Square bombing and the 2009 Fort Hood shootings.
In Europe, an investigation found no direct assistance or orchestration from al-Qaeda to the group that bombed a Madrid train in 2004. Likewise, authorities have found no links between international terrorists and the man who attacked Canada’s parliament in October.
Homegrown, less well-coordinated and more self-contained than a complex attack like those of Sept 11, these plots involve fewer communications for intelligence agencies to intercept, fewer potential sources to turn.
“Lone wolves”, such as Moner Mohammad Abusalha, a Palestinian-American who decided to wage jihad, are the most difficult to unearth, officials say.
In the US, the FBI wasn’t aware Abusalha had become radicalised until shortly before he launched a suicide attack in Syria in May.
“You have individuals who are inspired by the ideology but aren’t directly connected to any specific group,” said John Cohen, a former Homeland Security Department counterterrorism coordinator who is now a professor at Rutgers University.
French authorities were aware of the extremists who carried out last week’s attacks in France, but the men had not been perceived as significant threats by the overwhelmed domestic intelligence service. More than 1,000 extremists have left France to fight in Syria and some have returned home.