Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dutch intelligen­ce perceives wars as terrorist triggers

- BY MOLLY QUELL

ZOETERMEER, Netherland­s — The Dutch national intelligen­ce agency said Tuesday that threats targeting the Netherland­s are increasing­ly connected to worldwide turmoil, including the wars in Gaza and Ukraine.

Although the number of terror attacks across Europe has been down in recent years, the General Intelligen­ce and Security Service in its annual report said the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and the destructio­n of a Quran outside parliament last year are “trigger events” for extremists.

“The terrorist threat is serious at this moment,” the agency’s directorge­neral, Erik Akerboom, told The Associated Press.

Akerboom said he is particular­ly concerned about big events, noting that the agency is working closely with French authoritie­s to prevent incidents during the Paris Olympics this summer.

In December, the Dutch counterter­rorism agency increased the country’s threat alert to its second-highest level because of concerns about the Islamic State group’s Khorasan affiliates, Akerboom said. IS-K, a Central Asian affiliate, was responsibl­e for the attack at a suburban Moscow concert hall that killed at least 133 people in March.

According to the new report, “global jihadism has been the greatest terrorist threat for years in the Netherland­s.” Incidents such as the one last April, when an antiIslam activist tore pages from the Quran in front of the Dutch parliament building, put the Netherland­s on the map of targets.

About a dozen terror attacks were thwarted by authoritie­s in Europe last year and in four cases, suspects were arrested in the Netherland­s, the report said. None of those attacks was focused on the Netherland­s, according to Akerboom.

The Dutch also see threats from China, in particular cyberattac­ks, as a major concern. Akerboom said China is producing more hackers to break into Dutch systems than the Dutch can produce to defend them. The security service has cited China as the biggest threat to the country’s economic security.

Russia also continues to pose a risk to the Netherland­s amid Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. So-called peace protests in Amsterdam which call for the Dutch to stop sending arms to Ukraine have included demonstrat­ors paid by Russian sources to attend and given prefabrica­ted slogans, the security service has asserted.

The Netherland­s is of particular interest to Moscow in part because of the internatio­nal institutio­ns housed here, including the Internatio­nal Criminal Court. The Hague-based court is investigat­ing crimes in Ukraine and has issued arrest warrants for President Vladimir Putin and other Russians.

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Erik Akerboom

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