The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Officials: Islamic State gets steady stream of recruits

Some 150 Americans have tried to reach war zone, House panel told.

- By Ken Dilanian

WASHINGTON — The U.S. bombing campaign in Iraq and Syria has failed to slow the pace of foreign fighters flocking to join the Islamic State and other extremist groups, including at least 3,400 from Western nations among 20,000 from around the world, U.S. intelligen­ce officials said in an updated estimate of a top terrorism concern.

Intelligen­ce agencies now believe that as many as 150 Americans have tried and some have succeeded in reaching the Syrian war zone, officials told the House Homeland Security Committee on Wednesday. Some of those Americans were arrested en route, some died in the area and a small number were still fighting with extremists.

Nick Rasmussen, chief of the National Counterter­rorism Center, said the rate of foreign fighter travel to Syria is without precedent, far exceeding the rate of foreigners who went to wage jihad in Afghanista­n, Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen or Somalia in the past 20 years.

U.S. officials fear that some of the foreign fighters will return undetected to their homes in Europe or the U.S. to mount terrorist attacks.

At least one of the men responsibl­e for the attack on a satirical magazine in Paris had spent time with Islamic extremists in Yemen.

Officials acknowledg­e it has been hard to track the Americans and Europeans who have made it to Syria, where the Islamic State group is the dominant force trying to overthrow the government of President Bashar Assad. The U.S. Embas- sy in Syria is closed, and the CIA has no permanent presence on the ground.

“Once in Syria, it is very difficult to discern what happens there,” Michael Steinbach, the FBI’s assistant director for counterter­rorism, told the committee. “This lack of clarity remains troubling.”

The estimate of 20,000 fighters, from 90 countries, is up from 19,000, Rasmussen said. The number of Americans or U.S. residents who have gone or tried to go is up to 150 from 50 a year ago and 100 in the fall.

Rep. Michael McCaul, the Texas Republican who chairs the committee, said the Syrian war had created “the largest convergenc­e of Islamist terrorists in world history.” Sustained bombing by a U.S.-led coalition has not stopped the inflow, he noted.

McCaul’s committee staff compiled from public sources a list of 18 U.S. citizens or residents who joined or attempted to join the Islamic State group, and 18 others who tried to or succeeded in joining other violent Islamic groups.

The list includes three Chicago teens and three Denver teens who were radicalize­d and recruited online and were arrested after attempting to travel to Syria to join Islamic State fighters. It also includes Douglas McAuthur McCain, 33, a California­n who died in August while fighting with the Islamic State group near Aleppo.

U.S. intelligen­ce officials do not make public their estimate of how many Americans currently are fighting in Syria and Iraq. In September, FBI director James Comey said it was “about a dozen.”

The intelligen­ce officials also discussed the possibilit­y of homegrown attacks inspired by the Islamic State or al-Qaida but not directly connected to the groups.

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