ISIS terrorism in Europe raises fears of systematic campaign
 
 
Europe is living in constant anxiety because of the threats
spread by ISIS on the internet to target European countries through lone
wolves.
It seems that the terrorist organization is planning to
launch more operations in the heart of Europe, similar to the recent Vienna
attack in which four people were killed on November 2, as part of ISIS
re-launching what has been described as its “European campaign”.
The recent terrorist attacks in Austria and France have
caused the European Union to take measures to tighten the screws on extremist
groups that are still active on European soil.
ISIS campaigns
The recent Vienna bombing and its repercussions for
neighboring countries illustrate ISIS’s determination to re-launch its
terrorist campaign throughout Europe.
The French newspaper Le Monde reported that there is a great
risk in seeing ISIS reconfigure its transnational networks after the fall of
its last stronghold in Syria and the elimination of its leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, but Baghdadi’s successor has managed to resume terrorist acts
faster than expected.
The newspaper said that the terrorist organization opened
its European campaign in May 2014 with a gun attack on the Jewish Museum in
Brussels by a French terrorist returning from Syria, which left four dead, followed
by attacks with automatic weapons and explosives in Paris in January and
November 2015 and then Brussels in March 2016. Then terrorists used vehicles to
run over people, as happened at a Christmas market in Berlin in December 2016,
Stockholm in April 2017, and Barcelona in August 2017. In recent years,
European cities have lived in a bleak atmosphere and were subjected to many
terrorist operations in cities in France, Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands,
Germany, Spain, Sweden and Finland, which caused hundreds of victims, in
addition to material losses and other damage.
Despite the security plans taken by the European Union, the
resurgence of activity of some individuals living inside Europe has motivated
the continent to take steps to enhance security on its external borders and to
pass legislation to remove terrorist content from the internet.
Continuous operations
There have been 16 terrorist operations since last year in
France, Britain, the Netherlands, Germany and Belgium, and the perpetrators
were of Middle Eastern origins but had legal status in Europe.
The European Center for Counterterrorism and Intelligence
Studies was able to analyze these attacks and noted that stabbing operations
are the most used, which means that extremist elements have lost much of their
ability to obtain explosives or firearms.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


