With machetes and axes: ISIS trains its lone wolves to kill Europeans
ISIS has been recruiting individuals
within European countries and training them in unconventional methods to carry
out terrorist operations in their areas of hiding, with the methods and tools
used by these lone wolves varying, including run-overs, stabbings and
indiscriminate shootings in gatherings.
Machetes and
axes
The German Ministry of Interior
announced the latest methods by revealing a terrorist cell training in a forest
to use machetes and axes, stressing that they were planning to carry out
terrorist attacks during the coming period after being influenced by the ideas
of ISIS through the online platforms of the organization and its leaders.
Europe is afraid of sending more
“kill squads” loyal to the terrorist organization to its borders, especially
after the Taliban came to power in Afghanistan and the release of many ISIS
elements in Afghan prisons. The German intelligence agency drew attention to
the need to monitor the movement of extremists from Europe and whether they
would start to move to Afghanistan to join ISIS there.
There is no doubt that ISIS and
al-Qaeda have benefited from the end of the era of persecution under the rule
of the Taliban, enhancing the chances of sympathizers with these organizations,
which may turn Afghanistan into a place that attracts more extremists in the
future.
New tactics
On more than one occasion, ISIS
urged its followers to devise new methods and unexpected tactics in carrying out
attacks, such as deliberate burning of cars or stabbing people with sharpened
pencils. The organization's media outlets spoke of the need to search for
weapons in the areas nearby the resident elements, outside the geographical
scope of ISIS’s control.
In December 2020, the terrorist
organization explained some of the methods available to its members in the form
of messages such as: “If they prevent you from obtaining lethal weapons, then
tell them that a sharp pencil can be used... Or his motorcycle or car could be
deliberately burned, which may hurt his heart. Therefore, encourage each other
to such actions... It is better that you attack and hide quickly and wait for
another opportunity to attack again.”
In the second issue of the
ISIS-affiliated Voice of India magazine, which began in February 2020, the
organization’s spokesperson encouraged attacks targeting army and police
elements using simple weapons and tactics that specifically target army and
police officers who have deployed in the streets and alleys, making them an
easy target during the coronavirus pandemic.
In the fourth and fifth issues, ISIS
urged killing people by stabbing them with scissors, as well as helping to
spread the corona virus, describing it as a weapon much larger than stones and
as the best opportunity to kill civilians in large numbers.
Engy Mahdi, assistant professor in
the Faculty of Economics and Political Science at Cairo University, said that
the method does not differ from that of al-Qaeda in terms of relying on absolute
terrorism based on lone wolves and calling on sympathizers to kill nationals of
the coalition countries anywhere and in any place, which is an available means
that can be implemented without referring to the leadership and even without
there being an organizational relationship in the first place between the
perpetrator of the terrorist act and the organization.
In a study entitled “Cyber Jihad: A
Study of ISIS and the US Strategy to Confront It”, Mahdi pointed out that ISIS
has switched to this decentralization strategy, based on terrorism through lone
wolves, after its victories receded in the areas under its control, such as the
Syrian city of Raqqa, the Libyan city of Sirte, and the Iraqi cities of
Fallujah and Mosul, in light of the international community’s efforts to combat
it, to pursue its leaders and followers, and to bring them to account.