First attack under new ISIS leader
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the stabbing operation that took place on a bridge in London.
The attack left two people dead and
three others injured. The attacker, ISIS said, responded to calls for attacking
the citizens of the member states of the international coalition against ISIS.
Terrorist Usman Khan carried out the
attack at the heart of London's commercial district on November 29, before being
shot and killed by police. The attack was a repetition of another one that took
place on June 3, 2017, when terrorists drove over pedestrians, killing seven.
Three attackers were killed and dozens of other people were injured.
Observations
The London stabbing attack was the first
to be claimed by ISIS after the death of its founder and leader, Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi. It is also the first since Abi Ibrahim al-Qurashi took over the
ISIS leadership.
The attack shows that the new ISIS
leader wants to turn Europe into a main field for its attacks once more. During
Baghdadi's last days, his group was preoccupied with battles inside Iraq and
Syria.
The attack also shows that some ISIS
affiliates are being influenced by the messages of new ISIS spokesman, Abu
Hamza al-Qurashi, who called for attacking the interests and the citizens of
foreign states.
ISIS-leaning lone wolves
Terrorism specialist, Hesham al-Najjar,
the new ISIS leadership has not had enough time at the top of the terrorist
organization to build a network with operatives that allows this leadership to
issue orders to these operatives.
He told The Reference that the London
stabbing attack was most likely personally motivated by a man who sympathized
with ISIS.
"This means the attacker can be
classified as a lone-wolf," al-Najjar said. "Nonetheless, he belongs
to a sleeper cell that only wanted to carry out the orders of the
organization."
Attacker
Khan had been living in Staffordshire,
in the West Midlands of England. He had been convicted of terrorism offences in
2012 and released on license — a form of supervised release — in December last
year.
He was one of nine people jailed in 2012
over a plot to blow up the London Stock Exchange — only a short walk from the
site of the latest attack — and to build a terror training camp.
At the time of his conviction, Khan was
described as being from Stoke-on-Trent, in Staffordshire.