Terror threat will rise as Western jihadis return home

  • There will be more attacks using new technology such as drones, experts warn
  •  It will happen as IS fighters are pushed out of their Iraq and Syria strongholds
  • They are expected to come back to Britain hell-bent on more destruction

The terror threat will rise as Western jihadis in Iraq and Syria return home with battle-hardened skills in high-tech methods of attack, a report has warned.

Security services fear there will be more attacks using new technologies, such as drones, as Islamic State fighters are pushed out of their strongholds and make their way back to Britain and Europe, it was claimed.

The chilling report by Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre (JTIC) found that new and ‘more destructive methods’ of attack will emerge in the next two years. It came as Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson warned during a summit in Rome yesterday that the threat posed by militants was ‘evolving and intensifying’.

 

Abdelhamid Abaaoud – the man who organized multiple terror attacks in Belgium and France, including the November 2015 Paris attacks -is the kind of battle-hardened terrorist who it’s feared could soon end up on Britain’s streets

Islamic State recently released video shows a jihadi holding up a knife as the voices call for attacks on western nations

Islamic State recently released video shows a jihadi holding up a knife as the voices call for attacks on western nations

ISIS has made no secret of its determination to strike Western targets

ISIS has made no secret of its determination to strike Western targets

Data analysed by JTIC found many of those imprisoned for providing support to groups such as Islamic State in the past two years could be released between 2019 and 2023

Data analysed by JTIC found many of those imprisoned for providing support to groups such as Islamic State in the past two years could be released between 2019 and 2023

There are believed to be some 270 UK fighters currently in Syria and Iraq.

The JTIC report examined the threat from terrorism over the next five to 10 years, but also warned that growing numbers of Islamist convicts are likely to exacerbate the risk of radicalisation in prisons. 

Driver’s ‘plot to kill the Queen and PM’

 A Somali delivery driver discussed killing David Cameron and the ‘old woman Elizabeth’ – the Queen – before trying to join Islamic State, a jury heard yesterday.

Aweys Shikhey, 38, also talked of attacking Jews and Tottenham Hotspur’s White Hart Lane ground in North London. He tried to raise money by applying for loans, securing £10,000 from Barclays in 2016 for a ‘wedding’, the Old Bailey was told.

In spring 2017, Shikhey borrowed more cash from his boss saying he wanted to visit his two wives and children in Holland and Kenya, but encrypted online chat with friends showed his aim was to join IS.

His plan was exposed when one of the friends was arrested in east Africa suspected of terrorism. A message was found on his computer telling Shikhey: ‘May God bestow you in killing [then prime minister] David Cameron and the old woman Elizabeth.’ The defendant allegedly replied: ‘Amen, brother.’

Shikhey, who has a Dutch passport, denies preparing terrorist acts on or before May 23 last year. The trial continues.

 

The report added: ‘Security services will struggle to adequately monitor a combination of returning militants, an increased number of radical Islamist networks involved in the propagation of terrorism, and the radicalisation risks associated with a substantially increasing Islamist prison population.’

Data analysed by JTIC also found many of those imprisoned for providing support to groups such as Islamic State in the past two years could be released between 2019 and 2023. It suggested that Islamist groups that previously held support roles – such as spreading propaganda or financing – could be moved to operational ones.

These could include ‘setting up cells, acquiring weapons, providing facilities and safe houses for explosives building, and recruiting militants for attacks in Europe’.

Meanwhile, the fate of two Londoners suspected of being members of an Islamic State execution group dubbed ‘The Beatles’ risks becoming a diplomatic row.

US defence secretary Jim Mattis signalled he would use the Rome meeting to press allies to take back captured militants to face justice in their home countries, but ministers have resisted suggestions that Alexanda Kotey and El Shafee Elsheikh – who have been stripped of British citizenship – should return to the UK.

  • The trial of an Uzbek man who confessed to ramming a truck into a crowd in Stockholm, killing five people, started on Tuesday. Rakhmat Akilov said he wanted to punish Sweden for participating in the international coalition against IS.

 



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