Terror threat
ISIS Smuggler: Sleeper Cells and ‘Undead’ Suicide Bombers Have Infiltrated Europe
Europe is bracing for a new wave of jihadist attacks by terrorists
affiliated with the so-called Islamic State, what “you might call ISIS 2.0,” as Interpol chief
Jürgen Stock recently told reporters. Some previously imprisoned jihadists are being
released from jail, others are returning to Europe—and to prison—while still others, we
have learned, have never been known to police and operate as “sleeper cells” waiting to
be mobilized.
It is in the face of such concerns that U.S. intelligence chiefs have warned, despite
President Donald Trump’s assertions to the contrary, that ISIS is still far from defeated.
Last week, the International Center for the Study of Violent Extremism (ICSVE)
interviewed 18 ISIS cadres held by the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) closely
allied with U.S. coalition forces in Syria. Two of the prisoners interviewed were former
members of the ISIS intelligence operation known as the “emni,” sometimes also
written as “amni.”
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