When ISIS Strikes In The Heart of Europe
The Islamic State (ISIS) octopus sent its arms to Sinai, Beirut and Paris this month.
The Islamic State (ISIS) octopus sent its arms to Sinai, Beirut and Paris this month.
The Sony Playstation 4 video game console has become an increasingly popular way for terrorist networks to communicate, Belgian Interior Minister Jan Jambon warned last week following the coordinated Paris terror attacks that killed at least 129 and wounded at least 350.
PARIS – It’s Friday evening. We are in the middle of the traditional “Shalom Aleichem” song during a Shabbat Eve dinner with friends in central Paris. Everything is calm and quiet.
Paris – Halima Saadi Ndiaye was celebrating her 36th birthday in a cafe where her brother worked when terror took over. Within a minute, she was dead. Within hours, her sister Hodda was, too.
Russia’s security chief, FSB head Alexander Bortnikov, acknowledged that terrorism downed a Metrojet flight which crashed in the Sinai several weeks ago, killing 224 people – long after Western intelligence declared that terrorist involvement was ‘probable.’
A video released by an Islamic State-affiliated jihadist group threatened Washington, DC, with a Paris-like attack if it continued its military campaign in Syria.
While the government and media in France are still dealing with the scope of the intelligence failure that preceded the wave of terrorist attacks that killed 129 people and injured 352 here on Friday night, the army and security forces have swung into action against Islamic State targets in Syria.
A war on terror begins with consciousness: You don’t fight terror and don’t defeat it with fake consciousness. In order to win, you must call the murderer by his name, the enemy by his name, the terrorist by his name.
French police raided homes of suspected Islamist militants across the country overnight in the aftermath of the Paris shootings, French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said on Monday as he warned of potential further attacks.
Moscow does not consider Shi’ite Muslim group Hezbollah to be a terrorist organisation, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying on Sunday.