Europol warns of Isis attacks in Europe, says militants using new tactics

Car bombs and kidnappings, common in Syria, may emerge in Europe, Europol warns

An Iraqi special forces soldier takes cover as  an Islamic State fighter detonates a car bomb in a suicide attack in Tahrir neighbourhood of Mosul last month. Europol warned on Friday that car bombs and kidnappings may become more common. Photograph: Reuters
An Iraqi special forces soldier takes cover as an Islamic State fighter detonates a car bomb in a suicide attack in Tahrir neighbourhood of Mosul last month. Europol warned on Friday that car bombs and kidnappings may become more common. Photograph: Reuters

Islamic State (Isis) is likely to launch more attacks in Europe, the EU police agency Europol warned on Friday, with several dozen militants already in place and more possibly arriving as IS faces setbacks in Syria and Iraq.

In a report on the threat the Islamist group poses to the 28-nation bloc, Europol said the most probable forms of attack would be those used in recent years, from the mass shootings and suicide bombings seen in Paris and Brussels to stabbings and other assaults by radicals acting alone.

Car bombs and kidnappings, common in Syria, could emerge as tactics in Europe, it said, while protected sites such as power grids and nuclear power stations were not seen as top targets.

Essentially the entire European Union is under threat as almost all its governments back the US-led coalition in Syria, the agency said, warning Isis was likely to infiltrate Syrian refugee communities in Europe in an effort to inflame hostility to immigrants that has shaken many EU governments.

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If Isis is defeated or severely weakened in Syria/Iraq by the coalition forces “there may be an increased rate in the return of foreign fighters and their families from the region to the EU or to other conflict areas,” Europol said in a statement.

It said Isis was also likely to start planning attacks and sending militants to Europe from Libya and that other groups, including al Qaeda and its affiliates, also continue to pose a threat to the continent.

Europol director Rob Wainwright said EU states had stepped up their security co-operation in the wake of Isis attacks in the last couple of years, allowing more plots to be thwarted.

“Nevertheless,” he said: “Today’s report shows the threat is still high and includes diverse components which can be only tackled by even better collaboration.”

Reuters