K.S. Rajan (13 Sep 2014)
"ROBERT SPENCER"
US top counterterror official: Islamic State can strike “here at home with no warning”
Robert Spencer Sep 10, 2014 at 9:13am Islamic State of
Iraq and Syria, Jihad in the U.S., United States 2
Comments
matthew-olsenNo kidding, really? That’s why Olsen holds his lofty
position — because of insightful analyses like this one that no one else
ever thought of. One wonders if he is ever puzzled by the fact that
this entity that his boss and everyone around him thinks has nothing to
do with Islam has enough adherents among Muslims in the U.S. for him to
have to make this assessment.
“ISIL Stealing Upwards of $1 Million a Day to Fund Its Terror Regime,”
by Adam Kredo, Washington Free Beacon, September 10, 2014:
The United States’ top counterterrorism official warned that the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS) is stealing some $1 million
dollars a day to fund its operations and could have the ability to
convince its American sympathizers to conduct terror strikes “here at
home with no warning.”
Matthew Olsen, director of the U.S. National Counterterrorism Center,
recently delivered a candid and at times surprising assessment of ISIL’s
capabilities and threat, concluding that the group “poses a direct and
significant threat to us,” according to a transcript of his remarks
before the Brookings Institution.
As President Barack Obama prepares to delivery an address to the nation
Wednesday evening about ISIL, Olsen warned in his speech that, “left
unchecked, [ISIL] will seek to carry out attacks closer to home.”
ISIL already has recruited upwards of 10,000 extremist fighters,
including some from America, and currently controls territories “similar
in size to the UK,” according to Olsen, who discussed the ways in which
ISIL funds its terrorist activities.
“ISIL takes in as much as one million dollars per day from illicit oil
sales, smuggling, and ransom payments,” Olsen said, adding that the
group is quickly becoming a threat larger and more equipped than al
Qaeda.
As ISIL grows in influence—due in part to its outsized presence on
social media sites—the group could persuade sympathizers in the United
States to carry out deadly attacks on the homeland.
“We remain mindful of the possibility that an ISIL-sympathizer—perhaps
motivated by online propaganda—could conduct a limited, self-directed
attack here at home with no warning,” Olsen said.
The FBI has already “arrested more than half a dozen individuals seeking
to travel from the U.S. to Syria to support ISIL,” he warned.
ISIL, Olsen noted in terms not often employed by Obama administration
officials, “poses a direct and significant threat to us—and to Iraqi and
Syrian civilians—in the region and potentially to us here at home.”
The terror group’s major successes have been twofold: It is skilled on
the battlefield as well as the propaganda front, Olsen said.
“ISIL has proven to be an effective fighting force,” he said. The group
“views itself as the new leader of the global jihad. It operates the
most sophisticated propaganda machine of any extremist group. ISIL
disseminates timely, high-quality media content on multiple platforms,
including on social media, designed to secure a widespread following for
the group.”
ISIL has appealed to extremists across the world and seems to have surpassed al Qaeda as the terror group du jour, he said.
“We have seen ISIL use a range of media to tout its military
capabilities, executions of captured soldiers, and consecutive
battlefield victories,” Olsen explained. “More recently, the group’s
supporters have sustained this momentum on social media by encouraging
attacks in the U.S. and against U.S. interests in retaliation for our
airstrikes. ISIL has used this propaganda campaign to draw foreign
fighters to the group, including many from Western countries.”
The group has already proven that it can carry out terror attacks in Western countries.
“ISIL has the potential to use its safe haven to plan and coordinate
attacks in Europe and the U.S.,” Olsen warned. “This threat became real
this past year with the shooting in the Brussels museum by an ISIL
fighter and with the arrest of an individual in France who was connected
to ISIL and possessed several explosive devices.”