ISIS Affiliate Linked to Moscow Attack Has Global
Ambitions
The Islamic State in Khorasan is active in
Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran and has set its sights on Europe and beyond.
Eric
Schmitt
By Eric
Schmitt
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/25/us/politics/moscow-attack-isis.html
March 25,
2024
Updated
1:27 a.m. ET
Five years
ago this month, an American-backed Kurdish and Arab militia ousted Islamic
State fighters from a village in eastern Syria, the group’s last sliver of
territory.
Since then,
the organization that once staked out a self-proclaimed caliphate across Iraq
and Syria has metastasized into a more traditional terrorist group — a
clandestine network of cells from West Africa to Southeast Asia engaged in
guerrilla attacks, bombings and targeted assassinations.
None of the
group’s affiliates have been as relentless as the Islamic State in Khorasan,
which is active in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran and has set its sights on
attacking Europe and beyond. U.S. officials say the group carried out the
attack near Moscow on Friday, killing scores of people and wounding many
others.
In January,
Islamic State Khorasan, or ISIS-K, carried out twin bombings in Iran that
killed scores and wounded hundreds of others at a memorial service for Iran’s
former top general, Qassim Suleimani, who was targeted in a U.S. drone strike
four years earlier.
“The threat
from ISIS,” Avril D. Haines, the director of national intelligence, told a
Senate panel this month, “remains a significant counterterrorism concern.” Most
attacks “globally taken on by ISIS have actually occurred by parts of ISIS that
are outside of Afghanistan,” she said.
Gen.
Michael E. Kurilla, the head of the military’s Central Command, told a House
committee on Thursday that ISIS-K “retains the capability and the will to
attack U.S. and Western interests abroad in as little as six months with little
to no warning.”
American
counterterrorism specialists on Sunday dismissed the Kremlin’s suggestion that
Ukraine was behind Friday’s attack near Moscow. “The modus operandi was classic
ISIS,” said Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism scholar at the Council on Foreign
Relations.
The assault
was the third concert venue in the Northern Hemisphere that ISIS has struck in
the past decade, Mr. Hoffman said, following an attack on the Bataclan theater
in Paris in November 2015 (as part of a broader operation that struck other
targets in the city) and a suicide bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in
Manchester Arena, England, in May 2017.
Islamic
State Khorasan, founded in 2015 by disaffected members of the Pakistani
Taliban, burst onto the international jihadist scene after the Taliban toppled
the Afghan government in 2021. During the U.S. military withdrawal from the
country, ISIS-K carried out a suicide bombing at the international airport in
Kabul in August 2021 that killed 13 U.S. service members and as many as 170
civilians.
Since then,
the Taliban have been fighting ISIS-K in Afghanistan. So far, the Taliban’s
security services have prevented the group from seizing territory or recruiting
large numbers of former Taliban fighters, according to U.S. counterterrorism
officials.
But the
upward arc and scope of ISIS-K’s attacks have increased in recent years, with
cross-border strikes into Pakistan and a growing number of plots in Europe.
Most of those European plots were thwarted, prompting Western intelligence
assessments that the group might have reached the lethal limits of its
capabilities.
Last July,
Germany and the Netherlands coordinated arrests targeting seven Tajik, Turkmen
and Kyrgyz individuals linked to a ISIS-K network who were suspected of
plotting attacks in Germany.
Three men
were arrested in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia over alleged plans
to attack the Cologne Cathedral on New Year’s Eve 2023. The raids were linked
to three other arrests in Austria and one in Germany on Dec. 24. The four
people were reportedly acting in support of ISIS-K.
American
and other Western counterterrorism officials say these plots were organized by
low-level operatives who were detected and thwarted relatively quickly.
“Thus far,
ISIS-Khorasan has relied primarily on inexperienced operatives in Europe to try
to advance attacks in its name,” Christine S. Abizaid, the head of the National
Counterterrorism Center, told a House committee in November.
But there
are worrisome signs that ISIS-K is learning from its mistakes. In January,
masked assailants attacked a Roman Catholic church in Istanbul, killing one
person. Shortly afterward, the Islamic State, through its official Amaq News
Agency, claimed responsibility. Turkish law enforcement forces detained 47
people, most of them Central Asian nationals.
Since then,
Turkish security forces have launched mass counteroperations against ISIS
suspects in Turkey, Syria and Iraq. Several European investigations shed light
on the global and interconnected nature of ISIS finances, according to a United
Nations report in January, which identified Turkey as a logistical hub for
ISIS-K operations in Europe.
The Moscow
and Iran attacks demonstrated more sophistication, counterterrorism officials
said, suggesting a greater level of planning and an ability to tap into local
extremist networks.
“ISIS-K has
been fixated on Russia for the past two years,” frequently criticizing
President Vladimir V. Putin in its propaganda, said Colin P. Clarke, a
counterterrorism analyst at the Soufan Group, a security consulting firm based
in New York. “ISIS-K accuses the Kremlin of having Muslim blood in its hands,
referencing Moscow’s interventions in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria.”
A
significant portion of ISIS-K’s members are of Central Asian origin, and there
is a large contingent of Central Asians living and working in Russia. Some of
these individuals may have become radicalized and been in position to serve in
a logistical function, stockpiling weapons, Mr. Clarke said.
Daniel
Byman, a counterterrorism specialist at Georgetown University, said that
“ISIS-K has gathered fighters from Central Asia and the Caucasus under its
wing, and they may be responsible for the Moscow attack, either directly or via
their own networks.”
Russian and
Iranian authorities apparently did not take seriously enough public and more
detailed private American warnings of imminent ISIS-K attack plotting, or were
distracted by other security challenges.
“In early
March, the U.S. government shared information with Russia about a planned
terrorist attack in Moscow,” Adrienne Watson, a spokeswoman for the National
Security Council, said on Saturday. “We also issued a public advisory to
Americans in Russia on March 7. ISIS bears sole responsibility for this attack.
There was no Ukrainian involvement whatsoever.”
Russian
authorities on Saturday announced the arrest of several suspects in Friday’s
attack. But senior American officials said on Sunday that they were still
digging into the background of the assailants and trying to determine whether
they were deployed from South or Central Asia for this specific attack or if
they were already in the country as part of the network of supporters that
ISIS-K then engaged and encouraged.
Counterterrorism
specialists voiced concern on Sunday that the attacks in Moscow and Iran might
embolden ISIS-K to redouble its efforts to strike in Europe, particularly in
France, Belgium, Britain and other countries that have been hit on and off for
the past decade.
The U.N.
report, using a different name for Islamic State Khorasan, said “some
individuals of North Caucasus and Central Asian origin traveling from
Afghanistan or Ukraine toward Europe represent an opportunity for ISIL-K, which
seeks to project violent attacks in the West.” The report concluded that there
was evidence of “current and unfinished operational plots on European soil
conducted by ISIL-K.”
A senior
Western intelligence official identified three main drivers that could inspire
ISIS-K operatives to attack: the existence of dormant cells in Europe, images
of the war in Gaza and support from Russian-speaking people living in Europe.
One major
event this summer has many counterterrorism officials on edge.
“I worry
about the Paris Olympics,” said Edmund Fitton-Brown, a former top U.N.
counterterrorism official who is now a senior adviser to the Counter Extremism
Project. “They would be a premium terrorist target.”
Eric
Schmitt is a national security correspondent for The Times, focusing on U.S.
military affairs and counterterrorism issues overseas, topics he has reported
on for more than three decades. More about Eric Schmitt
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