The Strategic Context of the Paris Attacks

Similar documents
Paris, Sharm el-sheikh and the Resurrection of Old Europe

MIGRANT AND REFUGEE CRISIS IN EUROPE: CHALLENGES, EXPERIENCES AND LESSONS LEARNT IN THE BALKANS

Young refugees finding their voice: participation between discourse and practice (draft version)

Opening remarks. It is important to recall the hand we were dealt in this crisis.

Feb. 1, 2017 As long as illegal immigration is permitted, the foundations of American culture are at risk.

Refugee crisis: How do European countries' attitudes differ on refugees?

Germany and the Failure of Multiculturalism

CBC Learning authorizes the reproduction of material contained in this resource guide for educational purposes. Please identify the source.

Unifying Europe: Consensus-Building on Migration and Terrorism. December 2017 PREAMBLE

HISAR SCHOOL JUNIOR MODEL UNITED NATIONS Globalization: Creating a Common Language. Advisory Panel

The Dispensability of Allies

FAILING EUROPE? THE PRESENT REALITY.

It Happens on the Pavement: The Role of Cities in Addressing Migration and Violent Extremism Challenges and Opportunities

Protecting the rights of refugees, migrants, and asylum seekers in Europe

President-Elect Donald Trump

INTEGRATION OF REFUGEES INTO THE EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM OF GREECE.

U.S. resistance to Syrian refugees sparks comparisons to WWII Jews' plight

Countering Violent Extremism and Radical Rhetoric

THE ANDREW MARR SHOW INTERVIEW: JUSTINE GREENING, MP INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT SECRETARY SEPTEMBER 20 th 2015

Q&A: Trending Issues on Migration. The EU Quota Ruling. What are the Reasons for the Hungarian Government s Reaction?

VISION IAS

Making Sense Of The Worst Refugee Crisis Since World War II

NATO and the United States

THE ANDREW MARR SHOW INTERVIEW: MICHAEL FALLON, MP DEFENCE SECRETARY OCTOBER 26 th 2014

PAMUN XV GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEASURES TO ADDRESS EUROPE S REFUGEE CRISIS. Introduction of Topic

DRAFT OPINION. EN United in diversity EN. European Parliament 2015/0310(COD) of the Committee on Transport and Tourism

UK EMN Ad Hoc Query on settlement under the European Convention on Establishment Requested by UK EMN NCP on 14 th July 2014

PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE

CECA World History & Geography 3rd Quarter Week 7, 8, 9 Date Homework Assignment Stamp

Thinking About a US-China War, Part 2

EPP Group Position Paper. on Migration. EPP Group. in the European Parliament

Foro de Seguridad XXV Foro Económico. Krynica (Polonia) 8-10 de septiembre de 2015

Counter Terrorism Committee (CTC)

Measures to eliminate international terrorism

Seeking better life: Palestinian refugees narratives on emigration

x Introduction those in other countries, which made it difficult for more Jews to immigrate. It was often impossible for an entire family to get out o

Opening Statement Secretary of State John Kerry Senate Committee on Foreign Relations December 9, 2014


U.S. plans to accept more refugees, but security rules will limit number

Safeguarding Equality

Merkel s Twilight Arrives

Grassroots direct aid provision to asylum-seekers in Hungary

HOME SITUATION LEVEL 1 QUESTION 1 QUESTION 2 QUESTION 3

Racism and discrimination in the context of migration in Europe: ENAR Shadow Report 2015/2016. Ojeaku Nwabuzo, Senior Research Officer

Asylum Seekers, Refugees and Homelessness in Europe. Nicholas Pleace

An overview of irregular migration trends in Europe

May 30, 1967 Report on the talks of Josif Tito with UAR Ambassador Abuzeid in Vanga

Europeans Fear Wave of Refugees Will Mean More Terrorism, Fewer Jobs

epp european people s party

#MIGlobal Source: The New York Times.

At the borders of fortress Europe, the wretched refuse of their teeming

EPP Policy Paper 1 A Secure Europe

Counter-terrorism, De-Radicalisation and Foreign Fighters. Joint debate during the extraordinary meeting of the LIBE Committee. Giovanni Buttarelli

I. Executive Summary

Compromise Amendments to draft resolution On the Situation in Syria. Party Line Action Current Text Proposed Amendment CAS Decision.

RESPONDING TO INJUSTICE AN IGNATIAN APPROACH. Guantanamo Bay

Montessori Model United Nations. Distr.: Middle School Thirteenth Session Sept Sixth Committee Legal

With the current terrorist threat facing European Union Member States, including the UK

Press Conference June

From: Celinda Lake, Daniel Gotoff, and Tracey Johnstone, Lake Research Partners. Key Findings from New Poll of Likely Voters on Syrian Refugees

THE DESTABILIZING POTENTIAL OF EUROPE S MIGRANT CRISIS BY ANWITI BAHUGUNA, PH.D GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES

I. THE UNITED KINGDOM AND THE EUROPEAN UNION

Notes from Europe s Periphery

EMN Ad-Hoc Query on Ad hoc Query on granting refugee status to applicants claiming to belong to religious minorities Protection

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [without reference to a Main Committee (A/67/L.63 and Add.1)]

Migration Network for Asylum seekers and Refugees in Europe and Turkey

Cover Story. - by Shraddha Bhandari. 24 JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2016 FSAI Journal

The Syrian Conflict: Two Perspectives on 10,000 Lives. began in March of Millions have been displaced and are looking to start life anew in

Mary Bosworth, Professor of Criminology, University of Oxford and Monash University

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL

Situation in Iraq and Syria and the IS offensive including the persecution of minorities

Ad-Hoc Query on access to the labour market for asylum seekers. Requested by AT EMN NCP on 9 January Compilation produced on 9 April 2013

Ad-Hoc Query on The rules of access to labour market for asylum seekers. Requested by FR EMN NCP on 25 th October 2010

France, Germany, Portugal, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and United States of America: draft resolution

UNDERGROUND COMPLEXES

Countering Violent Extremism. Mohamed A.Younes Future For Advanced Research and Studies

Migrants Who Enter/Stay Irregularly in Albania

Why the German-Turkish Migrant Plan Can Work

The Syrian refugees in Lebanon and the EU-Lebanon. Partnership Compact new strategies, old agendas. Peter Seeberg

Addressing Emerging Terrorist Threats and the Role of UNODC

Research Report. Leiden Model United Nations 2015 ~ fresh ideas, new solutions ~

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL AND THE COUNCIL. Thirteenth report on relocation and resettlement

Investing in a caring, inclusive and open society

The Immigration Debate: Historical and Current Issues of Immigration 2003, Constitutional Rights Foundation

And The Republicans VIETNAM. BY Leonard P. Liggio. of it.

Conducting a Civil Conversation in the Classroom

14300/15 BM/mdc 1 DG D 1 A LIMITE EN

THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION. 5 on 45: Merkel wins, far right gains: What happened in Germany s elections? September 25, 2017

Immigration Trends in Europe and the US

SPECIAL UMD REPORT: Macedonia s Involvement in the Migrant Crisis

Germany s Presence in Afghanistan and the Failure of Communication

REFUGEES AND THOUSANDTHS

Spanish-Moroccan land border in Melilla no lawless zone for automatic expulsions

The Terror OCTOBER 18, 2001

MARCH 2018 TERROR AND THE CITY BOOSTING URBAN RESILIENCE TO VIOLENT EXTREMISM REPORT

Turkey, Germany and the Syrian Refugee crisis. Gerald Knaus Ankara 2 November 2015

Unit 3: International Relations Lesson 4: League of Nations (pp from the IB Course Companion)

Profiles of border guards and other relevant staff to be made available to the European Border and Coast Guard Teams

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY

Complexities of migration, radicalism and education. Ali A. Abdi University of British Columbia

Transcription:

The Strategic Context of the Paris Attacks Nov. 16. 2015 The terrorist attacks in Paris indicate a new level of sophistication in Islamic State s planning and coordination. By George Friedman The attacks in Paris on Friday night were part of a long-term pattern of occasional terrorist attacks by jihadists on targets in Europe. In the European context this stood out for two reasons. First, the scale of the attack was substantially larger than other attacks both in the number of participants and the number of casualties. Second, it was different in the level of sophistication and planning. Securing weapons and explosives, gathering at least three teams, identifying the targets and the manner in which these targets were to be attacked involved fairly complex logistics, intelligence and above all coordination. Most impressive was their counter-intelligence and security. There were at least seven attackers and additional support personnel to secure weapons, gather information and help them hide out in preparation for the attack. No one detected them. The large majority of attacks are detected and disrupted prior to execution by European and American intelligence services, using information, communications intercepts and the other tools available to them. No one detected this group, indicating that the group, or at least its leaders, were aware of the methods used to detect raids and evaded them. Lone wolves evade detection being lone wolves. These attacks required coordination and support. Their communications, movement and surveillance should have been detected. They weren t. That means there was a degree of training that could only be obtained through a more sophisticated group like Islamic State. Obviously, it was not unprecedented since the 9/11 attacks on the United States were an order of magnitude more successful and more complex. But in the European context, a simultaneous attack on three targets causing well over 100 casualties created a new reality. Yet, given the number of operatives, the targets and the ability to evade French and other intelligence, there are elements in Paris that remind us of the 9/11 attacks. It is noteworthy that Islamic State took credit for the attacks because such attacks are not 1 / 5

normally directly ordered by IS. Terrorist attacks on Europe or the United States designed to create maximum casualties were the modus operandi of al-qaida. IS has generally focused on taking and holding ground in Syria and Iraq. They were capable of terror attacks but their focus was on creating the caliphate, a territory ruled under their interpretation of Sharia, rather than on terror attacks. Within the context of more conventional warfare, they sometimes carried out terror attacks against enemy villages or positions. And they did encourage lone wolves, individual jihadists not directly connected to any group, to take the initiative in carrying out their own attacks. However, an attack of this sort, claimed quickly by IS, implying prior knowledge and involvement, represents a shift in strategy by IS. This was not an operation thrown together in a few days. The planning for the attacks, assuming that explosives and weapons had been secured, probably began no later than Oct. 1, 2015. We emphasize again that the risk of detection of an operation so long in planning is high and we should bear this in mind as we turn to the strategy. When we go back to the days surrounding Oct. 1, there are two things that stand out. First, the French began bombing targets in Syria on Sept. 27 and on Oct. 8 it attacked Raqqa, the unofficial capital of IS. A few weeks later, on Nov. 5, the French announced they were going to deploy their aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle, to the eastern Mediterranean to boost its efforts against IS. The French have a longstanding interest in Syria, given that after World War II it was part of a League of Nations mandate granted France. Since then, as it has in many of its former colonies, the French have maintained a long-term desire to influence Syrian politics. The deployment of their carrier was part of their long-term interest and the attack on Raqqa clearly angered IS. Given the timing, this might have been the trigger for the attacks. However, there is a broader consideration. The wave of immigration that has swept into Europe from the Islamic world, but particularly from Syria, has created a massive crisis in Europe and one that was particularly raucous prior to Oct. 1. Charges were being levelled by Germany against Central European countries for refusing to accept refugees. In turn, those countries charge that Germany was willing to transform their national character with an influx of refugees as well as endanger their national security. The deeper reality is that Europe had nearly broken down over the Greek debt crisis. Now, it has totally broken down over the mass migration issue. Had Europe been functioning as an integrated entity, a European security force would have been dispatched to Greece at the beginning of the migration, to impose whatever policy on which the EU had decided. Instead, there was no European policy, nor was there any force to support the Greeks, who clearly lacked the resources to handle the situation themselves. Instead the major countries first condemned the Greeks for their failure, then the Macedonians as the crisis went north, then the Hungarians for building a fence, but not the Austrians who built a fence after the migrants left Hungary. The point is that the raucous debate took place at the same time that an avalanche of migrants or refugees, depending on how you addressed these, arrived. 2 / 5

From IS point of view, this provided two opportunities. Tactically, it gave them an opportunity to insert agents into Europe in the midst of migration. But this was a secondary issue, since IS could insert operatives at somewhat greater risk if they wanted. But there was a much more significant problem and opportunity for Islamic State. First, the mass migration from Syria did not show itself at this level during the first phase of the Syrian civil war, when IS was not yet involved. It showed itself when IS became operational. As such, this posed a political problem for the group. The refugees were overwhelmingly Sunni and IS presented itself as the guarantor of Sunni rights. The fact that they were fleeing IS affirmed the sense in other parts of its territory that IS represented a threat not only to Shiites, Kurds and others, but also to Sunnis. Ultimately this represented a threat to IS power because if the Sunni base saw IS as a threat, then IS would become unsustainable. That was the strategic threat of the immigrants. There was also a strategic opportunity in two ways. First, the reception of the migrants by the Europeans, particularly as displayed on television, was unwelcoming. The ability to demonstrate to the Muslim masses that the Europeans were now hostile not only to the principles of Islam, but to Muslims themselves, would potentially position IS as the defenders of Islam or at least the Sunnis. IS had been careful, in the midst of a rigorous interpretation and implementation of Sharia in areas under its control, to also create a system of social services that provided at least a safety net to Sunnis. Fleeing the IS safety net for Europe, Muslims now discovered how despised they were. From the Islamic State point of view, the more hostile the greeting to the migrants, the more solid their position. The chaotic arguments in Europe supported their position. In late October, the atmosphere began to shift, or at least the intensity. Europe remained united, but the decision by Angela Merkel to very aggressively champion the case for sanctuary in Europe for the refugees not only created a battle with some European countries and the European right, but it also began to shift the center of gravity of European positions toward the idea that some sort of sanctuary had to be granted. This shift did not particularly please IS, since a more hostile stance satisfied its needs better. Whether this was the reasoning that led to the attack in Paris is something we do not know. We do know that a passport for a Syrian refugee who had passed through Greece was found on the body of one of the dead attackers, although it has not yet been confirmed whether the passport matched the identity of the attacker. Clearly, in this case, the organizer of the attack had to know that the attacker would be identified. Once identified, he would be tracked to his entry in Greece and from there identified as a refugee. Care could have been taken to exclude refugees, or at least take greater steps to hide identities. Instead, the fact that he may have been a Syrian refugee, or at least was holding the passport of one, was discovered in hours. Whoever organized this attack was not careless and he undoubtedly knew the consequences of a Syrian refugee being among the attackers. This was obvious to anyone in Europe or elsewhere. Nevertheless, the attacks went forward, knowing that the attackers would be killed and 3 / 5

identified. Therefore, IS, or the subgroup in command of this operation, had to know that the consequence of this attack would not only be increased hostility to IS, but intense re-examination, in the context of legitimate fear, of the policy of admitting Syrian refugees into Europe. That would mean that they intended to have that outcome. In the most extreme case, the refugees would be either placed in camps under careful guard until their identities and links could be determined, which would take a long time. Alternatively, a program or simple ad hoc expulsions of the refugees would take place. In either case, a process of potential radicalization would begin that would both paint the Europeans as an enemy, clarifying sides, or create a base for recruiting troops for IS. There was only upside in this for IS. The point that made this strategy attractive is that once the dead IS operative holding a Syrian passport was found, any reasonable European assumption would have to be that there were more. Given the numbers of dead and wounded, the presence of even a handful of such operatives would be cause for serious alarm. Given the fact that the operation was undertaken without any detection of movements or communications, it followed that the ability to discriminate between harmless refugees and IS operatives was uncertain. Considering this logic, any European not frightened was out of touch with reality. The question at this point then is what will be Europe s response. Already, the incoming Polish minister for European affairs has said that Poland will not be accepting refugee quotas previously agreed to by the European Union. Part of Europe s response depends on how powerful the backlash against the German position will be. Undoubtedly this was taken into account when choosing a Franco-German soccer match as a target. But in driving home the fact that an influx of terrorists, however few, is one of the prices for providing succor for them, the position of anti-immigrant leaders, like Hungary s Victor Orban, now looks more powerful than ever. This could cause a sweeping shift in European politics along with an end to the automatic assumption of open borders. The European strategic problem is how to implement a plan to solve the crisis. If the plan is expulsion, how do you expel several million people? Certainly you don t do it quickly. If the decision is to continue to provide them refuge, then the question is how do you identify IS or other operatives among them? Even questioning this many refugees, let alone effectively getting answers, will take a long time. And that long time is a window of opportunity for further operations. It may all be an accident, but if it is an accident, it is a remarkable one. With this attack and its threats for more, IS has struck at the heart of Europe s sense of security and regardless of what they do, the Europeans will be alienating huge numbers of people who not only have no where to go, but also have no way to get there in any reasonable time frame. What comes out of this is something Europe hasn t seen for a long time: camps, carefully guarded, with interrogation. The 4 / 5

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) refugees must be bought under control from the European point of view. That requires them to be confined. But how do you confine several million people? IS has posed a challenge that either makes Europe vulnerable or brutal. If accidental, it was very lucky. But we suspect it was strategic thinking and quite capable strategic thinking at that. 5 / 5