Amsterdam (AFP) - The Islamic
State group has honed the ability to launch global attacks and is set to
focus more on Europe following the Paris massacre, the chief of the EU
police agency Europol said Monday.
Rob Wainwright
told a news conference that "the so-called Islamic State had developed a
new combat style capability to carry out a campaign of large-scale
terrorist attacks on a global stage -- with a particular focus in
Europe."
"So-called Islamic
State has a willingness and a capability to carry out further attacks in
Europe, and of course all national authorities are working to prevent
that from happening," he added.
Wainwright
was unveiling the findings of a new Europol report on changes in how
the jihadist group operates, coinciding with the launch of the agency's
new counterterrorism centre in The Hague.
IS claimed
responsibility for the November 13 Paris attacks in which 130 people
were killed, releasing a video on Sunday purporting to show nine of the
jihadists in which they threaten "coalition countries" including
Britain.A US-led coalition has been fighting IS in Iraq since August 2014, and in Syria since September that year.
"IS is preparing more terrorist attacks, including more 'Mumbai-style' attacks, to be executed in member states of the EU, and in France in particular," the Europol report said.
"The attacks will be primarily directed at soft targets, because of the impact it generates. Both the November Paris attacks and the October 2015 bombing of a Russian airliner suggest a shift in IS strategy towards going global."
IS
had developed an "external action command" which was trained for
"special forces-style attacks" internationally, the report said.
But
the report played down fears that jihadists were smuggling themselves
into Europe as part of the huge wave of refugees and migrants that the
continent is dealing with, many of whom are fleeing the war in Syria."There is no concrete evidence that terrorist travellers systematically use the flow of refugees to enter Europe unnoticed," it said.
It
warned however that many new arrivals were vulnerable to radicalisation
or recruitment, with evidence that extremist recruiters were
specifically targeting refugee centres.
One
of the main tasks of the new Europol counter-terrorism centre was to
collect details on the estimated 5,000 Europeans who have gone to fight
with IS in Syria and Iraq, Wainwright said.
"We
already have details on 3,700 fighters actively engaged in the conflict
zone but that's not the full picture and it's something we will be
addressing through priority work of the new centre," it said.
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