The terrorist attacks in Brussels, where at least 31 people were killed earlier this week, has forced us once again to comprehend the almost incomprehensible. Why do people turn their backs on the relative comfort of their lives to join the brutal organisation that is Islamic State and commit terrorist offences and mass murder?
(The Australian)New ISIS recruits have deep criminal roots
European officials say the perpetrators in the most recent attacks appear to be part of a new wave of recruits that are not “radical Islamists†but rather “Islamized radicals†— people from society’s outer margins who feel at home with a terrorist organization noted for beheading hostages and executing unarmed civilians.
Joby Warrick, Gregg Miller (Washington Post)“Wie kan je meer vertrouwen?’
Sinds vandaag hebben we het over de broers El Bakraoui. Alweer broers. Hoe komt het toch dat terroristische aanslagen zo vaak een familiale aangelegenheid zijn? Een hechte band blijkt een grotere rol te spelen in het radicaliseren dan ideologie en godsdienst.
Lotte Alsteens (DS Avond)It is no surprise siblings with past crimes carried out attacks on Brussels
The el-Bakraoui brothers highlight the links between terrorism and criminal records, and the strength of family in Islamic militancy.
Jason Burke (The Guardian)Brussels terrorist attacks: why the heart of Europe?
Brussels is home to an increasing number of angry and alienated young men who feel they are not treated as equal citizens and have no future.
David Wroe (Brisbane Times)De gruwel heeft geen toekomst
Ook de huidige terreurgolf zal vroeg of laat op haar grens botsen. Wanneer dat is, hangt mee af van de manier waarop wij reageren.
Rik Coolsaet (De Standaard)Jihadi Cool: Belgium’s New Extremists are as Shallow as They are Deadly
These European attackers are not like the Al-Qaeda members of old—the radicalized adherents to fundamentalist Islam. Many of these new age killers were small children when the World Trade Center fell in 2001 and have spent much of their lives watching major wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and now Syria.
Kurt Eichenwald (Newsweek)Radicalisation, entre contexte et responsabilité individuelle
Le concept de “radicalisation” célèbre cette année ses douze ans. Apparu pour la première fois dans un document de travail de l’Union européenne en mai 2004, il est devenu le Saint Graal du contreterrorisme. Mais le processus dit de radicalisation est bien plus complexe qu’il n’y paraît à première vue.
Facing the fourth foreign fighters wave. What drives Europeans to Syria, and to Islamic state?
Thousands of young Europeans have gone to fight in the Levant, the fourth wave of jihadi foreign fighters since the 1980s. Their decision is rooted in a “no future” subculture and boosted by the conviction that by traveling to Syria they have nothing to lose and everything to gain.
Rik Coolsaet (Egmont Paper)Terror threats will be the new normal for Europe, experts say
Analysts believe there will be more security alerts and cancellations of major events after Paris attacks.
Matthew Taylor (The Guardian)Professor Coolsaet neemt afscheid van zijn studenten
‘Onze politici plegen vaandelvlucht’