French
authorities arrested seven people after anti-terror raids in Strasbourg
and Marseilles on Sunday, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said on
Monday.
The
eight-month-long investigation foiled a "new terrorist attack that had
been planned for a long time on our soil," Cazeneuve said during a news
conference in Paris.
Strasbourg is home to one of the most famous
Christmas markets in
Europe, with 2 million people expected to visit after it opens Friday.
French media reported the market was a potential target of the cell.
In 2000, the Strasbourg Christmas market was the target of a thwarted plot by al Qaeda-linked terrorists.
US
State Department officials told CNN the new alert was not triggered by
any one specific threat, but the timing may not be a coincidence.
"Credible
information indicates the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or
Da'esh), al Qaeda, and their affiliates continue to plan terrorist
attacks in Europe, with a focus on the upcoming holiday season and
associated events. US citizens should also be alert to the possibility
that extremist sympathizers or self-radicalized extremists may conduct
attacks during this period with little or no warning. Terrorists may
employ a wide variety of tactics, using both conventional and
nonconventional weapons and targeting both official and private
interests," stated the alert, which expires on February 20, 2017.
Syria link investigated
Investigators
said they believe the people behind the plot thwarted over the weekend
in France were being directed by a terrorist operative inside Syria
linked to ISIS, a source close to the investigation told CNN. The source
told CNN authorities are investigating whether any of the individuals
arrested over the weekend in Marseilles and Strasbourg traveled to
Syria.
They suspect some of those
under arrest traveled to Syria via Cyprus, but have not yet definitively
established this. A second source, a senior French counterterrorism
official, told CNN that in the past few days a threat by individuals
suspected of links to ISIS in Syria had been thwarted.
The
suspects arrested in Marseilles and Strasbourg are between 29 and 37
years old and are of French, Moroccan and Afghan nationality. Only the
Moroccan suspect was known to investigators, after they received
intelligence from a "neighboring country."
In June, two people linked to this case were arrested as part of the operation.
"Never
has the terrorist threat been so high in our country. The
anti-terrorist services are completely mobilized," French Interior
Minister Cazeneuve said. The case has been handed over to the Public
Prosecutor of Paris.
Heightened concern
The arrests come at a time of continued heightened concern over the terrorist threat to France. In
September, French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said the threat was at its maximum level and security services were foiling attacks "every single day."
The
senior French counterterrorism official told CNN that while intensified
counterterrorism operations had disrupted the plotting activity of
terror networks since the
Brussels attacks in March,
there was still an acute danger of attacks by radicals on French soil
directed, instigated, or inspired to attack, by ISIS. The official said
French security services were being surprised time and again by new
cases of travel to Syria.
The
official said the number of Islamist extremists on the radar screen of
French security services had grown to more than 15,000 and one growing
concern was how quickly radicalization was taking place, with
investigations establishing that
Nice truck attacker Mohamed Bouhlel,
who killed 84 on July 14, was radicalized in just two months. Attacks
instigated by ISIS over the Internet have also become a growing concern.
Rachid Kassim, a 29-year-old
French ISIS recruit in Syria, is suspected of stage-managing plots by
radicals who have remained in France by communicating with them through
the encrypted Telegram messaging app. He was linked to a string of plots
this summer, including the
killing of a police couple, the
killing of a priest and an
attempted attack on Notre Dame cathedral, but appears to have gone offline in recent weeks, French security sources told CNN.
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