Vehicle attacks like London easy to organise, hard to prevent

Vehicle attacks like London easy to organise, hard to prevent

by Joseph Anthony
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Police stand in front of the truck which ploughed into a crowded Christmas market in the German capital Berlin, Germany, December 20, 2016

Militants are increasingly turning to vehicle-ramming attacks, like the one staged near Britainโ€™s parliament on Wednesday, because they are cheap, easy to organise and hard to prevent.

Experts say the tactic of mowing people down avoids the need to obtain any explosives or weapons and can be carried out by a โ€œlone wolfโ€ attacker without using a network of fellow militants โ€“ all lessening the risk of alerting security agencies.

โ€œThis kind of attack doesnโ€™t need special preparation, it is very low-cost, within anybodyโ€™s reach,โ€ said Sebastien Pietrasanta, a French Socialist lawmaker and terrorism expert.

โ€œIt is often a case of individual action,โ€ he told Reuters. โ€œThey can be quite spontaneous.โ€

Four people were killed and at least 20 injured in London after a car ploughed into pedestrians and an attacker stabbed a policeman close to parliament in what police called a โ€œmarauding terrorist attackโ€. The attacker was shot dead.

Trucks were used to devastating effect last year against crowds in Berlin and Nice, in contrast to more organised attacks that have already hit Paris and Madrid โ€“ as well as London in 2005 โ€“ using teams of bombers or gunmen.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for both the Nice attack last July, when a truck killed 86 people celebrating Bastille Day, and for the Berlin attack in December, when a truck smashed through a Christmas market, killing 12 people.

While no group has yet claimed responsibility for Wednesdayโ€™s attacks, Islamic State is under intense pressure in Syria and in Iraq, where one of its last strongholds, Mosul, is under assault from Iraqi forces backed by a coalition that Britain is part of.

Islamic State encouraged readers of its online magazine Rumiyah in 2016 to use vehicles to kill and injure.


ISRAEL ATTACKS

Vehicle attacks are not a new tactic in the Middle East.

In 2008, a Palestinian rammed a bulldozer into vehicles on a Jerusalem street before a visit by then U.S. presidential candidate Barack Obama, wounding at least 16 people.

Another Palestinian drove his truck into a group of Israeli soldiers in Jerusalem in January this year, killing four of them in an attack that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said was likely to have been inspired by Islamic State.

Former senior CIA analyst Paul Pillar said that, while concern had long focused on โ€œsophisticated or high-tech methods of terrorist attack, the most readily available methods for killing a lot of innocent people have always been simple and require no sophistication or training.

โ€œThis includes mowing people down with a vehicle on any crowded city street. Locations might be chosen that have some other political or religious significance โ€“ such as a Christmas market, or the vicinity of a national parliament โ€“ but there always are vulnerable public places with lots of people,โ€ he said.

Jean-Charles Brisard, president of the Centre for the Analysis of Terrorism, a European thinktank, said Wednesdayโ€™s attack seemed to be โ€œrudimentary in its conceptionโ€.

Using a car as a battering-ram was a tactic that was highly rated by militants because it was lethal, he said. โ€œWith a vehicle, they cause a lot more deaths than with a knife or a machete.โ€

โ€œAttacks today are increasingly unpredictable, with rudimentary weapons, handguns, knives, vehicles,โ€ he said.

Anne Giudicelli, head of security consultancy Terr(o)risc in Paris, said the extra vigilance over large cities had helped to spawn a change in the militantsโ€™ approach.

โ€œEvery time you put in place a new measure after an attack or a thwarted attack, the assailants adapt to get around the measures in place and find the gaps,โ€ she said.

Tyson Barker, programme director with the Aspen Institute thinktank in Germany, said the London attack underscored the difficulty of protecting โ€œsoftโ€ targets, and the trade-offs between security and liberty in open Western societies.

โ€œYou can never eliminate the possibility of an attack. The intent is to close down that openness so the response has to be smart analytics, resilience, vigilance, but not anything that would close down that openness, which is the exact thing that weโ€™re trying to preserve,โ€ Barker said.

Barker said it was too early to predict the consequences of Wednesdayโ€™s events but an attack by Islamic State sympathisers in San Bernardino, California, in 2015 had triggered a campaign pledge by now-President Donald Trump to ban Muslims from entering the United States.

The Berlin Christmas market attack in December triggered significant changes in German policies on video surveillance and the ability to hold and detain asylum seekers deemed suspicious.

Saudi Arabian Interior Ministry spokesman Mansour al-Turki, part of a delegation in Paris for talks with French officials on counter-terrorism, said the defeat of groups like Islamic State and al Qaeda could lead to a splintering of the threat, creating new problems for governments.

โ€œWhen they are defeated in Syria and Iraq we are all going to face difficulties and nobody knows where the ISIS (Islamic State) fighters will go to,โ€ he told reporters.

โ€œI think we will be entering the next phase of terrorism which is through social media and lone wolves,โ€ he said.

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