New Orleans attack came as officials warned of an escalating threat of
international terrorism
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[January 04, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — After Hamas launched the deadly assault on Israel that
triggered retaliatory airstrikes on Gaza, FBI Director Christopher Wray
said he feared the Middle East violence could embolden individuals or
groups to carry out attacks inside the United States.
Months later, after extremists with the Islamic State group's
Afghanistan affiliate killed more than 140 people at a Russian concert
hall, Wray sounded the alarm about the potential for a similar
coordinated attack closer to home.
Following these months of warnings about a resurgent terrorism threat,
an Army veteran inspired by IS slammed a pickup truck into crowds
celebrating New Year's in New Orleans. But the culprit did not
coordinate with international operatives, nor was he part of any broader
plot. Instead, he embodied a longstanding concern that snapped into
focus in the years after the Sept. 11 attacks and never evaporated: the
threat from homegrown extremists who radicalize on their own before
committing mass violence in the name of foreign groups.
“I have never seen the threat landscape this worrying, not just from a
counterterrorism perspective but from state-sponsored threats,” said
Christopher Costa, a former career intelligence officer and senior
director for counterterrorism at the White House National Security
Council in the first Trump administration.
He said the “grab-bag of grievances” that may have driven 42-year-old
Shamsud-Din Jabbar to act — he had multiple divorces and financial
pressures and noted in a video posted before the rampage that he thought
of killing his family — was consistent with the profile of other
attackers. And it coincided with a climate of global instability that
has given extra incentive to troubled people prone to violence, from the
Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks that launched the war in Gaza to the
dramatic overthrow last month of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
“You pick the grievance, and then you’ll find the ideology to act on
it,” Costa said. “Now it includes Oct. 7, it includes IS — and why IS is
so important right now is because it is resurging as a result of what IS
could perceive as a victory in Syria.”
The New Orleans attack that killed 14 is thought to be the deadliest
IS-inspired assault on U.S. soil since a 2016 massacre of 49 people
inside a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, by a gunman who professed
allegiance to the group's then-leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. That
shooting occurred at a time when the FBI was racing to disrupt a surge
in plots by “lone wolves" who were drawn to act by Islamic State
propaganda or even to travel to the group's so-called caliphate in Syria
and Iraq.
The threat never abated, as evidenced by the FBI's October arrest of an
Afghan man in Oklahoma who authorities say was inspired by the Islamic
State group to plot an Election Day attack.
But more brazen and coordinated efforts originating from overseas have
drawn greater public attention recently, such as Iranian assassination
plots targeting public officials, including President-elect Donald
Trump. Add to the mix the turmoil in the Middle East, which has prompted
demonstrations in the U.S., the 2021 collapse of the Afghan government
that gave rise to Taliban leadership, and concerns about those with
Islamic State ties entering the U.S. through the southern border.
The swirl of concerns led Wray to tell The Associated Press in August
that he was “hard-pressed to think of a time in my career where so many
different kinds of threats are all elevated at once.”
That such a deadly assault in New Orleans was carried out by a lone
actor without any direction from overseas underscores the volatile and
unpredictable nature of the terrorism threat as well as the challenges
in stopping violence from such individuals.
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A black flag with white lettering lies on the ground rolled up
behind a pickup truck that a man drove into a crowd on Bourbon
Street in New Orleans, killing and injuring a number of people,
early Wednesday morning, Jan. 1, 2025. The FBI said they recovered
an Islamic State group flag, which is black with white lettering,
from the vehicle. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
“It’s a very, very difficult law enforcement challenge, much more
difficult than dealing with someone who may have had active
communications with overseas actors, for example, or having a
distinct online profile in which they were consuming and
participating in extremist activity in the online space," said
Nicholas Rasmussen, the counterterrorism coordinator for the
Department of Homeland Security.
“If you don’t have that,” he added, "then you are very much reliant
on that bystander phenomenon.”
There's no indication that Jabbar, who was fatally shot in a
firefight with police, was ever on law enforcement's radar prior to
the attack. FBI investigators, however, have turned up significant
signs of planning, including suspected bomb-making materials in his
short-term New Orleans rental property and his Houston home, the FBI
said in a statement Friday.
Though officials say he wasn't aided by conspirators, Jabbar's
method — ramming a truck into bystanders — is a favored option for
Islamic State followers, and a pro-IS media unit on Dec. 30
encouraged attacks at New Year's Eve celebrations in the U.S. and
other countries, according to an intelligence bulletin from the FBI
and DHS seen by The Associated Press.
The terrorism threat is set to be inherited in just over two weeks
by Trump and an FBI that's bracing for a dramatic leadership change
with the nomination of Kash Patel. Patel has long been skeptical of
the FBI's use of its national security powers and has spoken of
breaking off the bureau's “intel shops” from the rest of its
crime-fighting activities. It's unclear how the New Orleans attack
might affect any plans he has if confirmed to the post.
There's no question that the turmoil in Syria — and what it could
mean for the Islamic State group's ability to reconstitute and
inspire supporters in the West — is a major national security wild
card.
Assad’s ouster and the arrival of the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham, or HTS, as Syria’s main power broker have been met with
degrees of relief but also alarm. Apart from HTS’ past affiliation
with al-Qaida, the collapse of Assad’s military has raised fears of
a power vacuum that many believe IS will seek to exploit.
Assad’s departure also has opened a window for Turkey to expand
operations against Kurdish fighters in northern Syria that it
believes are terrorists. The Syrian Defense Forces have been key
U.S. allies in the fight against IS and operate detention camps for
thousands of captured foreign fighters.
U.S. and European officials are concerned that intensified Turkish
attacks against the SDF may contribute to a potential IS resurgence.
None of that conflict made a New Year's Day attack on U.S. soil by
someone claiming inspiration from IS easily predictable, especially
since such violence is far rarer than in the Middle East or Europe,
said Natana DeLong-Bas, a professor of theology and Islamic Studies
at Boston College.
Even so, she noted, “any idiot” can rent a vehicle.
“The means that he used were very simple and straightforward and
accessible to anyone,” she said.
____
Associated Press writers Rebecca Santana and Matthew Lee in
Washington and Jim Mustian in Black Mountain, North Carolina,
contributed to this report.
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