EU, US police cripple ISIL media mouthpieces

EU, US police cripple ISIL media mouthpieces

THE HAGUE
EU, US police cripple ISIL media mouthpieces

European and U.S. police forces have struck at the heart of Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ‘s (ISIL) propaganda machine, seizing servers and “punching a hole” in its ability to spread its radical jihadist message online.

The transatlantic takedown was spread over eight countries and was coordinated by the EU’s police agency in “a major operation over a two-year period”, the head of Europol Rob Wainwright told AFP on April 27.

The operation on April 25 and 26 was the latest in a campaign targeting in particular the Amaq news agency used by ISIL to broadcast claims of attacks and spread its message of jihad.

“With this takedown action, targeting major ISIL-branded media outlets like Amaq, but also al-Bayan radio, Halumu and Nasher news, IS’s capability to broadcast and publicise terrorist material has been compromised,” Europol said in a statement.

The “simultaneous multinational takedown” was coordinated by Europol from its headquarters in The Hague, and led by the Belgian federal prosecutor.

“Dozens and dozens” of national police forces fanned out in their countries, seizing servers in the Netherlands, Canada and the United States as well as in Bulgaria, France and Romania.

The goal was “to destabilize this apparatus by seizing and dismantling servers used to diffuse ISIL propaganda and to identify and arrest its administrators,” the Belgian prosecutor said in a statement.

“With this groundbreaking operation we have punched a big hole in the capability of ISIL to spread propaganda online and radicalize young people in Europe,” Wainwright said.

Britain’s Counter Terrorism Internet Referral Unit was also involved in identifying “top-level domain registrars abused by ISIL.”

“It was so technically challenging that we were only really able to do it because of our experience in major cybercrime takedowns,” Wainwright told AFP.

“We basically ran the cyber playbook against ISIL,” he said, adding police forces around the world had spent years gathering intelligence to locate the servers being used by the jihadists.

Europol began warning about the rise of Amaq in late 2015, stressing “the technical resilience of the terrorist online infrastructure.”

While a U.S.-led international coalition has been combatting ISIL on the battlefields of Iraq and Syria gaining back territory it seized in 2014, nations have also warned about that a multi-pronged attack was needed, including choking off its online access.

“They’ve been squeezed on the battlefield, and now they’ve been really badly squeezed, badly hit, on the online platform as well,” said Wainwright.

ISIL used Amaq to claim “every major attack since 2015 in Europe”, he said, including the deadly assaults in Paris, Brussels, Barcelona and Berlin.

Amaq was also used to claim the March supermarket siege in Trebes, France, where a 25-year-old gunman killed four people, including a policeman who took the place of a hostage.

“The technical infrastructure which allows it to put these terrible propaganda videos and messages out has been knocked offline,” Wainwright told AFP, speaking on his last day as Europol chief.

But Europol’s investigation is still ongoing, and arrests could follow.

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