06-30-2015, 02:07 PM
3 Terrorist Attacks Back to Back
The lone wolf and local network terrorist attacks are no longer something being anticipated, they're reality.
Last week was a bad one for anti-terror authorities and a lot of innocent families.
-- On Friday morning, European time, the head of the decapitated manager of a transportation company was found hanging from a fence near Lyon, in southern France, along with two banners said to bear Islamic writing. The attack, at a U.S.-owned factory, began when a delivery van, allegedly driven by Yassin Salhi, entered the facility, according to Paris Prosecutor Francois Molins, whose office handles anti-terrorism cases throughout France.
-- Not long after that, a bomb ripped through Al-Sadiq mosque in Kuwait's capital during Friday prayers -- a time when mosques are packed with worshippers. At least 27 people were killed. ISIS has posted a video of a man it claims is the suicide bomber, identifying him as Abu Suleiman al-Muwahid -- presumably a nom de guerre.
-- Then came news that a gunman had sprayed a tourist beach in Sousse, Tunisia, with bullets, killing at least 38 people and injuring at least 39 others. ISIS has claimed responsibility for that attack, as well, though this claim may be more tenuous. The attacker, identified by authorities as 24-year-old Saif Al-Deen Al Rezgui, was shot dead by police Friday outside the hotel.
Full story: http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/29/africa/tun...or-attack/
The lone wolf and local network terrorist attacks are no longer something being anticipated, they're reality.
Last week was a bad one for anti-terror authorities and a lot of innocent families.
-- On Friday morning, European time, the head of the decapitated manager of a transportation company was found hanging from a fence near Lyon, in southern France, along with two banners said to bear Islamic writing. The attack, at a U.S.-owned factory, began when a delivery van, allegedly driven by Yassin Salhi, entered the facility, according to Paris Prosecutor Francois Molins, whose office handles anti-terrorism cases throughout France.
-- Not long after that, a bomb ripped through Al-Sadiq mosque in Kuwait's capital during Friday prayers -- a time when mosques are packed with worshippers. At least 27 people were killed. ISIS has posted a video of a man it claims is the suicide bomber, identifying him as Abu Suleiman al-Muwahid -- presumably a nom de guerre.
-- Then came news that a gunman had sprayed a tourist beach in Sousse, Tunisia, with bullets, killing at least 38 people and injuring at least 39 others. ISIS has claimed responsibility for that attack, as well, though this claim may be more tenuous. The attacker, identified by authorities as 24-year-old Saif Al-Deen Al Rezgui, was shot dead by police Friday outside the hotel.
Full story: http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/29/africa/tun...or-attack/