ISIS planning large-scale attacks like IRA in Britain
‘Terror threat highest since 1970s when IRA was active’
Islamic State militants are planning “indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilians” in Britain on a scale similar to those staged by the Irish Republican Army 40 years ago, the head of the country’s new terrorism watchdog said.
In an interview with The Sunday Telegraph published on Sunday, Max Hill, the lawyer tasked with overseeing British laws on terrorism, said the militants were targeting cities and posed “an enormous ongoing risk which none of us can ignore”.
“In terms of the threat that’s represented, I think the intensity and the potential frequency of serious plot planning with a view to indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilians of whatever race or color in metropolitan areas - represents an enormous ongoing risk that none of us can ignore,” he said.
“So I think that there is undoubtedly significant ongoing risk which is at least as great as the threat to London in the 70s when the IRA were active on the mainland.”
The IRA launched attacks in a bid for Northern Ireland to leave the UK. They bombed targets including the BBC and parliament along with random pubs where British people would be drinking.
The IRA abandoned its armed struggle for an end to British control of Northern Ireland and unification with Ireland in a 1998 peace deal. More than 3,600 people were killed, including more than 1,000 members of the British security forces, during a sectarian conflict that began in the late 1960s.
British security officials have repeatedly said that ISIS, which is losing ground in Iraq and Syria, will target Britain.
Mr Hill, the new Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation who successfully prosecuted the failed 21/7 bombers, praised the intelligence services’ ‘truly remarkable’ success rate for foiling plots since the 2005 London bombings. — Agencies