Top U.S. intelligence official: ISIS has cells in UK, Germany, and Italy
- DNI Chief James Clapper said ISIS has clandestine cells in UK, Germany, and Italy
- The comments come as President Barack Obama asks Europe to do more in the fight against ISIS
Washington (CNN)America's
top intelligence official, James Clapper, said Monday that ISIS has
clandestine cells in the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy, comments
that come as President Barack Obama concludes an overseas visit where he
asked Europe to contribute more to the fight against ISIS.
When
asked by a reporter if ISIS had British, German and Italian underground
cells like the ones that carried out the deadly March terrorist attacks
in Brussels, Clapper, the director of national intelligence, said, "Yes
they do."
Clapper added, "We
continue to see evidence of plotting on the part of ISIL in (the UK,
Germany and Italy)." ISIL is the administration's preferred acronym for
ISIS.
He was speaking at a reporters' breakfast held by the Christian Science Monitor newspaper.
Matthew
Levitt of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy told CNN that
reports of ISIS activity in these countries "is not new" but added "it's
new that Clapper is saying it."
Levitt,
the former deputy assistant secretary for intelligence and analysis at
the Treasury Department, said that while the focus has rightly been on
France and Belgium, arrests of suspected terrorists were also taking
place in the UK and Germany as well.
In
a speech in Hanover, Obama said, "These terrorists are doing everything
in their power to strike our cities and kill our citizens, so we need
to do everything in our power to stop them."
He
called ISIS "the most urgent threat to our nations" and while he
acknowledged Europe's contribution to the counter-ISIS campaign he
added, "Europe, including NATO, can still do more."
Germany
has provided trainers and financial assistance to local forces but its
military is not involved in airstrikes against ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
Obama
underscored the need to share intelligence among allies, saying "If we
truly value our liberty, then we have to take the steps that are
necessary to share information and intelligence within Europe, as well
as between the United States and Europe, to stop terrorists from
traveling and crossing borders and killing innocent people."
Levitt said that Europe's "biggest problem is a lack of seamless intelligence sharing and collaboration."
Clapper
also added that ISIS has "taken advantage to some extent of the migrant
crisis in Europe, something which the nations I think have a growing
awareness of."
Obama during his
visit with Chancellor Angela Merkel, lauded her stance on refugees,
saying "Chancellor Merkel and others have eloquently reminded us that we
cannot turn our backs on our fellow human beings who are here now, and
need our help now."
Merkel has been
criticized at home and abroad for her welcoming policies towards Syrian
refugees, criticism that has increased following the terrorist attacks
in Paris and Brussels.
Frank
Cilluffo, director of George Washington University's Center for Cyber
and Homeland Security, told CNN that all of Europe faces the threat of
ISIS-linked operatives infiltrating the refugee flow.
"Given
the significant number of foreign fighters from all over Europe that
have traveled to Syria and Iraq to join ISIS, it's not surprising that
some of them are coming back," he said
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