I SIS is bringing home warriors

As the search for remaining members of the Moroccan cell responsible for the terrorist attacks in Spain continues, attention is now slowly shifting to hundreds of jihadists returning through the Gibraltar Strait, a contingent that adds the threat to Europe's doors. About 1,000 jihadists are thought to have taken their way back to Morocco and Tunisia after [...]
As the search for remaining members of the Moroccan cell responsible for the terrorist attacks in Spain continues, attention is now slowly shifting to hundreds of jihadists returning through the Gibraltar Strait, a contingent that adds the threat to Europe's doors.
About 1,000 jihadists are thought to have taken their way back to Morocco and Tunisia following the collapse of Islamic Califat.
From Maroku were 6 of the 12 terrorists who organized attacks in Catalonia.
Only a former leader of the operational wing of the violent extremist group has acknowledged that the exfil of the warriors of I The SIS includes militants angry by their status in Europe.
I - Controld Lands The SIS wrinkled for weeks, and some of the group's followers are carrying the anger to their native countries, broadcast the tch.
Morocco's proximity to Spain helps carry out attacks or even further infiltrate on the old continent.
At the height of the ISIS' power, 1,600 Moroccans are believed to have travelled to Iraq and Syria, what they do to one of the largest groups of foreign citizens in the rapidly shrinking California.
About half these people are estimated to be killed. North Africa, long a fertile terrain of extremism, is now seen every day as the launch platform for attacks towards Europe, a form of retaliation for the loss of land and the Islamic State fighters.
Former leader of I The SIS, withdrawn in 2015, whose identity is not made public, relates that there have been many radicalized Moroccan contacts since before joining the ISIS.
The most unhappy, he said, are those who have lived in France. The sense of class warfare in society perceived as inhospitable has been a common element of many men and boys headed for North Africa to join the ISIS.












