Given
growing evidence of a Syrian link, the attacks in Paris will hike
pressure on world leaders to overcome their deep divisions and solve a
problem that is a key source of Islamic extremism.
People
gather in tribute to the victims of the attacks in Paris on November
14, 2015 in Nantes, western France. Islamic State jihadists claimed a
series of coordinated attacks by gunmen and suicide bombers in Paris
that killed at least 128 people in scenes of carnage at a concert hall,
restaurants and the national stadium. AFP PHOTO / JEAN-SEBASTIEN EVRARD
“If they’ve done anything they’ve encouraged us today to do even harder work to make progress and to help resolve the crises that we face,” US Secretary of State John Kerry said Saturday at a second round of peace talks in Vienna.
“If they’ve done anything they’ve encouraged us today to do even harder work to make progress and to help resolve the crises that we face,” US Secretary of State John Kerry said Saturday at a second round of peace talks in Vienna.
Western military involvement in Syria
Some
of the Paris attackers were overheard telling hostages the attacks were
in retaliation for France’s bombing of the Islamic State group in Iraq
and Syria. Paris’s air strikes were also referenced by the group in a
statement claiming responsibility.
In
step with increased diplomatic activity, the attacks appear likely to
stiffen Western resolve to continue battlefield pressure against Islamic
State — with the risk of being sucked further into the conflict.
IS
had been on the defensive this week, facing losses to US-backed Kurdish
fighters around the town of Sinjar in Iraqi Kurdistan, increased
bombing from Russia and the reported death of one of its most infamous
executioners, Jihadi John.
French
President Francois Hollande sounded defiant in his reaction on Saturday,
saying he considered the carnage “an act of war” and promising a
response that would be “pitiless”.
European refugee crisis
Europe
is facing its biggest refugee crisis since the Second World War as
hundreds of thousands flee conflicts or oppression in Syria, Iraq or
Afghanistan to seek safety overseas.
Already
facing anti-immigration sentiment, the attacks could further complicate
efforts by European governments to persuade their populations to accept
this burden.
Fears have been
regularly stoked by reports that IS operatives could be hiding among the
800,000 migrants who have arrived this year, mostly on the shores of
Greece and Italy.
Candles and white
roses are displayed on the French flag in Toulouse on November 14, 2015
as a tribute to the victims of the attacks in Paris in which 128 people
were killed. Islamic State jihadists on Saturday claimed a series of
coordinated attacks by gunmen and suicide bombers in Paris that killed
at least 128 people in scenes of carnage at a concert hall, restaurants
and the national stadium. AFP
Many on the far-right were quick to link the attacks — so far without foundation — to the refugee crisis which has distilled fears about the so-called “Islamisation of Europe.”
Many on the far-right were quick to link the attacks — so far without foundation — to the refugee crisis which has distilled fears about the so-called “Islamisation of Europe.”
Poland’s
incoming right-wing government said Saturday it would no longer accept
refugees under an EU plan to relocate migrants from Greece and Italy to
other countries.
“After the tragic
events of Paris we do not see the political possibility of respecting”
the EU quota, announced incoming European affairs minister Konrad
Szymanski.
Security measures in Europe
Already
accustomed to seeing heavily armed security forces guarding schools and
synagogues since the Charlie Hebdo attacks in January, residents of the
French capital will now face an even more muscular presence.
An
extra 1,500 soldiers were mobilised to reinforce police in Paris on
Saturday, while European governments held emergency talks to review
their security arrangements.
“Last night’s attacks suggest a new degree of planning and coordination and a greater ambition for mass casualty attacks,” said British Prime Minister David Cameron on Saturday.
More armed police and visible security checks appear inevitable.
‘Borderless’ Europe
Removing
national barriers is a key part of the EU project, with Europeans
allowed to travel without passports or visas in the 22-nation Schengen
zone.
The refugee crisis had already
strained this system to breaking point, with a host of countries
including Germany and Sweden re-imposing border controls while Austria,
Hungary and others are building border fences.
EU
President Tusk said this week that “saving Schengen is a race against
time” but Friday’s attacks have already complicated efforts.
France,
Belgium and Germany stepped up border controls, while any indication
that the attackers or their weapons had travelled undetected across
European borders would add to calls for more scrutiny over people and
goods.
Source: Vanguard
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