ISIS
Group Claims California Wildfires Are Retribution, Vows 'You Will See
More Fires
15
November, 2018
One
of the many media groups supporting ISIS operations online claimed
that the deadly wildfires in northern and southern California are
retribution for coalition bombings in Syria.
The
image circulated online by Al-Ansar Media uses a photo of a burning
building and misspells the state "kalifornia."
"O
america, This is the punishment of bombing Muslims in Syria,"
states the text. "This is Allah's punishment for you. And in
shaa Allah, you will see more fires. Praise be to Allah."
The
Camp Fire in Butte County, north of Sacramento in California's Gold
Rush country, has claimed the lives of at least 48 people, according
to Cal Fire incident stats today. The blaze, which started Thursday,
has destroyed 7,600 residences and 260 commercial buildings, making
it the most destructive fire in the state's history as it ripped
through Paradise, Calif., at a speed of 80 acres per minute. It was
35 percent contained today at 130,000 acres. The cause is still under
investigation.
ISIS
Threatens to Poison Food
The
Woolsey Fire has torched 97,620 acres in Ventura and Los Angeles
counties after starting on Thursday, and was 47 percent contained
today. The blaze resulted in the evacuation of Malibu, reaching the
Pacific Coast Highway. There have been two fatalities and 483
structures destroyed including several celebrities' homes. The cause
of this blaze is also still under investigation.
ISIS
has not officially taken responsibility for either of the fires. The
terror group has previously suggested both wildland and commercial or
residential arson as an attack tactic.
This
time last year, as several wind-whipped blazes ravaged California,
ISIS highlighted the ferocity and toll of the wildfires in multiple
issues of their al-Naba newsletter, which usually focuses on news
from around ISIS' occupied territories and conflict zones.
In
January 2017, ISIS' Rumiyah magazine -- which was published in
multiple languages including English yet is no longer produced by the
terror group -- stressed to would-be jihadists that "incendiary
attacks have played a significant role in modern and guerrilla
warfare, as well as in 'lone wolf' terrorism," claiming a
November fire at a furniture factory in Losino-Petrovsky, Russia, and
highlighting scores of wildfires around Israel that month as
incidents that "demonstrated the lethality of such an effortless
operation."
Suggested
target locations for arson attacks, the magazine stated, "include
houses and apartment buildings, forest areas adjacent to residential
areas, factories that produce cars, furniture, clothing, flammable
substances, etc., gas stations, hospitals, bars, dance clubs, night
clubs, banks, car showrooms, schools, universities, as well as
churches, Rafidi [Shiite] temples, and so forth. The options are
vast, leaving no excuse for delay."
Jihadists
were advised to time their arson "preferably in the later part
of night to the early hours of morning when people are generally
asleep," and instructions were offered on how to block off exits
to inflict casualties. For wildfires, ISIS said to look for dry brush
"as fire cannot endure in damp or wet environments."
Arsonists were encouraged to leave the mark of ISIS somewhere near
the fire site with spray paint or black marker.
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