US officials think ISIS will attack  America this year - Pamela Engel - http://www.businessinsider.com/are-isis-sleeper-cells-likely-in-the-us-2016-2
At  the annual worldwide-threats hearing in the US Senate this week, top US  intelligence officials talked about the possibility of ISIS infiltrating America  and mounting an attack in 2016.
Lt.  Gen. Vincent Stewart, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told the  Senate Armed Services Committee that ISIS - aka the Islamic State, ISIL, or  Daesh - "will probably attempt to conduct additional attacks in Europe, and  attempt to direct attacks on the US homeland in 2016."
US  Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told the committee that ISIS is  "taking advantage of the torrent of migrants to insert operatives into that  flow," and warned that the group is "pretty skilled at phony passports so they  can travel ostensibly as legitimate travelers."
"As  we saw in the November Paris attacks," in which ISIS operatives trained in the  Middle East killed 130 people across the city in a single night, "returning  foreign fighters with firsthand battlefield experience pose a dangerous  operational threat," Clapper said.
He  continued: "Although the US is a much harder target than Europe, ISIL's leaders  are determined to strike the US homeland beyond inspiring homegrown violent  extremists attacks."
But  some experts have thrown cold water on these alarming predictions.
Christopher  Swift, an adjunct professor of national-security studies at Georgetown  University and international lawyer at Foley & Lardner, said that concerns  about highly trained ISIS operatives getting into the US are likely overblown.  He said this week that ISIS is more likely to try to radicalize people who are  already in the US rather than send operatives overseas.
"It's  a lower-cost strategy for ISIS and they don't need to have a major event to have  an effect, it's sufficient for them to have a moderate number of small events  that are difficult for people to anticipate," Swift, who testified in front of  the US House Subcommittee on Terrorism this week, told Business  Insider.
And  because anyone with an internet connection can find ISIS propaganda online, it's  easy for people with no formal connections to terrorist groups to become  radicalized but fly under the radar of US law enforcement. People coming into  the US who have traveled to conflict zones overseas, however, are going to look  more suspicious.
It  would also take highly trained ISIS operatives out of the group's territory in  the Middle East, where they could be useful.
"Throwing  a set of operatives at the US border, you're taking high-value people and  throwing them at a hard target," Swift said. "It would show a level of  desperation on their part because it'd show they're willing to make an  investment that they haven't been willing to make to date."
Motivating  radicalized "lone wolves" in the US will likely be of lower impact for ISIS - to  pull off a Paris-style attack with high casualty counts, it takes sophisticated  planning and a group of trained terrorists - but it's also more likely to be  successful.
"It's  low cost, it's easier to do, it has a higher likelihood of success and a lower  likelihood of discovery," Swift said.
But  Swift did caution that as ISIS loses ground in the Middle East amid a campaign  of US-led airstrikes and local ground offensives, it will look to strike  external targets in the West, including the US.
"When  you're losing, you try to get your adversary to stop beating you," Swift said.  "And one of the ways to do that is to turn the tables on your adversary and hit  them."
Peter  Bergen, a journalist and national-security analyst who recently wrote the book  "United States of Jihad: Investigating America's Homegrown Terrorists," made a  similar assessment.
"I  think it's quite unlikely that there would be a Paris-style attack in the United  States," Bergen told Business Insider.
He  continued:
They  almost all trained in Syria, there were probably a couple of dozen people in a  support network in both France and Belgium. We just don't have that here. And  we've had a number of people, Americans, who've gone to join ISIS; usually it's  a one-way ticket.
The  ocean between the US and the Middle East and Europe also helps.
"We're  protected by our geography," Bergen said. "You can drive from Paris to Damascus;  you can't drive from Damascus to New York City."
Europe  is also dealing with a massive refugee crisis that the US has been largely  insulated from. And American Muslims are generally more integrated into society  than European Muslims, many of whom are confined to housing projects on the  outskirts of big cities. The discrimination they face might motivate some to  turn to radical Islamist groups.
"It's  the French citizens, the German citizens, the British citizens - these countries  are really having a serious problem, and as we saw in Paris, that can have very  violent consequences," Bergen said.
He  continued:
[T]he  profile of a terrorist in Europe now amongst the Muslim population is they are  very disadvantaged, they come out of a criminal background, they often meet in  prison and are radicalized in prison. And we're not seeing that in the United  States because American Muslims don't live in ghettos, their average income is  the same as the average American, the average education is the  same.
Still,  ISIS has been steadily ramping up attacks against the West, and the US is a  prime target.
"The  United States will almost certainly remain at least a rhetorically important  enemy for most violent extremists in part due to past and ongoing US military,  political, and economic engagement overseas," Clapper said in his written  testimony.
He  continued: "Sunni violent extremists will probably continually plot against US  interests overseas. A smaller number will attempt to overcome the logistical  challenges associated with conducting attacks on the US homeland."
And  Clapper acknowledged that the greatest threat the US likely faces is from "lone  wolves" who might never have visited ISIS territory but still could act in the  interest of the group.
He  said:
The  perceived success of attacks by [homegrown violent extremists] in Europe and  North America, such as those in Chattanooga and San Bernardino, might motivate  others to replicate opportunistic attacks with little or no warning, diminishing  our ability to detect terrorist operational planning and readiness.
ISIL  involvement in homeland attack activity will probably continue to involve those  who draw inspiration from the group's highly sophisticated media without direct  guidance from ISIL leadership and individuals in the United States or abroad who  receive direct guidance and specific direction from ISIL members or  leaders.
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