Defense and Security

Terrorism and Counterterrorism

  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: May 18–24
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from May 18 to 24, 2019. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents will be included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1559051020810'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='100%';vizElement.style.height=(divElement.offsetWidth*0.75)+'px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   May 18: Bandits killed seventeen in Birnin-Magaji, Zamfara. May 18: Herdsmen killed one and abducted seven in Ovia North, Edo. May 18: Bandits killed one and abducted six in Toto, Nassarawa.  May 18: Boko Haram killed twelve in Konduga, Borno.  May 18: Sectarian violence led to eleven deaths in Yagba West, Kogi. May 19: Cultists killed twenty in Khana, Rivers. May 19: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped two in Igabi, Kaduna. May 19: Gunmen kidnapped ffiteen in Birnin-Gwari, Kaduna. May 20: Herdsmen killed one in Aniocha South, Delta. May 20: Gunmen killed one policeman and two others in Wukari, Taraba. May 20: Boko Haram killed twenty Nigerian troops in Gubio, Borno; five militants were also killed.  May 21: Bandits killed eighteen in Batsari, Katsina. May 21: Bandits killed five in Danmusa, Katsina. May 21: Bandits killed eleven in Faskari, Katsina. May 21: Sectarian violence led to seven deaths in Itu, Akwa Ibom.  May 24: Nigerian troops killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Kukawa, Borno. 
  • Islamic State
    Where Exactly is the Islamic State in West Africa?
    Jacob Zenn is an adjunct assistant professor at Georgetown University and is a senior fellow at The Jamestown Foundation. The Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA) claimed a May 16 attack near Tongo Tongo, Niger, killing more than twenty soldiers not far from the Malian border. In March it issued a photo of its members in Burkina Faso and in April it claimed an attack on a militia in Mali. But, it is not clear that the ISWA group based primarily in Nigeria is behind those attacks.  In March 2015, Abubakar Shekau, Boko Haram’s leader, pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and its “caliph,” Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, leading to the rebranding of Boko Haram as ISWA. The group has since gone through two leadership transitions and is now split into at least two discernable factions. One is ISWA, which is still pledged to the Islamic State and whose third leader is Abu Abdullah Ibn Umar al-Barnawi or “Ba Idrisa.” The other comprises members still loyal to Shekau who defected with him when the Islamic State rejected him as leader; it is referred to as Boko Haram, even though both are “Boko Haram factions.”  After an attack on a Shia procession in Kano in November 2015, which was claimed by ISWA, both factions have focused their attacks exclusively on northeastern Nigeria and the borderlands of Chad, Cameroon, and Niger around Lake Chad. Generally speaking, ISWA tends to focus on military targets and Shekau’s Boko Haram tends to pilfer from villages while also targeting the Nigerian military. ISWA has portrayed itself as a more “civilian-friendly” alternative to Boko Haram and, to an extent, it has lived up to this billing.  The recent claims of attacks by ISWA in the border regions of Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and Mali, therefore seem out of character, geographically speaking. In fact, all indications suggest that those three attacks in Niger, Burkina Faso, and Mali were carried out by the group formerly known as Islamic State in Greater Sahara (ISGS), whose leader is Adnan Abu Walid al-Sahrawi. Recall that in 2017, ISGS was blamed for and claimed an ambush of U.S. and Nigerien soldiers in Tongo Tongo that killed four U.S. Special Forces, which is the same location as the attack on May 16. Although al-Sahrawi has since been recognized by the Islamic State, including by name in Abubakar al-Baghdadi’s April 2019 video appearance, al-Sahrawi’s ISGS has not apparently earned “province” status.  What this suggests is that ISGS has, at least in name, been subsumed under the banner of the Ba Idrisa-led ISWA. This means that ISWA as we have up to now understood it—based in Nigeria and the Lake Chad Basin—is not conducting attacks in Niger, Burkina Faso, or Mali, but is merely claiming attacks that are instead carried out by ISGS. This is a new trend that is important for followers of ISWA and Boko Haram to recognize, especially those who keep track of attack data. They need to decide whether attacks claimed by ISWA were actually carried out by ISWA, or, in fact, carried out by ISGS, and whether this distinction is worth making at all. For now, this is fairly easy: almost any attack in Niger, Burkina Faso, or Mali can be said to be by ISGS, while those in and around the Lake Chad Basin can be said to be carried out by ISWA. What could complicate this clear geographical distinction, however, are reports of ISWA members, such as Abu Musab al-Barnawi, the ISWA leader who was deposed by Ba Idrisa, talking to jihadists in Mali and of ISWA relocating cells to northwestern Nigeria near where ISGS leader al-Sahrawi operates in Niger. Therefore, in the future the areas of operations between the “two ISWAs” could overlap.
  • Nigeria
    ISWA Tries to Win Over Some Nigerians While Killing Others
    The conventional wisdom is that the Boko Haram faction that calls itself the Islamic State in West African (ISWA) is less brutal than Abubakar Shekau’s rival faction, notorious for the Chibok school girl kidnapping and the targeting of civilians. There is some truth to this: ISWA has avoided using female and child suicide bombers and it does not seem to indiscriminately murder entire villages. Its rhetoric does not glory in murder like Shekau’s. In fact, it seems to cast itself as a Robin Hood-like group, taking food from the rich and distributing it to the poor (or so it says), standing in for an otherwise absent government. But being “less brutal” than Shekau is a very low bar. Members of the military and others working against ISWA have been subject to kidnapping and murder. On May 20, ISWA raided an army barracks in Borno State and reportedly killed twenty soldiers. Two days later, a video was released showing the execution of nine soldiers. Before being murdered, each soldier identified himself by name, unit, and service number. The video also showed ISWA fighters swearing an oath or pledging allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the head of the Islamic State hiding somewhere in Iraq or Syria. Reuters had not been able to independently verify the video, but it has the hallmarks of ISWA. There are also reports of ISWA murdering members the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), an informal militia that assists the Nigerian army in its fight against Boko Haram, and, in 2018, of the abduction and murder of two Muslim nurses working for the Red Cross.  Shekau’s faction, too, kills military personnel, CJTF volunteers, and government officials whenever it can, though it seems to be less active than ISWA, and where the latter seems to avoid civilian targets, Shekau does not. ISWA’s use of brutal propaganda videos recalls similar ones Shekau produced in the early days of the Boko Haram insurrection, which can be dated to 2009 or 2011. There is anecdotal evidence that such videos are successful in undermining the morale of soldiers.  According to the Nigeria Security Tracker, deaths of military personnel have matched or surpassed military deaths during height of the Boko Haram insurgency in 2014 and 2015, while those of civilians and Boko Haram fighters remain much lower than their highs during that period. (In absolute terms, deaths of military personnel now appear to be comparable to those of civilians and Boko Haram members, which, historically, have been far higher.) Far from being defeated, Boko Haram has split and in some ways has become more deadly and dangerous. 
  • Terrorism and Counterterrorism
    Women and Terrorism: Hidden Threats, Forgotten Partners
    A new report from the Women and Foreign Policy program, launched this week, highlights the roles that women play in violent extremism—including as perpetrators, mitigators, and victims—and offers recommendations to better enlist their participation in efforts to combat radicalization.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: May 11–17
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from May 11 to 17, 2019. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents will be included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1558363599144'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='100%';vizElement.style.height=(divElement.offsetWidth*0.75)+'px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   (Last week, May 10: Eleven Nigerian soldiers and four Boko Haram militants were killed during a fight in Magumeri, Borno.) May 11: Boko Haram killed four and kidnapped five in Maiduguri, Borno.  May 12: Bandits killed six in Shinkafi, Zamfara. May 12: Sectarian violence resulted in four deaths in Okpokwu, Benue. May 13: A Boko Haram bomb killed three Nigerian soldiers in Damboa, Borno.  May 13: Gunmen kidnapped five oil workers in Akukutor, Rivers. May 13: Bandits killed thirteen in Batsari, Katsina. May 14: The Islamic State (Boko Haram) killed twenty-eight Nigerien soldiers in Tillaberi, Niger. May 14: Bandits abducted eight and killed two in Maru, Zamfara. May 14: Gunmen killed twenty in Kankara, Katsina.  May 15: Sectarian violence led to three deaths in Wukari, Taraba.  May 16: Boko Haram killed five in Madagali, Adamawa.  May 16: Boko Haram killed thirteen in Ceilia, Chad. May 16: Sectarian violence led to three deaths in Donga, Taraba.  May 16: Bandits killed eleven in Kankara, Katsina. 
  • Terrorism and Counterterrorism
    Women and Terrorism
    U.S. policymakers overlook the roles that women play in violent extremism—including as perpetrators, mitigators, and victims—and rarely enlist their participation in efforts to combat radicalization. This omission puts the United States at a disadvantage.
  • Terrorism and Counterterrorism
    Cyber Week in Review: May 17, 2019
    This week: President Trump declares national emergency on threats to U.S. technology, WhatsApp hacked, San Francisco bans facial recognition, the United States passes on global pact against online extremism; and, Supreme Court ruling opens door for antitrust action against online marketplace platforms. 
  • Burkina Faso
    Islamist Violence in Burkina Faso Following Familiar Pattern
    Islamist terrorist groups in northeast Burkina Faso are following a strategy of violence reminiscent in some ways of Boko Haram’s early days in Nigeria. The groups are attacking Protestant and Catholic churches, killing pastors, priests, and congregants, and also teachers in secular schools. In a May 12 attack on the town of Dablo in northern Burkina Faso, “gunmen” killed a Catholic priest and five congregants, burned the church and places serving alcohol, and looted other commercial establishments. The attackers numbered about twenty. On May 10, apparently in a separate incident, militants killed five teachers. Similarities to Boko Haram include targeting Christians and teachers in secular schools. The theological basis of both appears to be a similar, extremist variant of Salafist Islamic now thought to be associated with the Islamic State. Based on that theology is a similar hostility to all things western and secular. Like in Nigeria’s northeast, government authority in northern Burkina Faso has been weak following the 2014 ouster of long-time strongman Blaise Compaore. But unlike Boko Haram, the terrorists in Burkina Faso do not appear to have a charismatic leader with a media presence like Boko Haram’s Abubakar Shekau. Furthermore, Burkina Faso has in France a close ally that is prepared to intervene when needed, as it recently did to rescue four hostages. The extent and nature of the groups’ ties in both countries to outside terror networks in not completely clear. Boko Haram appears to be largely indigenous, with little or no tactical and strategic coordination with the Islamic State or al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), despite similar rhetoric and apparent communication. Though in Burkina Faso there appear to be links with Islamist groups in Mali, details are sparse.
  • Burkina Faso
    French Forces Free Hostages in Burkina Faso With U.S. Help
    French President Emmanuel Macron announced on May 10 that French military forces rescued four hostages in Burkina Faso held by Islamist militants. Two were French, one was American, and one was South Korean. The operation cost the lives of two French soldiers. Burkina Faso is now subject to Islamist attacks similar to those in Mali. Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has congratulated groups operating in Burkina Faso for swearing allegiance to the Islamic State. In an official statement, the French government thanked Burkina Faso and Benin for there “perfect cooperation;” presumably those two countries also played a role in the rescue. The French minister of the Armed Forces, Florence Parly, in a twitter statement praised the “valuable support of our American allies.” However, she provided no details about what that support was. Whatever the American involvement was, it is unlikely that there were American casualties. France has by far the largest military contingent in West Africa, some 4,500. The United States has been involved in training of the Burkinabe military, so the total number of U.S. troops present is likely small. In comparison with the uproar over the October 2017 death of four American soldiers in Tongo Tongo, Niger, the French public response to these recent military casualties has been muted. The French commonly regard the former French colonies in West Africa, such as Burkina Faso, as Europe’s “near abroad,” and French public opinion is generally supportive of French military operations in the region, so long as they are small.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: May 4–10
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from May 4 to 10, 2019. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents will be included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1557838214420'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='100%';vizElement.style.height=(divElement.offsetWidth*0.75)+'px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   May 4: Bandits killed thirty-one in Maru, Zamfara.  May 5: Gunmen abducted the Taraba permanent secretary in Jalingo, Taraba. May 5: Sectarian violence resulted in three deaths in Wukari, Taraba. May 6: Sectarian violence led to three deaths in Jama'are, Kaduna. May 6: Sectarian violence led to five deaths in Ardo-Kola, Kaduna. May 7: Boko Haram killed four soldiers and seven others in Jere, Borno.  May 7: The Nigerian Air Force killed twenty bandits in Safana, Zamfara. May 8: Herdsmen killed five in Ardo-Kola, Taraba. May 8: Herdsmen killed six in Jalingo, Taraba. May 8: Nigerian troops killed two bandits in Chikun, Kaduna. May 9: Nigerian troops killed five bandits in Sabon Birni, Sokoto. May 10: Sectarian violence led to seven deaths in Wukari, Taraba. May 10: Nigerian troops killed seven Boko Haram militants in Ngala, Borno.  May 10: Sectarian violence led to eight deaths in Jalingo, Taraba. May 10: Bandits killed one in Batsari, Katsina. 
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: April 27–May 3
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from April 27 to May 3, 2019. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents will be included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1557242356227'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='100%';vizElement.style.height=(divElement.offsetWidth*0.75)+'px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   April 27: Boko Haram killed one soldier and three others in Kofia, Cameroon.  April 27: Gunmen abducted three oil workers in Ahoada East, Rivers. April 29: Bandits abducted the board chairman of the Universal Basic Education Commission (UEBC) along with his daughter and killed the driver in Abuja.  April 29: Boko Haram killed thirty in Madagali, Adamawa. April 29: Sectarian violence resulted in three deaths in Bassa, Plateau.  April 30: Boko Haram killed fourteen loggers in Monguno, Borno.  April 30: Bandits killed seventeen in Safana, Katsina.  May 1: Bandits kidnapped six from an all-girls school in Zurmi, Zamfara.  May 1: A mob killed seven bandits in Birnin-Magai, Zamfara. May 2: Sectarian violence resulted in four deaths in Imeko-Afon, Ogun.  May 2: Herdsmen killed six in Girie, Adamawa. May 2: Nigerian troops killed "dozens" (estimated at twenty-four) of Boko Haram militants in Damboa, Borno. May 3: Gunmen killed two in Akwanga, Nassarawa.  May 3: Boko Haram killed fifteen soldiers in Magumeri, Borno.   
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: April 20–26
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from April 20 to 26, 2019. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents will be included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1556549281507'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='100%';vizElement.style.height=(divElement.offsetWidth*0.75)+'px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   (Last week, April 19: A British woman and one other were killed while four people were kidnapped in Kajuru, Kaduna.) April 20: Bandits killed eleven in Katsina-Ala, Benue. April 20: Gunmen abducted three cattle merchants in Donga, Taraba. April 20: Nigerian troops killed six bandits in Anka, Zamfara.  April 20: Approximately twenty people were abducted in Birnin-Gwari, Kaduna. April 21: Bandits killed seventeen and abducted two in Kankara, Katsina. April 21: Gunmen killed two in Sanga, Kaduna. April 21: A Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC) official deliberately drove his car into an Easter procession in Gombe, Gombe, killing eight members of the Gombe Boys' Brigade; the crowd then killed the NSCDC official and the driver in retaliation. April 22: Sectarian violence resulted in five deaths in Katsina-Ala, Benue. April 22: The Nigerian Air Force killed ten bandits in Shinkafi, Zamfara. April 22: Nigerian troops killed five sectarian mercenaries in Katsina-Ala, Benue. April 22: Four personnel of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) were abducted in Abua/Odual, Rivers.  April 22: Nigerian troops killed three Boko Haram militants in Kukawa, Borno. April 24: The Nigerian Air Force killed "some" (estimated at five) Boko Haram militants in Gwoza, Borno. April 24: Gunmen killed three policemen and one community chief in Oyigbo, Rivers; two of the assailants were also killed  April 25: Two Chinese construction workers were kidnapped in Ohaozara, Ebonyi. April 25: Gunmen kidnapped two Shell workers and killed their two police escorts in Emuoha, Rivers. April 25: Gunmen killed a bus driver and kidnapped all approximately, thirty passengers, in Emuoha, Rivers.   April 25: Nigerian troops killed four bandits in Shinkafi, Zamfara. April 26: Sectarian violence led to three deaths in Kajuru, Kaduna. April 26: Boko Haram attacked a Nigerian military base in Biu, Borno; no casualties have been reported yet. 
  • Sri Lanka
    Sri Lanka Mourns Its Losses, Spain Holds an Election, and More
    Podcast
    Sri Lankans mourn after the Easter Sunday attacks, Spain holds a snap election, and Japanese Crown Prince Naruhito ascends the throne.
  • Sri Lanka
    Sri Lanka Bombings: What We Know
    A high level of coordination suggests the perpetrators had substantial expertise, possibly drawn from a foreign-based terrorist group.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: April 13–19
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from April 13 to 19, 2019. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents will be included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1555946363426'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='100%';vizElement.style.height=(divElement.offsetWidth*0.75)+'px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   April 13: The Nigerian Air Force killed four bandits in Talata-Mafara, Zamfara. April 13: Nigerian and Cameroonian troops killed twenty-seven Boko Haram militants in Ngala, Borno. April 14: Herdsmen killed two in Bassa, Plateau. April 14: Soldiers killed "many" (estimated at ten) bandits in Zurmi, Zamfara. April 14: Gunmen killed seventeen in Akwanga, Nassarawa. April 15: Seven Chadian soldiers and sixty-three Boko Haram militants were killed during a clash in Kaiga Kindjiria, Chad. April 15: Kidnappers abducted five in Ijumu, Kogi.  April 15: Herdsmen killed two in Ikole, Ekiti.  April 15: Gunmen abducted eighteen in Lokoja, Kogi.  April 15: Herdsmen killed six in Anambra West, Anambra.  April 16: Nigerian troops killed three bandits in Gassol, Zamfara.  April 16: Troops repelled a Boko Haram attack, killing fifty-two militants; two Chadian soldiers were also killed in Kukawa, Borno.  April 17: A gunman killed one herdsman in Kaura, Kaduna.  April 17: Gunmen killed four in Demsa, Adamawa. April 18: Gunmen killed eleven in Numan, Adamawa. April 18: Nigerian troops killed seven bandits and lost one soldier in Aljumana and Ketere in Zamfara (LGA unknown).   April 18: Boko Haram killed eleven in Tchakamari, Cameroon.  April 18: Gunmen killed sixteen in Tsafe, Zamfara. April 11–18: The Islamic State claimed to have killed sixty-nine soldiers over the past week around Borno and in Tomer, Niger.  April 19: Sectarian violence resulted in twenty-two deaths in Wukari, Taraba.