
By David Choi
It’s becoming clear that ISIS is losing the battle on the home
front. In fact, it’s not only losing out on a huge source of
revenue from
oil smuggling, but major campaigns by coalition forces are
underway to root out its remaining bastions in Iraq and Syria.
Although this may be cause for celebration, US officials are
more concerned with what comes afterward. “At some point there is going to be a terrorist diaspora,”
said FBI Director James B. Comey at a cybersecurity
conference. “Not all of the Islamic State killers are going to
die on the battlefield.”
This supposed migration of militants lends itself to some
credence in light of a recent
report by Harry Sarfo, a detained Islamic State recruit. An ISIS official claimed “that they have loads of people living
in European countries and waiting for commands to attack the
European people,” Sarfo
said from a maximum-security prison in northern Germany. “And
that was before the Brussels attacks, before the Paris attacks.”








