The U.S.-led Global Coalition has achieved great successes against ISIS on the battlefield in Syria and Iraq. We celebrate the coalition's gains on the ground but, notes U.S. Coordinator for Counterterrorism Nathan Sales: “We also have to be mindful that ISIS is adapting and it's going to be up to us to adapt along with them.”
“Every square kilometer of territory that's liberated means women and children and men who no longer have to live under the false Caliphate that ISIS has tried to construct. The success that we're having though, against ISIS in Syria and Iraq doesn't mean that the struggle is over. It simply means that the struggle is entering a new stage. And that new stage is one in which ISIS might be sending operatives across the world to carry out attacks. Another, related problem is those who may be inspired by ISIS to commit attacks.”
“Homegrown terrorism is a threat that is on the rise and it is one that we are going to be focusing on,” he said.
The United States and its Global Counterterrorism Forum partners recently announced new initiatives to address threats posed by returning foreign terrorist fighters and by homegrown terrorists. Two separate programs seek to effectively assess the motivations and sympathies of returning family members and to explore the factors that drive people to become homegrown terrorists and identify them before they can strike.
The United States and the Global Counterterrorism Forum also endorsed new recommended strategies to counter radicalism online: