Inside the jihadi workshop of death: How ISIS is developing driver-free vehicles for bomb attacks in the West and sophisticated new missile technology capable of downing passenger jets
- January 5th, 2016
ISIS is developing driver-free cars in a bid to carry out spectacular attacks against the West, it has emerged.
Scientists and ballistics
experts have been employed by the terror group to create sophisticated
new weapons intended to bring bloodshed to Europe.
From a 'jihadi university'
in the Syrian city of Raqqa, they are working on building
remote-controlled vehicles which can be used as mobile bombs in
devastating strikes.
ISIS is developing driver-free cars in a bid to carry out spectacular attacks against the West, it has emerged
The
videos would be smuggled to Islamist sleeper cells in European cities
who would then use the instructions to build their own car bombs
In another chilling twist,
IS – also called Daesh – have stunned Western security agencies by
modifying defunct missiles so they are capable of downing passenger jets
or military aircraft.
The products of the terror
group's research-and-development unit were disclosed after eight hours
of training videos carried by a captured IS fighter were handed to Sky News.
Major Chris Hunter, a
former UK Special Forces soldier and advisor to the British military,
said he was shocked at some of the developments revealed in the film
footage.
He said: 'I think this is one of the most significant intelligence finds in terms of Daesh.
'What we've seen with
their typical propaganda videos is they're very, very high quality.
They're designed, they're produced to inspire people and prospectively
touch the nerves of anybody who is viewing them; they're done in a very
specific way.
'With this training
footage it's very clearly purely designed to pass on information – to
pass on the progress in the research and development areas – and it
gives us a very good insight into where they are now, what they're
aspiring to do and crucially the diversity of the types of threats we
might face. I would say it is an intelligence gold mine.'
According to the film
clips, an IS team has produced fully-working driver-free cars which can
be packed with explosives and driven into a target, causing horrific
damage.
According
to the film clips, an IS team has produced fully-working driver-free
cars which can be packed with explosives and driven into a target,
causing horrific damage
Scientists
and ballistics experts have been employed by the terror group to create
sophisticated new weapons intended to bring bloodshed to Europe
According
to the film clips, an IS team has produced fully-working driver-free
cars which can be packed with explosives and driven into a target,
causing horrific damage
The footage also shows IS scientists producing a homemade thermal battery for surface-to-air missiles
In the driver's seat, the
jihadists claim to have placed mannequins with thermostats to produce
the heat signature of humans in a bid to allow the vehicle to fool
scanning machines that protect key buildings in the West.
The videos would be
smuggled to Islamist sleeper cells in European cities who would then use
the instructions to build their own car bombs.
This would potentially allow terror groups to cause carnage without risking their own lives.
The footage also shows IS scientists producing a homemade thermal battery for surface-to-air missiles.
The component could allow
the fanatics to recommission thousands of missiles that Western
governments assumed were redundant through old age.
Major
Chris Hunter, a former UK Special Forces soldier and advisor to the
British military, said he was shocked at some of the developments
revealed in the film footage
The
videos would be smuggled to Islamist sleeper cells in European cities
who would then use the instructions to build their own car bombs
This would potentially allow terror groups to cause carnage without risking their own lives
Heat-seeking warheads can be used to attack passenger and military aircraft. They are 99 per cent accurate once locked on.
For decades, terror groups
including the IRA had these weapons but storing them and maintaining
the thermal battery – a key component to the warhead – was virtually
impossible.
An IS trainer carrying the
unedited training videos was captured by the remnants of the Free
Syrian Army (FSA) as he headed north through Turkey towards Europe.
In Turkey, an IS defector
said that the top secret training programme was known about in Raqqa. He
confirmed the programme was designed for attacks in Europe and further
afield, said Sky News.
He said: 'Videoing and documenting this training programme was meant for Europe to cause huge damage.
'But doing such a
programme and documenting it was meant to target a large number of
people and in more than one location, of course it wasn't meant either
for Syria or Iraq
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