The failed terrorist attack of the man that exploded a bomb in a taxi and was shot by the cops in Strathroy made Isis more angry. Now they're threatening Canada and Toronto. You never know.
‘Our wolves will come to you’: ISIL ramps up anti-Canada propaganda after Ontario terror incident
TORONTO — An image circulated by an ISIL propaganda outfit on Wednesday showed Toronto burning while a terrorist watched from nearby mountains, a wolf at his side. “Our wolves will come to you,” it read.
As expected, ISIL has ramped up its propaganda campaign against Canada following last week’s police killing of Aaron Driver, an ISIL supporter in Strathroy, Ont. who was allegedly in the final stages of planning a bomb attack.
Attempting to capitalize on the incident, the pro-ISIL al-Wa’d Foundation released two posters on its Telegram channel on Wednesday, including the one showing an apocalyptic Toronto, according to the SITE Intelligence Group.
“O worshippers of the cross in Canada, now now fighting came, our wolves will come to you from where you will not know so you won’t enjoy life,” it read. The second poster showed a terrorist walking through a destroyed Toronto street.
“Soon very soon,” it read.
The ISIL newspaper al-Naba also took on Canada in its Tuesday edition, calling Driver “one of the soldiers of the Islamic State” and saying his failed plot was “a martyrdom-seeking attack targeting Canadian Crusader police in Ontario.”
It went on to claim that Canada “participates in the war on Islam” and “takes part in the Crusader campaign on the Islamic State.” For its part, ISIL’s Amaq news agency said last Thursday that Driver was responding “to calls to target coalition countries.”
It is a pattern familiar: Within days of the recent attacks in Europe and the United States, ISIL tried to stoke fears by threatening more. Not mentioned in the releases on Canada was that Driver’s alleged plot resulted in only his own death.
ISIL makes heavy use of propaganda, much of it distributed on social media. A retired senior Canadian Security Intelligence Service official, Andy Ellis, said in April that Canadians were part of the ISIL propaganda wing, which valued their English-language skills.
The RCMP and FBI have been investigating an ISIL propagandist with a Canadian-sounding voice who has narrated several of the terrorist group’s most gruesome videos, including the claim of responsibility for the Orlando attack.
But Wednesday’s posters, with their clichéd images of Toronto’s snow-capped mountains and pet wolves, do not appear to have been made by anyone familiar with Canada, and the text does not appear to have been written by an English-speaker.
http://news.nationalpost.com/news/c...ada-propaganda-after-ontario-terror-incident?
‘Our wolves will come to you’: ISIL ramps up anti-Canada propaganda after Ontario terror incident
TORONTO — An image circulated by an ISIL propaganda outfit on Wednesday showed Toronto burning while a terrorist watched from nearby mountains, a wolf at his side. “Our wolves will come to you,” it read.
As expected, ISIL has ramped up its propaganda campaign against Canada following last week’s police killing of Aaron Driver, an ISIL supporter in Strathroy, Ont. who was allegedly in the final stages of planning a bomb attack.
Attempting to capitalize on the incident, the pro-ISIL al-Wa’d Foundation released two posters on its Telegram channel on Wednesday, including the one showing an apocalyptic Toronto, according to the SITE Intelligence Group.
“O worshippers of the cross in Canada, now now fighting came, our wolves will come to you from where you will not know so you won’t enjoy life,” it read. The second poster showed a terrorist walking through a destroyed Toronto street.
“Soon very soon,” it read.
The ISIL newspaper al-Naba also took on Canada in its Tuesday edition, calling Driver “one of the soldiers of the Islamic State” and saying his failed plot was “a martyrdom-seeking attack targeting Canadian Crusader police in Ontario.”
It went on to claim that Canada “participates in the war on Islam” and “takes part in the Crusader campaign on the Islamic State.” For its part, ISIL’s Amaq news agency said last Thursday that Driver was responding “to calls to target coalition countries.”
It is a pattern familiar: Within days of the recent attacks in Europe and the United States, ISIL tried to stoke fears by threatening more. Not mentioned in the releases on Canada was that Driver’s alleged plot resulted in only his own death.
ISIL makes heavy use of propaganda, much of it distributed on social media. A retired senior Canadian Security Intelligence Service official, Andy Ellis, said in April that Canadians were part of the ISIL propaganda wing, which valued their English-language skills.
The RCMP and FBI have been investigating an ISIL propagandist with a Canadian-sounding voice who has narrated several of the terrorist group’s most gruesome videos, including the claim of responsibility for the Orlando attack.
But Wednesday’s posters, with their clichéd images of Toronto’s snow-capped mountains and pet wolves, do not appear to have been made by anyone familiar with Canada, and the text does not appear to have been written by an English-speaker.
http://news.nationalpost.com/news/c...ada-propaganda-after-ontario-terror-incident?