WASHINGTON
(AP) — The Islamic State group will probably continue to be a threat to
the U.S. even after it is ousted from key strongholds in Iraq and
Syria, President Barack Obama said Thursday, warning that lone-wolf
believers will still be inspired to launch attacks that are harder to
detect and prevent.
Speaking
to reporters after meeting with his top national security advisers in
the Pentagon, Obama said the U.S. has to do a better job disrupting
terror networks and intercepting the internet messages that can get to
troubled individuals and inspire them to act.
"What
ISIL has figured out is that if they can convince a handful of people
or even one person to carry out an attack on a subway, or at a parade or
some other public venue, and kill scores of people as opposed to
thousands of people, it still creates the kinds of fear and concern that
elevates their profile," Obama said.
He
said terrorism likely won't be eliminated by his administration or his
successors, and he's always pushing his team to seek out new ideas to
battle the problem.
"I
haven't gotten numb to it. It bugs me whenever it happens," he said.
But, he added, "I do think that because of our extraordinary efforts the
homeland is significantly safer than it otherwise would be."
The
Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for a number of recent
mass killings, including the Bastille Day attack in Nice, France, last
month that left more than 80 dead, and the Orlando nightclub shootings
that killed 49. While they may not have been directed by the group, the
attackers were reportedly inspired by IS.
Obama
has beefed up the U.S. military fight against the Islamic State group
in Iraq and Syria, recently authorizing more troops to help Iraqi forces
prepare to take back the northern city of Mosul, which has been under
IS control since 2014. And this week the U.S. expanded its campaign
against the group with a new front of airstrikes in Libya, to help the
fledgling government there take back the city of Sirte.
The group, however, still maintains strongholds in the region, and the fight in Syria has bogged down.
On
Thursday, however, Obama said the anti-IS campaign is making progress
in Iraq and Syria, because the group has not regained the territory it's
lost in recent months.
But
he noted that ousting the terror group from Mosul, and from its
headquarters in Raqqa, Syria, won't eliminate its networks or its
ability to encourage the smaller, more individual attacks.
So,
he said, "it is so important for us to keep our eye on the ball and not
panic, not succumb to fear, because ISIL can't defeat the United States
of America or our NATO partners."
The
U.S. and its allies, said Obama, must "keep on grinding away" against
the group, and take key operatives off the battlefield, and "eventually
we will win."
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