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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Terror attacks kill dozens on three continents

Henry Chu And Laura King Los Angeles Times

CAIRO – Armed militants struck within hours of each other on three continents Friday, wielding bombs, firearms and a gruesome display of a decapitated head in a demonstration of the growing global reach of Islamist violence.

The militant group Islamic State claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing of a Shiite mosque in Kuwait and an attack on a seaside resort in Tunisia, and it may have at least inspired an attack on a gas factory in France. The extremist organization, now controlling large parts of Iraq and Syria, has sought to expand its influence well beyond the Middle East.

As many as 60 people were killed in the attacks, more than half of them by a gunman who went on a rampage outside a hotel popular with foreign holidaymakers on the sunny Tunisian coast. Up to two dozen people died in the bombing of the mosque, and one man was beheaded in France. The violence marred the holy month of Ramadan, which began last week.

An Islamic State leader this week had called on acolytes to use Ramadan, traditionally a time of spiritual reflection and acts of kindness, as an opportunity instead to bring “calamity for the infidels.”

“Be keen to conquer in this holy month and to become exposed to martyrdom,” Abu Mohammad Adnani, a spokesman for the Sunni militant group, said in an audio message released Tuesday. He urged followers to mount attacks in Libya, Syria and Iraq against Westerners, Shiite Muslims and any Sunni Muslims who opposed Islamic State.

He also warned President Barack Obama of retaliation for the air raids that U.S. forces have helped carry out against the militants.

The nearly half-hour audio message was a fresh example of Islamic State’s sophistication in disseminating its extreme worldview through online and social media, tools that allow the group to project its message of violence far outside the territory it rules with an iron fist.

Islamic State “has definitely proved itself a lot more capable than major groups in the past at spreading that propaganda, whether it be blogging, the Internet,” said Alan Fraser, a Middle East expert at the London-based risk consultancy AKE. “And part of the brutality of Islamic State’s activities in Iraq and Syria (is) designed to get that kind of media attention.

“That’s one of its tactics. It’s very hard to combat.”

Savagery akin to that seen in the group’s slickly, and sickly, produced videos of mass executions and beheadings was evident in the attacks Friday, which struck places of work, worship and relaxation in Europe, Asia and Africa, respectively.

The severed head of a previously killed man was hung from a fence near the U.S.-owned gas factory in southeastern France that attackers tried to blow up by ramming a car into the plant about 9:30 a.m. Friday. Flags with Arabic inscriptions lay close by, French media reported.

French President Francois Hollande said a message had been written on the decapitated body. He added that there was no doubt it was a terrorist attack, and French anti-terrorism prosecutors have opened an investigation.

Two other people were injured in the explosion at the Air Products factory in the small town of Saint-Quentin-Fallavier, outside the city of Lyon, Hollande said.

A suspect was quickly arrested after the incident and, though prosecutors said he refused to talk, was identified as 35-year-old delivery truck driver Yassin Sahli, who was known to workers at the plant. Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said French intelligence services had designated Sahli in 2006 as a potential extremist but stopped monitoring him two years later for undisclosed reasons.

French media reported that the beheaded man was Sahli’s employer, the boss of a local transport company.

In Tunisia, a gunman disguised as a bather killed at least 37 people with a Kalashnikov rifle that he hid under a beach umbrella and used to strafe the pool and shore area of a hotel in Sousse, a popular vacation spot about 90 miles south of the capital, Tunis.

Terrified swimmers dashed out of the surf to find cover. Sunbathers were shot dead in their lounge chairs on the private beach fronting the Hotel Riu Imperial Marhaba.

Many of the dead were European travelers, according to Tunisian officials. Britain confirmed that at least five British nationals were killed.

An official from the Tunisian Interior Ministry told Tunisian radio that the gunman was killed by security forces. The official identified the attacker as a student from the city of Kairouan, 35 miles inland from Sousse.

Friday’s rampage was praised on a forum associated with Islamic State. A Tunisian calling himself Abou Anas said gleefully on Twitter: “Didn’t we tell you that this is a month of conquests, a hard blow to tourism.”

In the only one of Friday’s three attacks that Islamic State said it directly instigated, a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a Shiite Muslim mosque in Kuwait. The Persian Gulf nation has witnessed a recent rise in sectarian tensions between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

Video footage showed dazed, white-clad worshippers milling about in the smoke from the blast, which killed up to two dozen people.

Despite the close timing of the three attacks in France, Tunisia and Kuwait, a Pentagon spokesman said it was “too soon to tell” whether they were “coordinated centrally or coincidental.”

“We continue to look into it,” U.S. Army Col. Steve Warren said. “We’re collecting intelligence as rapidly as possible.”