FILE - Defense Intelligence Agency Director USMC Lt. General Vincent Stewart awaits to testify at a House (Select) Intelligence Committee hearing on "World Wide Cyber Threats" on Capitol Hill in Washington September 10, 2015.    REUTERS/Gary Cameron
FILE – Defense Intelligence Agency Director USMC Lt. General Vincent Stewart awaits to testify at a House (Select) Intelligence Committee hearing on “World Wide Cyber Threats” on Capitol Hill in Washington September 10, 2015. REUTERS/Gary Cameron

 

Washington – Islamic State is likely to “increase the pace and lethality” of its transnational attacks, U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency Director Vincent Stewart said on Monday.

Speaking to a security conference, Stewart linked his warning to the extremist movement’s establishment of “emerging branches” in Mali, Tunisia, Somalia, Bangladesh and Indonesia.

“And it wouldn’t surprise me to see them further extend” operations from the Sinai Peninsula deeper into Egypt, he said.

“Last year, Daesh remained entrenched on Iraqi and Syrian battlefields and expanded globally to Libya, Sinai, Afghanistan, Nigeria, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Yemen and the Caucasus,” Stewart said, using a derisive Arabic acronym for Islamic State. “Daesh is likely to increase the pace and lethality of its transnational attacks.”

As reported by Vos Iz Neias