‘Threat intelligence’ from the Internet was crucial to arresting three men planning terrorist strikes.
The arrest on Wednesday of three Brooklyn residents of Central Asian descent on charges of trying to join Islamic State and carry out attacks against the Coney Island amusement park and U.S. law-enforcement officers demonstrates the changing nature of the threat from homegrown extremists. It also demonstrates the means that intelligence and law-enforcement agencies have to disrupt this threat.
That two permanent U.S. residents, Abdurasul Juraboev, a citizen of Uzbekistan, and Akhror Saidakhmetov, a citizen of Kazakhstan, along with Uzbek immigrant Abror Habibov were arrested for attempting to provide material support to a terrorist organization is unfortunately familiar. However, the way this conspiracy came together, as well as the way it was detected, speaks to the increasing importance of “threat intelligence” harvested from the cyber world.