The number of average daily attacks carried out by ISIS worldwide jumped 42% over the past three months, according to new data published Thursday.
IHS Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre recorded a total of 1,086 ISIS attacks worldwide between July 1 and Sept. 30 — and the average daily number of attacks jumped to 11.8 from 8.3 in the preceding quarter.
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The true number of attacks was likely “far higher,” according to IHS, because the data only included operations claimed by the militants or definitively linked to them by governments.
The average daily death toll also jumped significantly over the reporting period, according to IHS. There were 2,978 non-militant fatalities — at an average of 32.4 per day, a 65.3% increase from the previous quarter.
“The group’s capacity to wage a territorial-focused insurgency in conjunction with a punitive campaign of terrorist attacks remains undiminished despite an increasingly broad spectrum of armed opposition,” IHS said.
The rate of attacks notably rose during a time period where ISIS did not manage to expand much in terms of territory, according to IHS.
“We’re probably more in a consolidation phase currently where the group is stabilizing gains its made and protecting those gains,” said Matthew Henman, head of IHS Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Center.
That hasn’t diminished ISIS ability to cause havoc by carrying out attacks — including in areas they don’t control, he added.
“They’re able to make daily life fraught and dangerous and insecure,” Henman said.
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IHS’ data showed the vast majority of attacks during the reporting period — just over 83% — were in Iraq and Syria, the heartland of ISIS’ self-proclaimed caliphate.









