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‘Kill them and have no mercy’: ISIS releases sickening selfie video showing terror attack on concert-goers in Moscow

US warned Moscow of the attack three days before incident

The attackers in selfie
The attackers in selfie

ISIS has released a sickening new video showing how four of their terrorists machine-gunned more than 140 people defenceless civilians in a concert hall in Moscow.

The attack is said to be the ‘most violent’ perpetrated against Russia ‘in years’, and ISIS claimed responsibility for it.

The terrorist organization said the attack in the Crocus City Hall in the western outskirts of Moscow on Friday night was part of the ‘raging war between the Islamic State and countries fighting Islam.’

US intelligence officials strongly believe members of Islamic State in Khorasan Province, or ISIS-K, carried out the attack.

US has also officially rebutted Vladimir Putin’s claims that the attacks were carried out on Ukraine’s orders.

ISIS’ news agency Amaq released a sickening 90-second selfie video of the attack that is too graphic to be shared.

The clip, described by the terror group as ‘exclusive scenes… of the bloody attack on Christians in the city of Krasnogorsk in Moscow’, begins with one terrorist holding a knife running into the main hall of Crocus City Hall.

The man filming the video twice says: ‘Bring the machine gun. Kill them and have no mercy on them.’

Another man carrying what appears to be a yellow and black machine gun then runs into the hall and begins firing wildly in all directions.

The music concert venue engulfed in flames after grenades were thrown by the terrorists
The music concert venue engulfed in flames after grenades were thrown by the terrorists

The gun appears to match up with images released by Russian authorities of the aftermath of the attack.

The gunman filming the sick attack can be heard saying: ‘The infidels will be defeated, God willing. God is great. The infidels will be defeated. We went out for the sake of God and to seek His religion.’

The four heavily armed men are then seen slowly walking away from the entrance to the main hall.

The men appear to be the same ones who took a sick selfie in front of the terror group’s flag in the wake of the attack.

The selfie, released by ISIS’ official news agency Amaq hours ago, shows the four perpetrators in dark baseball caps and face masks pointing upwards, a gesture that has long-been associated with the terror group.

The gesture refers to the tawhid, which is ‘the belief in the oneness of God’, according to foreign policy experts. The identities of the people seen in the selfie has not yet been confirmed, but ISIS claims they are among those who carried out the attack.

Despite ISIS admitting to carrying out the sick attack, Vladimir Putin was quick to blame Ukraine for the deadly massacre.

The US, however said that it had intelligence that rebutted Putin’s claims.

‘ISIS bears sole responsibility for this attack. There was no Ukrainian involvement whatsoever,’ National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson said in a statement.

ISIS-K, set up in late 2014 in eastern Afghanistan in the wake of US-led airstrikes against ISIS strongholds across Iraq, is known for its extreme brutality.

The group has been led by Shahab al-Muhajir, an engineer by training, since 2020.

His name means ‘Shahab the Migrant’, referring to the fact that he is the first non-Afghan and non-Pakistani person to run ISIS-K

He reportedly spend time as a subcontractor of a security firm in Afghanistan, and was known to have spent some time on the US’ Bagram Airfield, formerly the largest US military base in Afghanistan.

al-Muhajir is one of three ISIS-K members on the list of people sanctioned under an anti-terror directive first set out by George Bush in the wake of the September 11 attacks in 2001, and renewed every year since by successive presidents.

A suspected terrorist being interrogated
One of the suspected terrorists being interrogated

The others are Sultan Aziz Azam, a spokesperson for the group, and Maulawi Rajab, a senior leader who ‘plans ISIS-K’s attacks and operations and commands ISIS-K groups conducting attacks in Kabul’, according the US State Department, which only sanctioned the terrorists in November 2021.

Meanwhile, the UK only sanctioned the three men in 2023. OFSI, the UK’s sanctions body,  cited al-Muhajir responsibility ‘for multiple terrorist attacks resulting in hundreds of deaths in 2021’ as the reason for his punishment.

 

He and his terror cell have targeted Russia in the past, having claimed responsibility for the deadly 2022 suicide bombing at the Russian embassy in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, that killed two embassy staff and four others.

Earlier this month, Russia’s FSB said it foiled an ISIS-K attack on a Moscow synagogue, the country’s Tass news agency reported.

While the attack on Friday night was a dramatic escalation, experts said the group has opposed Russian President Vladimir Putin in recent years.

 

‘ISIS-K has been fixated on Russia for the past two years, frequently criticizing Putin in its propaganda,’ Colin Clarke of Soufan Center, a New York-based research group, told Reuters.

Michael Kugelman of the Washington-based Wilson Center said ISIS-K ‘sees Russia as being complicit in activities that regularly oppress Muslims.’

ISIS-K also has a history of carrying out attacks across the world as well.

Earlier this year, US intelligence intercepted communications that confirmed the group carried out the twin bombings in Iran that killed nearly 100 people during a memorial for dead military commander Qassem Soleimani.

And last year, a top US commander told Congress that ISIS-K was quickly building its capacity to conduct ‘external operations’ in Europe and Asia.

Michael Kurilla, the commander of US Central Command, said at the time that he believed Western interests may be victim to an ISIS-K attack ‘in as little as six months and with little to no warning’, though was quick to say that an attack within the US itself was unlikely.

Russia has come under fire after reports emerged that Vladimir Putin allegedly dismissed warnings from US intelligence agencies that an ISIS attack was imminent.

A US intelligence official described how American agencies learned how a cell of ISIS based in Afghanistan was planning an attack in Moscow and shared the information with Russian officials.

Putin dismissed the alerts as an attempt to intimidate Russia.

US officials say that the information was privately shared as recently as three days before gunmen burst into a large concert hall on Friday night.

Earlier in March, the US embassy in Moscow also issued a security alert.

It warned about a potential terror attack in Moscow and urging people to avoid crowds and be aware of their surroundings.

‘The Embassy is monitoring reports that extremists have imminent plans to target large gatherings in Moscow, to include concerts, and U.S. citizens should be advised to avoid large gatherings over the next 48 hours,’ the March 7 security alert stated.

Concerts were specifically mentioned as a potential target in the US security alert.

It is not clear what prompted the warning or whether it was related to Friday night’s attack.

The US gave the intelligence to Russia under the Duty to Warn requirement – an intelligence community requirement to notify US and non-US groups of potential impending threats.

The gunmen who carried out the attacks have since been arrested by Russian authorities.

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