Ohio State attack echoes Islamic State group’s brutal calls
NEW YORK — In chillingly detailed articles in a slick online magazine, Islamic State extremists exhorted English-language readers this fall to carry out attacks with knives and vehicles.
Using those very methods, Somali-born student Abdul Razak Ali Artan injured 11 people Monday at Ohio State University, authorities say.
It isn’t clear whether Artan ever saw or heard about the magazine’s instructions, but in a Facebook post made before the attack, he said that if the U.S. wanted Muslims to stop carrying out “lone wolf attacks,” it should make peace with the Islamic State group. The posts were recounted by a law enforcement official who was briefed on the investigation but wasn’t authorized to discuss it publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.
The group has for a few years urged sympathizers to strike out alone with any weapons available. But it has reinvigorated that message in recent weeks in its new propaganda magazine and a video, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, a U.S. monitoring service that tracks militant postings.
