The U.S. Secretary of State, who landed at Brussels airport where one of the attacks occurred, will repeat a U.S. offer to help with the investigation and efforts to fight terrorism.
Two of the three suicide bombers in the terror attacks that killed 31 civilians and wounded 300, Khalid and Ibrahim El Bakraoui, were reportedly listed as a “potential terror threat” in U.S. databases.
Authorities on Thursday captured six people linked to Tuesday’s attacks, while French authorities made an arrest in a Paris suburb.
Israel has some of the toughest — and the most successful — airport security operations in the world, and Europe is trying to catch up.
In the past two decades, more than 500 people have died on the continent in attacks against schools, public transit, summer camps and restaurants.
Hate crimes against Muslims rose after the terror attacks in Paris last fall, and Muslims in the New Jersey college town now fear they may face the same reaction.
There had been speculation that Tuesday’s bombings, which killed 31 civilians and wounded 300 others, were in retaliation to Salah Abdeslam’s arrest in Belgium last week.
The group released a video Wednesday vowing to hack ISIS websites, shut down “thousands” of their Twitter accounts and steal “their Bitcoins.”
British politicians supporting departure from the EU have capitalized on the attacks in Brussels as support continues to gain in polls.
“This absolute carnage reminds us cruelly and painfully that the fight against terrorism will never be finished,” La Libre wrote in an editorial.
Tuesday’s bombings in Belgium have U.S. lawmakers calling for new surveillance legislation. But the tech industry has urged a measured approach.
The resolution, coming in response to the attacks in Brussels, will state that the militant group poses a threat to the “value of freedom in all countries.”
British leaders immediately condemned his comments for spreading anti-Muslim sentiment.
Brothers Khalid and Ibrahim el-Bakraoui had ties to the November attacks in Paris and were known to Belgian authorities due to their criminal records.
The driver had taken the suspected terrorists to the airport and helped police find explosives and their home.
At least 34 people died and over 200 were injured in a series of coordinated bombings in the Belgian capital Tuesday.
Even before the attacks in Brussels Tuesday, a record number of Americans reported fears of terrorist violence on U.S. soil.
The explosives used in Tuesday's deadly attacks in Belgium were easy to make, an adviser to the British army said.
The Brussels terror suspect, who was earlier believed to be at large, has now been ID'd as one of the bombers who blew himself up Tuesday, a report said.
Chinese state media said Europe seemed “powerless” to prevent terror attacks, and risked being pushed into a “clash of civilizations.”
Investigators have identified Najim Laachraoui as the third man involved in the airport attack. Earlier reports by Belgian media that said he had been arrested were later retracted.
The threat of deadly attacks is dramatically changing emergency medical services training — and will continue to do so, medical personnel say.