Gunfire broke out in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis early on Nov.
18 as police pursued suspects from the terror attacks on Nov. 13. Witnesses
documented the flood of police into the historic suburb as the raid grew.
(Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)
PARIS French police commandos killed the suspected ringleader of the Paris
attacks in a massive predawn raid Wednesday, two senior European intelligence
officials said, after investigators followed leads that the fugitive militant was holed up
north of the French capital and could be plotting another wave of violence.
More than 100 police and soldiers stormed an apartment building in the suburb of
Saint-Denis during a seven-hour siege that left two dead, including the suspected
overseer of the Paris bloodshed, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, a Belgian extremist who had
once boasted he could slip easily between Europe and the Islamic State strongholds
in Syria.
[LIVE updates from Paris and elsewhere]
After the raid, forsenics experts combed through the aftermath blown-out windows,
floors collapsed by explosions presumably seeking DNA and other evidence. The
Authorities say as
many as 20 people may have been involved in the plot to attack Paris.
Here's what we know about them so far. (Gillian Brockell/The Washington
Post)
Object 2
Uthayaseelan Sanmugan, a 38-year-old cook who lives near the targeted apartment,
said he woke up at 4:30 a.m. to the sound of gunfire, went to his window and saw the
lights of weapon lasers outside.
When I got to the street, I saw a lot of blood on the sidewalk. The blood of the
terrorists.
Residents were instructed to stay inside their homes.
I heard gunshots, and, sometime around 7 a.m., a huge blast, an explosion, said
Kelly Ovo, a 45-year-old day laborer who lives close to the apartment under siege.
French police reported that Diesel, a 7-year-old police dog, was killed by the
terrorists in the raid.
Molins, the Paris prosecutor, told reporters that the operation was launched after
authorities had received information potentially tips or intelligence information
that Abaaoud was in the area.
Abaaoud, an ardent Islamic State supporter linked to several other terrorist attempts,
was believed to be in Syria earlier this year. But some officials speculate he could
have returned to Europe, perhaps passing undetected among the flood of asylum
seekers pouring into Greek islands from Turkey.
The siege appeared to have been aided by another potential breakthrough in the
probe: the discovery of a mobile phone in a garbage can near the Bataclan Concert
Hall, the site of one of Fridays assaults.
The phones data contained a map of the music venue, French media reported, along
with a chilling text message sent shortly after the first gunmen entered: Lets go, were
starting.
[The mystery surrounding the Paris bomber with a fake Syrian passport ]
The information on the mobile phone opened fresh leads, including to an apartment
southeast of Paris in Alfortville, according to Mediapart, a French news outlet.
The hunt for suspects in Fridays attacks, which took place at a concert hall, several
bars and restaurants, and a soccer match, French officials cast a wide net for potential
suspects. Across France, 118 additional raids were conducted overnight on Tuesday,
with at least 25 arrests. That brought to 414 the total number of raids launched
throughout France since Fridays attack, the Interior Ministry said.
After Fridays assaults, which laid bare the shortcomings of European intelligence
agencies ability to prevent militant attacks, officials across the continent have
remained on high alert.
In Copenhagen, a terminal at the citys international airport was briefly evacuated after
an overheard conversation about a bomb, police said in a Twitter post. The terminal
was later reopened.
Countries including Sweden and Italy raised terror alerts. Extra security was posted in
St. Peters Square, where Pope Francis addressed pilgrims.
French authorities, meanwhile, issued a pan-European bulletin asking people to watch
for a Citroen Xsara car that could be carrying Salah Abdeslam, a French militant also
accused of having a direct role in the attacks, the Spanish news site El Espaol
reported Wednesday.
On Tuesday, authorities in Hanover, Germany, abruptly called off a friendly soccer
match between Germany and the Netherlands that Chancellor Angela Merkel had
planned to attend. One target of Fridays attacks was a friendly soccer match between
France and Germany at a crowded stadium north of Paris - not far from the SaintDenis raids. No explosives were found at the German site.
In Brussels, another soccer match between Belgium and Spain was also canceled
Tuesday.
But Frances secretary of sport, Thierry Braillard, said soccer matches around the
country will go ahead as planned. Life must go on, he told the sports newspaper
LEquipe. German officials said soccer matches would be played as scheduled as well.
In a measure of French concerns, the country on Tuesday invoked for the first time a
European Union mutual aid pact that calls for members of the bloc to assist other
member states if they are attacked.
[The bombs exploded, and Frances president called it war. It was 1986. ]
France continued airstrikes Tuesday night against Islamic State targets in Syria, a
significant escalation of its military participation in the U.S.-led campaign against the
Islamic State. Also on Wednesday, Frances only aircraft carrier, the Charles de
Gaulle, embarked from Toulon port en route to the eastern Mediterranean, where its
fighter jets will take part in operations against the militant group.
Also Tuesday, Russia conducted a significant number of strikes on Raqqa, possibly
using sea-launched cruise missiles and long-range bombers, a U.S. defense official
said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the Russian operation. Those
strikes follow the Russian governments assessmentthat explosives brought down an
airliner full of Russian tourists over Egypt last month. The Islamic State claimed
responsibility for that attack.
Bruce Riedel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, who spent 30 years serving
in the CIA, said raids in Paris are also likely focusing on hunting down the groups
bombmaker. Suicide belts worn by the assailants were likely assembled in Europe,
rather being smuggled in, he said.
That means that theres somebody somewhere close to Paris that knows how to
make suicide belts, he said. I suspect that whoever had those skills wasnt wanted in
the operation. A bombmaker is very important in a terrorist group.
Daniela Deane in London, Virgile Demoustier, Emily Badger and Karla Adam in Paris,
and Loveday Morris in Baghdad contributed to this report.
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