DEADLY ISTANBUL BLAST.
ISIS member behind deadly Istanbul suicide blast, PM says
The suicide bomber who killed at least 10 foreigners Tuesday in a popular central Istanbul tourist area belonged to ISIS, officials said -- an attack that shows the group's nerve, reach and capacity for terror.
No
group claimed responsibility for the blast, yet Turkish Prime Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu pinned blame on the group that calls itself the Islamic
State, which has entrenched itself in neighboring Syria and Iraq while
proving willing time and again to lash out elsewhere.
At
least eight Germans died in the blast between the Hagia Sophia and Blue
Mosque tourist attractions in Istanbul's cultural and historic heart,
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said, warning that figure may rise. A
Turkish official earlier told CNN that at least nine Germans were
killed. Davutoglu indicated that the 15 wounded were from inside and
outside his country, with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier saying nine of those were German.
"They haven't just targeted those who died," Davutoglu said. "They have targeted the whole of Turkey and the whole world."
Born
in 1988, the man responsible for the blast was not among the thousands
being tracked by Turkish authorities, having "newly (come) into Turkey
from Syria," Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said.
Just
to Turkey's south, Syria has been embroiled in a civil war for nearly
five years -- a conflict that, according to the United Nations, has cost
more than 250,000 lives, spurred more than half the country's 17
million residents to flee and caused humanitarian crises for those left
behind, as illustrated by the hundreds starving in the siege of Madaya.
This
violence can be pinned on many groups, including forces loyal to Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. Yet ISIS has been behind many of the worst
atrocities there and elsewhere in the region, a fact that's made the
terror group a top target for civilized countries.
A member of NATO, Turkey has increasingly been engaged in this fight -- including allowing the United States to launch strikes
from Incirlik Air Base in southern Turkey and clamping down to curb
more fighters from going through its territory to join the group. ISIS
has responded by singling out Turkey as a primary target, and a recent
issue of its Dabiq magazine had a cover showing President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan alongside U.S. President Barack Obama.
And Davutoglu stressed Turkey wouldn't back down after Tuesday's attack, urging his countrymen and people worldwide to unite against this threat.
"We
will continue our fight against terror with the same firm attitude,"
said the Prime Minister, insisting his country will continue working
with the U.S.-led coalition to combat ISIS. "We will never compromise,
not one single inch."
'I saw shocked tourists falling to the ground'
Tuesday's
blast rattled Sultanahmet Square around 10:20 a.m. (3:20 a.m. ET) and
brought a rush of ambulances and security forces to an area that would
have been heavily guarded on any day.
"I've
never heard such a loud explosion in my life," Sener Ozdemir, a
45-year-old shop owner, told Turkey's semi-official Anadolu news agency.
"...Just after the incident, I saw shocked tourists falling to the
ground."
Targeting outsiders would be
in line with attacks executed or inspired by ISIS, which has enemies
everywhere and has proven willing to strike those who don't subscribe to
its twisted, hard-line version of Sharia law.




Turkey is a popular destination for
Germans, and Germany's foreign ministry urged travelers in Istanbul "to
avoid public gatherings (and) tourist attractions for now" after the
attack.
The Peruvian foreign ministry
said in a statement that one of its citizens is in stable condition at a
hospital after being wounded.

A Norwegian citizen was taken to a nearby hospital after the incident, foreign ministry spokesman Frode Andersen told CNN.
Sajjan Gohel, international security director at the Asia-Pacific Foundation,
doesn't think it's a coincidence this suicide blast happened in a
square that's both a draw for tourists and significant to Turkey's
history and its diverse cultural identity -- the type of place, he said,
"that ISIS is so deeply opposed to."
"The
type of monuments that are in Sultanahmet Square are the type that ISIS
has been blowing up in Syria," Gohel told CNN. "It's seen as a place
where you have a mesh of different entities. It's a real melting pot."
Germany's Merkel: 'We will persevere'
The
blast comes as Turkey deals with multiple security threats -- from
longstanding nemesis the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, as well as
ISIS, which has taken over swaths of Syria and Iraq on its quest to form
a far-reaching caliphate.
Ankara has persistently battled the PKK, which the United States and other governments have branded a terror group.
Turkey's
actions against ISIS, which first emerged out of Iraq but now has its
de facto capital in Syria, are more recent but have nonetheless made it a
target of that terrorist group.
Its military cooperation with the United States and other NATO nations in particular has angered ISIS, said Fadi Hakura, associate fellow at Chatham House.
Investigators honed in on ISIS after two suicide blasts in October hit
a lunchtime peace rally in Ankara, in which demonstrators were calling
for an end to the renewed conflict between the PKK and Turkish
government. Those explosions killed as many as 100 people and injured
more than 240 more.
Tuesday's blast --
if it's confirmed to be the terror group's work -- ups the ante for
Ankara, forcing it to step up its anti-ISIS fight even more, according
to the Asia-Pacific Foundation's Gohel.
"An
attack like this is designed to create economic, political and social
consequences," Gohel told CNN. "Turkey has to realize that the pipeline
that feeds ISIS from Turkey to Syria has to now be cut off, because
incidents like this are not one-offs. This could be part of a series of
plots."
And given that the dead aren't Turkish,
this attack directly impacts other countries as well. While it's not
known if the bomber targeted any one nationality, the idea of terrorists
targeting tourists is not new -- as illustrated in last March's attack on Tunis' Bardo Museum and June's mass shooting at a Tunisian beachfront hotel.
"We
have a free society ... but there are people who want us harmed," said
Merkel, referring to the Tunisia attacks and the more recent ones
targeting civilians in Paris. "... We will persevere."
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