Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Migration and Second-Generation Radicalization Drive Rise in Islamic Terrorism in Europe

Group of young migrants attempting to breach a border fence amid a tense situation, showcasing the challenges of migration and border control.

Research has shown that, alongside terrorists entering the EU through migration and open borders, there is an increasing trend of second-generation radicalization among the children of immigrants. 

Research has linked a significant increase in jihadist violence in Europe to large-scale immigration and failed integration policies, accompanied by a documented rise in radicalization among second- and third-generation immigrants.

The influx of migrants has produced settled Muslim communities across Western Europe. Large swaths of these populations have failed to integrate in France, Belgium, Germany, and the United Kingdom, and the children and grandchildren of the original immigrants, born on European soil and holding European passports, have become the primary radicalization pool from which the continent’s jihadist terrorism now draws.

Europol’s EU Terrorism Situation and Trend Report recorded 120 terrorist attacks across the EU in 2023, up from 28 in 2022 and 18 in 2021, with 14 classified as jihadist and 334 jihadist arrests, a rise from 266 the prior year. In 2024, 58 attacks were recorded across 14 member states, 24 of them jihadist, with arrests climbing to 449, the highest figure in recent years. Spain, France, Belgium, and Germany accounted for the majority of both years’ arrests.

The profile of the perpetrators is consistent across multiple independent research bodies. Grey Dynamics, analyzing Europe’s jihadist threat through 2025, concluded that rather than recent immigrants or asylum seekers, the threat is primarily domestic, involving EU citizens or long-term residents who are frequently second-generation.

START InSight found that 89% of terror attacks in Europe were carried out by first-, second-, or third-generation immigrants. Of those attacks, 26% were committed specifically by second- or third-generation immigrants.

Lorenzo Vidino, whose research on European jihadism is widely cited, found that ISIS-mobilized jihadi terrorists in Europe have tended to be second-generation Muslim immigrants. He also noted that countries such as Italy and Spain, which have smaller second-generation Muslim populations, have experienced fewer attacks than France, Belgium, Germany, and the United Kingdom, where those populations are larger.

The mechanism driving radicalization among this cohort is documented in academic literature. A core driver is identity crisis. Second- and third-generation immigrants often do not feel a sense of belonging to their European host societies or to their ethnic countries of origin.

Radical Islam can fill that vacuum by providing a sense of dignity, identity, and purpose to young people who feel marginalized or discriminated against. The Council of Europe identified a typical radicalization profile as young people between the ages of 16 and 24 with histories of school failure, criminal records, and little or no work experience.

The Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, analyzing thwarted jihadi plots in Europe between January 2022 and March 2025, found that minor plotters are more likely to be EU citizens than third-country nationals, and that several were second- or third-generation immigrants.

The radicalization of minors represents the most acute current development. A 2026 study found that youth and minors accounted for 42% of all terror-related investigations in Europe and North America in 2025, a threefold increase since 2021.

In 2024, teenagers were involved in nearly two-thirds of Islamic State-linked arrests in Europe. Belgian intelligence reported that one-third of its terrorist investigations between 2022 and 2024 concerned minors.

The radicalization process has also accelerated dramatically. What historically required months or years can now occur within weeks or even days. This shift has been driven by short-form online propaganda, algorithmic amplification, and the exploitation of developmental vulnerabilities among adolescents.

The ethnic and national origins of the perpetrator pool are also consistent across the data. START InSight found that the ethno-national groups most represented in European jihadist terrorism are Moroccans and Algerians. Moroccans predominate in France, Belgium, Spain, and Italy, while Algerians are most prominent in France. Their representation is broadly proportional to the size of those immigrant communities in their respective host countries.

French Interior Ministry data from 2023 showed that 4,263 of the 20,120 individuals listed in France’s National Database for the Prevention of Radicalization Leading to Terrorism were foreign nationals. That amounted to 21% of the database, compared with foreign nationals comprising 8.2% of the total population.

In Germany, 138 of 480 individuals assessed as dangerous Islamist extremists held no German passport. That represented 29% of the total, while foreign-born residents accounted for 16.6% of the population.

The full causal chain supported by the data runs from immigration through integration failure to domestic terrorism. Second- and third-generation radicalization is a downstream consequence of the original immigration decision. Without large-scale immigration from Muslim-majority countries in North Africa and the Middle East, the second- and third-generation radicalization pool would not exist.

Researchers who argue that recent arrivals are not the primary perpetrators are technically correct in a narrow sense. However, that framing can obscure the longer generational chain of causation.

Europol, West Point’s CTC, START InSight, and Grey Dynamics collectively document a terrorism threat that is domestic in execution and generational in origin. Their findings trace the threat to immigration patterns and the failure of European states to manage the long-term social consequences of integration.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/06/migration-second-generation-radicalization-drive-rise-islamic-terrorism/

Trump gets major win against China in African rare earth minerals race

State Department calls the acquisition a 'flagship US investment' that will catalyze further deals in the DRC

JOHANNESBURG — In what’s being hailed as a major win for the Trump administration against Chinese domination of the rare earth minerals market, the U.S. has supported an American company, Virtus Minerals, in developing two major mines producing cobalt and copper in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

This is claimed to be the first U.S. rare earth minerals acquisition in the African nation since President Donald Trump announced the Washington Accord last December.

Historically, China has been the heavy lifter of these metals. The Strategic Studies Institute reported that 80% of the world’s cobalt is produced in the DRC — and 80% of that is controlled by China. Cobalt, used in a wide range of applications, from electric cars and mobile phones to military jets, is on the U.S. government’s list of critical minerals. Copper, also on the list, has traditional uses such as piping for plumbing, but is also needed in electronics and the automotive industry.

President Donald Trump standing with Rwanda's President Paul Kagame and Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix-Antoine Tshisekedi at signing ceremony

President Donald Trump attends a signing ceremony with Rwanda's President Paul Kagame and Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix-Antoine Tshisekedi at the Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace in Washington on Dec. 4, 2025.

During December’s signing at the White House, Trump made clear the administration’s fight to curb Chinese domination of minerals and help American mining companies make a major impact in the DRC. "A great day for Africa, a great day for the world," Trump said.  The accord also aims to bring an end to fighting between the DRC and Rwandan-backed forces, although the Rwandan-supported M23 rebel group have continued their hostile infiltration in the Eastern DRC.

American mining company Virtus is, with U.S. support, claiming to be "the first U.S.-owned operator back in the DRC in more than a decade", with its investment in Chemaf, a local cobalt and copper producer with two mining operations, one, Étoile, in Lubumbashi and Mutoshi, in Kolwezi. Together it’s planned the mines will produce a combined 75,000 tonnes of copper, and 20,000 tonnes of cobalt a year. The processing plants are currently under development and will come online next year.

DR Congo US mining

Virtus Minerals CEO and Chamaf Chairman. Phillip Braun, the Chargé d’Affaires U.S. Embassy Kinshasa Ian J. McCary, and Chemaf Managing Director Sooryanarayanan Prabhakaran cutting the ribbon of the new mine.

The minerals will ultimately be exported to the west through the Lobito Corridor to a port in Angola. Lobito is the rail route the U.S. has backed with a $5 billion investment commitment, with, according to a Virtus statement, "the aim of obtaining a secure, auditable copper and cobalt supply chain for the U.S. and its allies."

THE WEST STILL DOESN’T GRASP THE DANGER OF CHINA’S RARE EARTH ENDGAME

Frans Cronje, president of the Washington-based Yorktown Foundation for Freedom, says the Virtus projects are significant because they show the administration is seriously trying to change the balance in a minerals battle with China.

He told Fox News Digital, "This development signals a more assertive United States effort to compete with China for access to Africa’s critical mineral base, particularly in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where cobalt and copper are strategically vital to global energy and defense supply chains."

US and DRC flags in Kolwezi

The U.S. and DRC flags fly outside Chemaf's site in Kolwezi, Democratic Republic of the Congo. 

Cronje added, "China has built deep structural dominance across much of Africa’s resource sector over the past two decades, but U.S.-backed initiatives such as this suggest a shift towards more direct engagement, rather than relying on Chinese-controlled supply routes. This matters because Africa’s vast resource endowment, combined with its geostrategic position along key Atlantic and Indian Ocean corridors, makes it central to future global economic and security competition."

A State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital, "President Trump and Secretary Rubio remain firmly committed to supporting U.S. companies that seek to do business in the DRC."

AFRICAN WAR-TORN NATION INVOKES TRUMP ‘GOLDEN AGE' FOR MINERALS DEAL IN EXCHANGE FOR BOOTING VIOLENT REBELS

Mine in DRC

Chemaf's site in Kolwezi, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

"The United States government fully supports the efforts of Virtus Minerals," the spokesperson continued. "This acquisition serves as an initial flagship U.S. investment in the DRC, and sends a clear signal that the U.S. private sector interest is real and will catalyze further investment in alignment with the U.S.-DRC Strategic Partnership Agreement, which positions the DRC to play an integral role in the Trump Administration's global efforts to secure critical mineral supply chains."

The spokesperson added that "increased U.S. investment will create quality jobs for American and Congolese workers, foster skills development and support local communities that have long been exploited by the opaque systems constructed and perpetuated by adversarial foreign actors who have controlled the DRC's critical minerals sector."

Rare earth minerals in DRC

Cobalt and Copper mined from Chemaf's Etoile site in Lubumbashi, DRC.

Virtus holds 56 mining licenses in total in the DRC. Phillip Braun, Virtus Minerals CEO and Chemaf chairman, told Fox News Digital, "Our first goal is to bring the Étoile and Mutoshi plants up to full production. From there, we will explore everything Chemaf's 56 mining permits have to offer — copper, cobalt and other metals like tungsten."

"None of this would be possible," Braun added, "without the strong partnership now growing between the United States and the DRC, and the support of leaders in both countries who saw what was possible. We look forward to bringing our two nations closer by building a steady, trusted supply of the minerals we depend on and supporting other American companies that want to invest in the DRC any way we can."

"A more active U.S. presence in these supply chains," Cronje continued, "would mark a significant rebalancing of influence on the continent, with implications not only for resource access but for broader geopolitical alignment in regions that are becoming increasingly contested."

https://www.foxnews.com/world/trump-gets-major-win-against-china-african-rare-earth-minerals-race

Monday, June 22, 2026

Far from a millionaire, Ilhan Omar now claims a potentially negative net worth

Omar's office blames an accounting error that listed assets without liabilities and overstated her husband's net worth


Democratic Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar’s latest financial disclosures show dramatically lower reported asset values than an earlier filing that listed millions of dollars in businesses connected to her husband.

In a financial report meant to cover 2024, the Minnesota Democrat claimed that she and her husband controlled between $6 million and $30 million in assets, figures that raised eyebrows as conservatives honed in on allegations of fraud among Minneapolis’ Somali community. In a recently filed 2025 report reviewed by Fox News Digital, however, Omar revised the value of her and her spouse’s assets down to, at most, $125,000.

Taking the lower-end estimate of Omar’s assets as reported in the disclosure — just $20,000 — and comparing it against both the low and high estimates of her debt — $30,000 and $100,000, respectively — would leave the congresswoman with a negative net worth. Congressional financial disclosures report broad ranges, so the filings do not establish a precise net worth.

Her husband has between $15,000 and $50,000 of credit card debt while the congresswoman has a student loan balance also worth between $15,000 and $50,000.

ILHAN OMAR'S OFFICE SAYS SHE'S ‘NOT A MILLIONAIRE’ AFTER $30M FILING REVISED DOWN TO UNDER $100K: REPORT

Rep. Ilhan Omar speaking at a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.

Rep. Ilhan Omar attends a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 29, 2022, celebrating President Joe Biden's cancellation of student debt. 

"The amended disclosure confirms what we’ve said all along: the Congresswoman is not a millionaire," a spokeswoman for Omar told Fox News Digital. "The original filing was based on incomplete information from Mr. Mynett’s businesses’ accountants in good faith and deference to professional judgement. It listed assets without liabilities, and it significantly overstated her husband’s net worth. The accounting error created a misleading picture of far greater wealth."

"The Congresswoman amended her disclosures voluntarily as soon as the discrepancy was identified. The amended disclosure is now complete and accurate," the spokeswoman added. 

OMAR FACES MOUNTING SCRUTINY AFTER FRAUD RINGLEADER SENTENCED TO 41 YEARS

Rep. Ilhan Omar speaking at a town hall event in St. Paul, Minnesota

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., attends a field hearing at the Minnesota Senate Building in St. Paul on Jan. 16, 2026, continuing the town hall event following an attack.

As suggested by Omar’s staffer, the major changes made between the two filing years can be attributed to different valuations being given to companies linked to the congresswoman’s husband. 

A winery that Omar’s 2024 disclosure previously valued at between $1 million and $5 million was updated to have a value of "none" for both 2025 and in a revised 2024 disclosure she filed in March.

WINERY BELONGING TO ILHAN OMAR'S HUSBAND SHUT DOWN AMID FINANCIAL SPOTLIGHT

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and husband Tim Mynett

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and husband Tim Mynett at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Annual Legislative Conference Phoenix Awards on September 23, 2023, in Washington, DC.

Her husband’s venture capital advisory firm, meanwhile, saw its value reduced to nothing in the two filings after previously being valued at between $5 million and $25 million.  

Omar and her senior staff have stated that her husband was one of many partners in the wine and advisory businesses, stating that previous disclosures reported the full values of the ventures rather than her husband’s individual share.

It is unclear, however, why her husband’s equity in these companies reportedly dropped to $0 between 2024 and 2025.

Tim Mynett, Omar’s husband, has over two decades of experience in D.C. Omar claimed that he made between $100,000 and $1 million through his venture capital advisory firm in 2024, though her 2025 disclosures suggest that his only income, between $200 and $1,000, came from a defunct winery.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/far-from-millionaire-ilhan-omar-now-claims-potentially-negative-net-worth

Migration and Second-Generation Radicalization Drive Rise in Islamic Terrorism in Europe

Research has shown that, alongside terrorists entering the EU through migration and open borders, there is an increasing trend of second-gen...