Foiled Taylor Swift concert attack aimed to kill ‘tens of thousands’ of fans

Suspects in the foiled plot to attack Taylor Swift’s Vienna concerts in early August sought to kill “tens of thousands” of her fans before the CIA uncovered intelligence that disrupted the planning and led to arrests, the agency’s deputy director said.

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) informed Austrian authorities of the plan, which allegedly included links to the Islamic State (IS) armed group. The intelligence and subsequent arrests ultimately led to the cancellation of three sold-out concerts on the tour Erasdevastating fans who had traveled across the world to see the singer in concert.

CIA Deputy Director David Cohen discussed the failed plot at the annual National Security and Intelligence Summit this week in Maryland.

“They were plotting to kill a massive number of people – tens of thousands of people at that concert, many Americans, I’m sure – and were quite advanced in that,” Cohen said Wednesday.

“The Austrians were able to make these arrests because the agency and our partners in the intelligence community provided them with information about what this ISIS-linked group was planning to do.”

Knives and explosives planned

Austrian authorities said the main suspect, a 19-year-old Austrian, was inspired by the Islamic State group. He reportedly planned to attack outside the stadium, where more than 30,000 fans were expected, with knives or homemade explosives. An additional 65,000 spectators were likely inside the venue. Investigators discovered chemical substances and technical devices during a search of the suspect’s home.

Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner had previously said that help from other intelligence agencies was needed because Austrian investigators, unlike some foreign services, cannot legally monitor text messages.

The 19-year-old’s lawyer said the allegations were “exaggerated at best” and argued that Austrian authorities were “exaggerating this” in order to gain new surveillance powers.

Taylor Swift broke her silence on the cancellations last week after her London concerts ended.

“The cancellation of our concerts in Vienna was devastating,” she wrote in a statement posted on Instagram. “The reason for the cancellations has left me with a new sense of fear and an overwhelming sense of guilt, as so many people had planned to come to these concerts.”

She thanked the authorities – “thanks to them we were crying concerts and not lives,” she wrote. The singer waited until the end of the European leg of her Eras tour to speak out in order to prioritize safety, she said.

“I want to be very clear: I’m not going to talk about something in public if I think it might provoke those who would want to harm the fans who come to my concerts,” she said.

In the UK after a knife attack

Concert promoter Barracuda Music said it had canceled the three-night Vienna tour, which was scheduled to begin on August 8, because the conspiracy-related arrests were too close to showtime.

The main suspect and a 17-year-old were taken into custody on August 6, the day before the cancellations were announced. A third suspect, aged 18, was arrested on August 8. Their names have not been released in accordance with Austrian confidentiality rules.

The London shows, the next leg of the tour after Vienna, came just after a stabbing attack at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class left three young girls dead in the UK. In a statement released after the Southport attack, the star said she was “completely shocked” and “didn’t know how to convey my condolences to the families”. Media reported that Swift met some of the survivors backstage in London.

The Vienna plot has also been compared to a 2017 suicide bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, that killed 22 people. The bomb exploded at the end of the concert as thousands of young concertgoers were leaving the venue, becoming the deadliest extremist attack in the UK in recent years.

Deputy Director David Cohen on Wednesday praised the CIA’s work in preventing planned violence, saying other counterterrorism “successes” in foiling plots generally go unnoticed.

“I can tell you that within my agency, and I’m sure others as well, there were people who thought it was a very good day for Langley,” he said, referring to the CIA headquarters. “And not just the Swifties on my team.”

Taylor Swift’s record-breaking tour is currently on hiatus until the fall.

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