The problem with the “lone wolf” label is that we run the risk of only focussing on the specifics of an individual case, and once again miss the patterns emerging in the broader terrorist threat, writes Jacinta Carroll.
The terrible events in Orlando – 50 people dead, 53 wounded in the worst terrorist attack on US soil since 2001 – have some striking elements of familiarity for Australians.
Many of the questions being asked now about Omar Mateen are the same that were asked – and continue to be posed – about Man Haron Monis and the Martin Place siege.
While intelligence and law enforcement are working to develop a full picture of Mateen and his possible connections, we have some picture of the individual.
Mateen is described as a lone actor with knowledge of and access to semi-automatic firearms, who made his public allegiance to Islamic State only minutes before the attack. That suggests an affiliation that is “inspired” and distant rather than being a “real” part of the group.
A perpetrator of domestic violence with mental health issues, he attacked ordinary citizens in a public venue before taking hostages. The FBI apparently had investigated him several times in the past but had given him a pass.
In his attack on a fashionable café in Sydney’s CBD, Monis too had pledged a fumbled allegiance to IS only during the hostage siege; he had a history of association with a range of groups but little specifically with IS. He also had a history of alleged abuse towards women, as well as mental health issues.