It really does interest me how much of these attacks are centrally and meticulously planned by organised terror groups, or how much are just randomers or random groups that the large organisations are more than happy to take credit for. Honestly don't know which would be scarier tho.
The BBC's Panorama programme has seen the transcripts of some important interrogations carried out by France's equivalent of MI5, the DGSI. They reveal valuable details about the tactics used by Abaaoud to train and equip IS fighters in Europe.
Nicolas Moreau was one them. He was arrested in 2015 having left Nantes to fight jihad in Syria in 2014.
He, like many IS recruits, was a former petty criminal who had converted to Islam in prison and become disillusioned with life in France.
He told his interrogators he couldn't stand the "injustice" and "couldn't see any future in this country".
He went on to provide valuable information about IS's external operations department known as Amni, meaning "security", that sends hand-picked trained fighters back to Europe to inflict death and destruction on their homelands.
"Each gets 50,000 euros (£40,000) to mount an attack," Moreau said.
Crucially he then revealed the kunya, the nom de guerre of the person in charge of Amni - Abu Omar from Brussels.
In fact, Abu Omar's real name was Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the commander of the network that was to plan and execute a number of attacks in Europe in 2015, culminating in the meticulously planned massacres in Paris.
Another IS fighter, Reda Hame, captured in France in August 2015, gave more precise details about Abaaoud that helped intelligence agencies fill in the picture about how his network operated.
Hame's value to Abaaoud was that his French passport was due to expire and Abaaoud wanted to get him back to Europe to carry out an attack while his passport was still valid.
He said Abaaoud was "a very tough person, very determined and very dangerous".
Time was of the essence to take advantage of the expiry date. Abaaoud personally gave Hame a crash course in weapons training and then issued instructions.
Getting weapons in France, he said, was not a problem.
But the most chilling instructions that Abaaoud issued were about the targets Hame was to hit.
"He just told me to choose an easy target like a place where there are people. Imagine a rock concert in a European country. If we arm you, would you be ready to shoot into a crowd?"
Abaaoud added that it was best to wait after the attack for the forces to intervene and then to die while fighting.
"He said that if many civilians were hit, the foreign policy of France would change."
http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-35872562