The head of France's internal intelligence agency has warned that the country is "clearly targeted" by the Islamic State group which could launch a "terrorist campaign" of bombings in places where big crowds gather.
DGSI agency chief Patrick Calvar made the comments at a hearing before a parliamentary committee on national defence on May 10, an account of which was made public yesterday.
"We know that Daesh (Arabic acronym for IS) is planning new attacks -- using fighters in the area, taking routes which facilitate access to our territory -- and that France is clearly targeted," Calvar said.
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Calvar noted that while last November's attacks in Paris that killed 130 people were conducted by suicide bombers and jihadists armed with Kalashnikovs, a new form of attack was possible.
"We risk being confronted with a new form of attack: a terrorist campaign characterised by leaving explosive devices in places where big crowds gather, multiplying this type of action to create a climate of panic," he said, less than a month before the start of the Euro 2016 international football tournament in France.
He viewed France as "the country most threatened" by IS as well as Al-Qaeda which he said wants to "restore its image" and its regional offshoots in the Maghreb and the Arabian peninsula.