People heading away from Zaventem Airport after explosions rocked the facility in Brussels on Tuesday. AP At least 30 people were reported killed and dozens more wounded after explosions ripped through Zaventem Airport and a metro station in Brussels on Tuesday morning.

The attacks came days after Saleh Abdeslam, a suspect in last year's Paris attacks, was arrested in the Belgian capital, which is also the de facto capital of the European Union.

Clint Watts, a senior fellow at the George Washington University Center for Cyber and Homeland Security, said on Tuesday that the Brussels attacks were in line with an "iceberg" theory of terrorist plots.

That theory purports that, just as for every iceberg seen above water, the underlying mass of a terror network and its plots are not immediately visible — or, "for every attacker, there are usually three to four additional people who helped facilitate the plot."

"That the eight attackers in Paris used more explosive belts than ever before seen in the West suggests a sizeable European terrorist facilitation network," Watts wrote for War on the Rocks in November.

He added: "The iceberg theory of terrorist plots suggests we should look for two, three, or possibly four dozen extremist facilitators and supporters between Syria and France. This same network is likely already supporting other attacks in the planning phase."

A soldier near broken windows at Zaventem Airport after the explosions on Tuesday. Reuters

Belgian officials have long been aware of the existence of an ISIS-linked terrorist cell in Brussels, believed to be centered in the district of Molenbeek. Belgium's interior minister, Jan Jambon, has called Molenbeek "the capital of political Islam in continental Europe," and multiple suspects have been arrested there in connection to the Paris attacks.



Outside Belgium, at least 18 people have been detained across Europe since November for their alleged roles in the Paris attacks, The New York Times reported last weekend.

'C onsiderable planning and coordination'

Tuesday's attacks in Brussels bear a shocking similarity to the methods employed by ISIS in Paris on November 13, experts said. Those attacks are believed to have been coordinated by ISIS' external operations wing, using multiple attacks across the city to overwhelm the police and evade capture.

Just as the Paris attackers planned their assault for at least three months prior to the attack, experts believe the attacks that rocked Brussels on Tuesday morning were most likely months in the making, the timing driven more by a desire to act before being disrupted than by revenge for Abdeslam's arrest.

"Twin coordinated attacks on Belgian transport sites. Maybe revenge for Abdelslam, but planned and prepped ages ago," ISIS expert Michael Weiss, author of "ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror," tweeted on Tuesday.

Will McCants, author of "The ISIS Apocalypse," agreed.

"Plots like this take weeks or months to put in motion," McCants told Business Insider on Tuesday. "If the attackers are associates of Abdeslam, then they probably moved up the timetable of a preexisting plot to avoid capture."

The aftermath of the explosion inside the Brussels metro. Twitter

Significantly, traces of explosives were found in a Brussels apartment rented by the terrorists weeks before they carried out the Paris attacks, The New York Times reported, suggesting the existence of a makeshift bomb factory in the heart of Belgium's capital.

Terrorism expert Mia Bloom, professor of communication at Georgia State University and author of two books on terrorist-recruitment methods, told Business Insider "a plot of this caliber requires considerable planning and coordination."

"It is likely that Abdeslam's cell has been plotting this prior to his arrest (there was a substantial arms cache found)," Bloom said.

She added: "Coordinated attacks (multiple attacks in the same location, happening around the same time) tend to require the most planning. While it's impossible to know for certain, in my humble opinion, it is highly unlikely that these attacks took only a few days."

Geopolitical and security analyst Michael Horowitz largely echoed this sentiment in a statement to Business Insider.

"I think that more than a retaliation, the attacks (likely planned months ago), were in reaction to it: The cell was likely concerned that Abdeslam would talk and his capture eventually lead to dismantling of their own cell."

JM Berger, coauthor of "ISIS: The State of Terror," said in an email to Business Insider that while it was "very early to draw any major conclusions," it was "certainly possible this attack had already been planned and the timetable was moved up after the arrest."

A sophisticated 'foreign infrastructure'

Analysts say the terrorist network's ability to evade law enforcement after the Paris attacks long enough to plan and execute a major attack in the heart of the EU — even if its timeline was disrupted by Abdeslam's arrest — is testament to the deep networks jihadists have consolidated across Europe.

"The CT [counter-terrorism] federal police are actually very good," Ben Taub, freelance contributor for The New Yorker on jihadism in Europe, tweeted on Tuesday. "It's a numbers issue. Can't keep up. Networks too deep."

A handout picture showing Belgian-born Abdeslam Salah on a call for witnesses notice released by the French Police Nationale information services on its Twitter account. Thomson Reuters Matthew Levitt, director of the Stein Counterterrorism Program at the Washington Institute, corroborated Taub's assessment: "I spent last week in Belgium meeting CT officials (& taking metro) — they are only recently aware of the scope of their CT threats," Levitt tweeted.

Josh Rogin, a columnist for Bloomberg View, tweeted a stark detail: "On Sunday at the # BrusselsForum the Belgian FM warned that more attacks were being planned by a network of 'more than 30' terrorists."

A Belgian counterterrorism official put it bluntly in an interview with BuzzFeed just last week.

"We just don't have the people to watch anything else and, frankly, we don't have the infrastructure to properly investigate or monitor hundreds of individuals suspected of terror links, as well as pursue the hundreds of open files and investigations we have," the official said.

He added: "It's literally an impossible situation and, honestly, it's very grave."