Three Taylor Swift concerts have been canceled after authorities thwarted a terror plot linked to ISIS. The planned attacks were aimed at Ernst Happel Stadium in Vienna, where Swift was scheduled to perform sold-out shows on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.

Cops have foiled a suspected ISIS-linked plot to attack a Taylor Swift concert


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Cops have foiled a suspected ISIS-linked plot to attack a Taylor Swift concertCredit: Getty

The suspected attack was to take place at Ernst-Happel Stadium, Vienna
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The suspected attack was to take place at Ernst-Happel Stadium, Vienna

Swift concert organisers released a statement saying the shows have been cancelled
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Swift concert organisers released a statement saying the shows have been cancelledCredit: Instagram/barracuda.music

A picture showing cops in hazmat suits during one of the raids that led to the arrests
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A picture showing cops in hazmat suits during one of the raids that led to the arrestsCredit: Seebacher Doris/Krone KREATIV


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Two suspects, including a 19-year-old man, have been arrested after authorities found various chemicals and other substances at their residence in Ternitz.

Both the attackers allegedly had detailed plans on how to carry out a mass attack.

Authorities, who received a tip from foreign intelligence agencies, asked local residents to evacuate the place as they cordoned off the roads during their raid.

Bomb squads are now said to be investigating if the materials were meant to design explosives.

Franz Ruf, Austrian Director General for Public Safety, said of the attack: “A concrete threat has been averted.

“The suspected perpetrator was focused on the Taylor Swift concerts. Preparatory actions were detected.”

One of the suspects is a native Austrian – and is said to have been radicalised by the Islamic terror outfit in June, New York Post reports.

Authorities are still investigating the case – and believe there are other suspects involved, according to Austrian media.

Event organizer Barracuda Music said in a post on its Instagram channel late Wednesday: “We have no choice but to cancel the three scheduled shows for everyone’s safety.”

It comes after cops foiled a suspected terror plot from IS ahead of England’s Euros final – raiding a series of addresses just hours before kick-off.

Officers swooped amid fears of an imminent attack on the Three Lions fan zone in Berlin’s sprawling Breitscheidplatz.

Three suspects were detained by German special forces during a series of coordinated raids in nearby Potsdam.

It has since emerged that police searched three addresses while looking for five men after pictures were taken on phones of Breitscheidplatz and a large church.

The men were said to be known IS supporters already under German police surveillance.

German cops also arrested a suspected ISIS terrorist while he was trying to sneak his way into the Euros.

Anti-terror investigators caught Soufian T, 23, who is said to have applied to get a pass as a security guard for “side events” outside the football stadium.

Cops from the Cologne police department, along with investigators from the Bonn State Security Service and federal police, arrested the German-Moroccan-Polish citizen with his mother and sister at Cologne-Bonn Airport.

Several mobile phones and cash worth £2,100 were seized.

Reaction from Taylor Swift’s team

A source close to Taylor Swift’s entourage said:

“The news has been kind of a shock for the whole team, as everyone was looking forward to those concerts in Austria as they are in the last part of the Eras Tour in Europe.

“There was a huge excitement to play in such a historical city, but also a big disappointment to have to cancel those shows. The terrorist threat made the team tense in a way that it’s not something easy to deal with, as everyone wants to be safe and just enjoy the tour and work in the best environment possible.

“The tour in general and especially in Europe has been going fantastic, and there is a huge disappointment that the concerts are cancelled, but everyone is very understanding of the situation and grateful that the Austrian police and the government took the best decision for the security and safety of each and all of us, from the fans to Taylor, to the crews and the team.

“There was a meeting with everyone, Taylor, the staff, and the whole team, and everything got explained to us, and it was very good to make things go smoother, and to ensure that everyone is very safe and that is the best decision that was taken.

“We are going to keep working for the next shows coming in London after the stop in Austria, but it wasn’t an easy day to, that is for sure. The goal is to wrap up the Euro part of the tour in the best way.”

The terror outfit had also threatened chilling attacks on the Paris Olympics in an appalling poster message.

The death cult posted a propaganda image showing one of its terrorists seemingly flying an “armed drone” to attack the iconic Eiffel Tower.

The poster, pushed by ISIS-linked social media channels, was captioned: “Lone wolves’ Olympics have begun with the Will of Allah.”

France has been on high alert amid a slew of vile threats made by Islamic terror outfits.

Just a few days ago, French counter-terror cops foiled a plot for an “Islamist-inspired” attack which was planned for during the Olympic Games.

A NEW WAVE OF BLOODSHED

In recent weeks, ISIS have resurfaced across Europe and the US in a concerning escalation putting British counter-terror experts on high alert.

Will Geddes spoke to The Sun and said he would not be surprised if the UK’s terror threat level increases.

He said: “I would be remarkably surprised if we did not see a terrorist attack on the UK or on European soil, certainly in the next few months.”

These worries have stemmed from a horrific attack in Moscow as four ISIS-K gunmen unleashed gunfire on concert-goers, slaughtering over 140 and publishing horrific videos of their deaths.

It was the worst Islamic extremist terror attack in Europe to date.

Barbaric history of ISIS

ISIS, also known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, is a murderous terrorist network that officially formed in 2004.

The group, known for its barbaric public executions and beheadings, was originally part of al-Qaeda – the terrorists responsible for 9/11 which sparked the decades-long global War on Terror.

They took advantage of instability in Iraq and Syria after 2000 to rule with an iron fist.

After an injection of American troops into Iraq in 2007, ISIS lost some of its power grip in the region.

But it began to reemerge in 2011 and by 2014 the US had formed Operation Inherent Resolve.

The mission involved putting American boots on the ground in Iraq and Syria – as well as other regions in the Middle East.

In 2014, ISIS was the most powerful, best-equipped and wealthiest Islamic extremist group the world had ever seen.

By 2015 it had branches operating in at least eight other countries.

That October, their Egypt network bombed a Russian plane and killed over 220 people.

In November 2015, 130 were murdered and over 300 injured during one of their most brutal attacks on the West in Paris.

And in June 2016, a gunman who pledged himself to the murderous organisation killed at least 48 people at a nightclub in Florida.

By December 2017, ISIS had lost 95 per cent of it’s stolen territory.

But its core ideologies, which included a burning hatred for the Western way of life, continued to inspire countless terrorist attacks around the world.

While American combat in Iraq was officially axed in December 2021, 2,500 troops were left stationed there to work as advisers and trainers for Iraqi security forces trying to fend off extremist forces.

There are believed to be less than 1,000 still stationed in Syria.

Three of those American troops were killed in Jordan on January 28 – in a drone attack at a US military base near the Syrian and Iraq borders.

Paris is expected to take further measures in the coming months amid the rising chilling threats.

France raised its terror threat level to the highest marker after the Moscow attack – meaning an attack is “imminent”.

Meanwhile, Western intelligence revealed how cops stopped at least 12 terror attacks in the past 12 months across Europe.

Ten jihadist attacks have been bravely intercepted and prevented in Europe last year, says Dutch intelligence agency AIVD.

Among the attacks foiled include stabbing rampages at global events, and barbaric assaults on specific venues and groups being targeted, the annual report revealed.