The following statement was issued today by National Security Council spokesperson Ned Price.
Today,
Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism
Lisa Monaco concluded a series of meetings in Brussels, Belgium with
Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel, Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of Interior Jan Jambon, Minister of Justice Koen Greens, and
other Belgian security officials, police, and federal prosecutors. Ms.
Monaco led a U.S. delegation, at the President's
direction, to follow up on our joint counterterrorism efforts following
the March 22
ISIL terrorist attacks in Brussels. The delegation included John
Mulligan, Deputy Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, and
General Frank Taylor, Under Secretary
for Intelligence and Analysis at the Department of Homeland Security.
Discussions with Belgian officials focused on our whole-of-government
approach to information sharing and counterterrorism cooperation with
our Belgian partners and solidarity with the Belgian
people.
Ms.
Monaco praised the work of Belgian intelligence and law enforcement
services in confronting the threat from ISIL and noted that Belgium is a
vital partner in the Global Coalition to Counter ISIL. Ms. Monaco
discussed with Belgian officials our shared efforts to disrupt terrorist
plotting against the United States and Europe and to degrade and
destroy ISIL. They also discussed a number of ways
we can enhance our counterterrorism cooperation in the wake of the
March attacks in Brussels, to include intensifying our information
sharing and sharing lessons the United States learned following the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Ms. Monaco and
Belgian officials agreed to advance a foreign terrorist fighter work
plan the U.S. Foreign Fighter Surge Team developed with its Belgian
counterparts immediately following the attacks, to disrupt the
recruitment and flow of foreign terrorist fighters to Syria
and Iraq. Ms. Monaco and the delegation also discussed with their
Belgian counterparts countering violent extremism (CVE) efforts, to
include our continued joint cooperation through the Strong Cities
network, which includes Antwerp, to share best practices
on counter-radicalization and prevention at the municipal level.
Ms.
Monaco and the delegation also met with European Union Counterterrorism
Coordinator Giles de Kerchove to discuss how we can support EU efforts
to strengthen counterterrorism coordination and information sharing
amongst its members. They discussed the importance of quickly and
effectively implementing the European Union's directive on passenger
name record (PNR) collection and sharing, to bolster
the EU's border security and efforts to disrupt foreign fighter flows.
Source: The White House, Office of the Press Secretary
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