The Bastille Day slaughter of 84 people in Nice, following the 130 killed in Paris on May 13, 2015, left France the victim of two of the largest terrorist attacks outside the Middle East.
In France—as in the U.S., Turkey and Bangladesh—such attacks have nearly all been instigated by homegrown terrorists, not recent immigrants. All known Paris attackers were citizens of France or Belgium. The killer in Nice, Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, was a resident of France since 2005.
The New America Foundation counts 94 Americans killed in seven Islamic terrorist incidents since 9/11. Terrorists in Orlando, San Bernardino, Fort Hood, Seattle and Little Rock were born in the USA; those in Boston and Chattanooga had been citizens for decades.



The House Homeland Security Committee reported that, “Since September 11, 2001, there have been 124 U.S. terrorist cases involving homegrown violent Jihadists.”
Yet despite the homegrown origin of Jihadist terrorism, American politics has somehow spun toward the notion that controlling terrorism is primarily a matter of controlling immigration.