August 9, 2024 - 10:00am

“Give me the child until he is seven, and I will give you the man.” So Aristotle spoke when asked about the value of childhood education. Aristotle would not have been familiar with the concept of the “teenager,” a term that was not used until the early Sixties. Yet something seems to be going wrong with the current teenage generation — the latter half of Gen Z — in the West. Or, at least some parts of it.

The recently prevented terrorist attack on a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna was planned by three young men, aged 15, 17, and 19. Although two of them are Austrian citizens, they all have a migrant-Muslim background, fitting the profile of a growing demographic that seems to be attracted to Islamist-inspired terrorism.

Terrorism expert Peter R. Neumann is labelling them “TikTok jihadists” and he has collected some revealing (and hugely concerning) data on the phenomenon. They are often young teenagers who have little to no interest in ideology or religion per se but find the social media appearance of terrorist organisations like Isis or al-Qaeda attractive. One could argue that they are the Islamic equivalent of the profile we know from school shooters in the US, such as in Uvalde, Texas or in the Parkland high school shooting in Florida.

They find support for radical views on the internet taking them further down a lethal spiral, with the actual ideology being only of tertiary concern — violence and nihilism taking primacy. Subsequently they either act as lone wolves or as part of virtual groups to carry out terrorist attacks designed to grab a maximum of media attention. Based on Neumann’s research, there are indicators that the number of such individuals is trending upwards, at least in Western Europe: jihadist activity has increased dramatically since October 2023 when Hamas attacked Israel, with a series of attacks in Western Europe and many more that have been thwarted by counter-terror authorities. Compared to the latest available data from Europol for 2022, Neumann writes, the number of carried out and planned attacks has more than quadrupled.

Of the 58 individuals involved in attacks or their planning, 38 are teenagers. This represents 65.5% and is significantly higher than in previous decades. According to security authorities, even 10-year-olds have been identified as potential perpetrators.

Although more pronounced, this trend is not entirely new. Two out of the four attackers during the 2005 London tube bombings were under the age of 20. What is new, however, is that jihadis in Western cities are more likely to be teenagers that have never lived in Muslim countries. It suggests that some young people of ethnically non-European heritage are losing meaningful connections to the European societies they are living in. Among the terrorists of 9/11, none was under the age of 20. But since then, the Islamist ideology (or the supposed glamour connected to it) has taken over certain parts of the internet and has become all too easily available to young people — and all too appealing to those from migrant backgrounds.

The American psychologist Jonathan Haidt has been claiming for years that young people in the West are going through a mental health crisis that is causally related to the use of social media. He has not yet touched on the topic of TikTok jihadists — let’s hope it doesn’t become the subject of his next book.


Ralph Schoellhammer is assistant professor of International Relations at Webster University, Vienna.

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