Belgrade, Serbia - A dark shadow stretches from the endless conflict in Gaza to the heart of Europe. Today, a terrorist attack has shaken Belgrade, bringing to mind the fragility of peace in the Old Continent, increasingly marked by growing tensions.
An armed man with a crossbow shot a gendarme in the neck while on surveillance duty at the Israeli embassy in Belgrade. The aggressor, then killed by the gendarme in a shootout, was identified by the Serbian Minister of Internal Affairs, Ivica Dačić, as M. Ž., a convert from Mladenovac who had moved to Novi Pazar.
While the wounded gendarme is hospitalized and the Serbian authorities investigate the incident, the echoes of the shots resonate far beyond Serbian borders. The attack, immediately classified as a terrorist act, carries with it the weight of an increasingly tense international climate.
Dačić, while emphasizing that the investigations are still ongoing, did not rule out the possibility of international terrorism, mentioning the possible involvement of the Salafist movement. An hypothesis that, if confirmed, would confirm the fears of a creeping radicalization fueled by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and capable of striking at any time and in any place.
Serbian police, engaged in searches in several locations, have raised the alarm to the maximum level throughout the country. A clear signal of the awareness that today's attack could be just the tip of a much deeper and dangerous iceberg.
While the war rages in Gaza and Europe appears increasingly divided and fragile, the Belgrade attack represents a tragic warning: the long wave of hatred and violence can reach every corner of the world, threatening global security and stability.
Editorial