WASHINGTON: CIA director John Brennan said Wednesday that three bomb attacks which struck Saudi Arabia last week bore the "hallmark" of the Islamic State group, also known by its Arabic acronym Daesh.
No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attacks but observers quickly noted that the methods used resembled those of the extremist organization.
Seven people are believed to have been killed and two wounded in the Medina attacks, at a mosque in Qatif and in western Jeddah, the economic capital, not far from the US consulate.
"Those three attacks were, I think, the work of ISIL," Brennan said at an event at a Washington think tank, using the US government's preferred abbreviation for the Islamic State group.
"ISIL presents a very, very serious threat not just to Europe and the United States... but inside of Saudi Arabia," he told an audience at the Brookings Institution.
Several days after the attacks, the Saudi interior ministry announced the arrests of 19 suspects, including 12 Pakistanis.
Regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia is part of the US-led international coalition battling the IS group in Iraq and Syria.
Since March 2015, the country has also led a coalition fighting rebels in Yemen. In the past year, Saudi authorities have stepped up the arrests of extremists and in 2015 announced that they had dismantled an IS-linked group, detaining hundreds of suspects, mainly Saudis.
Saudi Arabia's top cleric, Sheikh Abdulaziz al-Sheikh, has declared the IS group to be an "enemy of Islam."
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