Radicalisation in Europe has been on the rise, especially among young people, EU Counter-Terrorism Coordinator Bartjan Wegter told Euronews, with Europe’s security services now dealing with cases involving children as young as 12.

“We’re talking about minors (and youth) aged between 12 and 20 years old,” Wegter told Euronews’ 12 Minutes With, adding that a huge challenge for law enforcement is that young people radicalise very quickly. “Sometimes, it’s a matter of weeks.”

Wegter explained that at that age, minors are generally very susceptible and are therefore targeted online for criminal activity, even if in real life they do not have any criminal record.

According to recent studies, young people spend between five and eight hours per day on social media, with radicalisation and recruitment taking place online in these spaces and without any in-person meetings.

“So, it’s very difficult for our law enforcement to capture this,” the EU counter-terrorism coordinator said.

“It’s a matter of exchanging good practices. Sharing data, sharing information, but also very much monitoring the online environment, which is where much of this takes place.”

Wegter reiterated that more time spent online is not necessarily negative in itself, but “it’s a matter of educating youth” and cooperating with the websites and platforms where young Europeans spend most of their time.

“It is also a matter for dialoguing with the platforms and the industry to ensure that they take their responsibility in countering the kind of content that is leading to the radicalisation of our young people.”

Growing threat of online communities inciting violence

Europol’s — the EU law enforcement organisation — latest terrorism trend assessment indicates a clear rise in the involvement of minors and young adults in terrorism‑related behaviour across the European Union.

According to the 2025 European Union Terrorism Situation and Trend Report, 449 people were arrested for terrorism‑related offences in the EU in 2024.

Almost a third of them — 133 people — were aged between 12 and 20 years. The youngest offender was 12 and arrested for planning to commit an attack.

According to Europol, the vast majority of these young suspects were linked to jihadist terrorism, followed by right-wing terrorism and violent extremism.

Wegter insisted that “jihadism remains the number one threat in Europe”.

“That’s the number-one threat to our security,” Wegter told Euronews, adding that its tactics have changed over the past decade.

He added that although the so-called Islamic State (IS) no longer exists as a physical entity, the extremist group “has adapted its tactics and it has been very agile”.

The IS or Daesh rose to prominence in the mid-2010s but has been largely decapitated following the loss of the territories it occupied in the Middle East except for some pockets in the Syrian desert, and now operates in a decentralised way through its affiliates and global terror operations.

Wegter explained that its command centres have been decentralised, meaning that “it has now different frontlines in the global war of jihad in different regions”.

“Also, instead of organising the sort of large-scale concerted attacks from outside the EU’s borders, it has now shifted tactics to really trying to recruit people, very often young adolescents, from within the EU.”

The rise of ‘nihilistic violent extremism’

On top of jihadist radicalisation challenges, Europe faces an alarming shift in extremism: violent right-wing and left-wing ideologies are surging online, luring young people into “communities”.

Wegter says these communities or networks then operate on the basis of “salad bar ideology”.

**“**There are very often different parts of different ideologies that are put together in a sort of mishmash of very negative, very violent, let’s say, motivations.”

And the rise of the “salad bar extremism” then develops into a new trend, which Wegter describes as “nihilistic extremist violence”.

“It is very often driven by an online community of violent extremists, or accelerationists, meaning that they want to disrupt the whole of society.”

These hardcore ideologies typically combine racism, misogyny, and other extreme ideas and target young people who “don’t have any ideological baggage are very much drawn to extreme violence.”

This brand new phenomenon doesn’t “neatly fit into the box of strictly speaking terrorism”, Wegter said.

“But it has many of the same characteristics and vulnerabilities that are being exploited by some actors to actually disrupt our society,” he concluded.

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