Swiss Attorney General reports terrorism investigations have doubled since 2022, with 120 active cases primarily involving jihadist activities.

"We must expect terrorist activities in Switzerland to increase."
"The federal government has neglected internal security for a long time. We clearly have a shortfall in this area."
Switzerlandâs reputation as a neutral sanctuary immune to global turmoil is officially under siege. The number of active terrorism investigations has doubled since 2022, a staggering statistic that shatters the complacency often felt within our borders. Attorney General Stefan Blättler has issued a stark wake-up call, revealing that federal prosecutors are currently grappling with 120 active cases of suspected terrorism.
This is not a theoretical risk; it is an operational reality. While Switzerland has historically been viewed as a quiet neighbor compared to the turbulence in France or Germany, Blättler warns that this impression is dangerously misleading. The surge in cases indicates that the threat landscape has shifted dramatically. Authorities have successfully intervened to prevent planned attacks recently, but the sheer volume of investigations suggests the pressure is mounting. As Blättler bluntly stated, "We must expect terrorist activities in Switzerland to increase." The era of assuming safety by default is over; the Confederation is now on the front lines of European security.
The primary driver of this escalating threat is unmistakable: the majority of the 120 active cases are rooted in jihadist backgrounds. The battlefield is no longer just physical; it is digital, financial, and borderless. Investigations have uncovered a complex web of terrorist propaganda spreading through the Swiss internet, illicit funds flowing from Swiss accounts to terror organizations abroad, and individuals attempting to travel to conflict zones for jihad.
This is a sophisticated, multi-layered threat that requires constant vigilance. The Attorney Generalâs office is tracking not just potential bombers, but the logistical spines that support terror networks. The risk is that radicalized individuals, fed a steady diet of online hate, will transition from passive support to active violence. If these networks are not dismantled in advance, the transition from propaganda consumer to attacker can happen with terrifying speed. The authorities are engaged in a high-stakes race to intercept these actors before they can operationalize their intent on Swiss soil.
The most insidious threat facing the Confederation comes from the shadows: the isolated perpetrator. While we may not see large-scale coordinated assaults, Switzerland has already been scarred by incidents in Morges, Lugano, and Zurich. These attacks, often carried out by individuals acting alone, are notoriously difficult to detect and prevent. Blättler cited the recent attack in Magdeburg as a grim reminder of how quickly a single radicalized individual can strike.
Detecting a lone wolf requires a level of surveillance and intelligence gathering that tests the limits of law enforcement. Unlike large cells that generate
As the terror threat soars, the system meant to protect us is buckling. In a damning indictment of federal priorities, Attorney General Blättler declared, "The federal government has neglected internal security for a long time." The consequences of this neglect are critical. With personnel stretched thin to cover the 120 terror investigations, other vital areas of law enforcement are falling by the wayside.
Investigations into organized crime and cybercrime are being deprioritized due to a severe lack of resources. This creates a dangerous vacuum where gang crime and digital extortion could flourish unchecked. Blättler warned that without immediate action to bolster the Federal Public Prosecutorâs Office, Switzerland risks sliding toward the violent reality seen in Belgium or Sweden. We are currently fighting a two-front warâterrorism and organized crimeâwith a force sized for peacetime. The shortfall is clear, and without a rapid injection of support, the cracks in our internal security shield will only widen.