NPR's counterterrorism correspondent Dina Temple-Raston explains how the attacks in Paris show the Islamic State is no longer a local threat confined to Syria and Iraq.
When Jean Jullien learned of the Paris attacks, the French artist dashed off a pen-and-ink mash-up of the Eiffel Tower with a peace sign. That symbol has since become a worldwide icon of the tragedy.
More than 120 people have been killed and 350 injured in a series of terrorist attacks in Paris. The assault left Parisians in a state of shock, feeling under siege even a day later.
This week Barbershop focuses on the Paris attacks. NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Bridget Johnson of PJ Media, Abderrahim Foukara, Al Jazeera's Washington bureau chief, and Arsalan Iftikhar, an attorney and commentator.
Francois Molins says police believe the attackers were organized in three teams, and that investigators have targeted two black cars: a Seat and a VW Polo with a Belgian license plate.
Residents and tourists have been leaving flowers at the sites of the different terrorist attacks in Paris. Meanwhile more information is slowly emerging about the people who carried them out.
Dr. Patrick Pelloux talks about rushing to the hospital and treating those injured in the terrorist attacks in Paris last night. Pelloux was also a first responder when the satirical magazine he contributes to, Charlie Hebdo, was attacked earlier this year.
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Samia Hathroubi, European director of the Foundation for Ethical Understanding, about what conversations in Muslim Parisian communities may sound like in the coming days.
France has reinstated border controls that Europe had abandoned in recent years as they reel from Friday night's terrorist attacks that left at least 129 dead.