ISIS hit by jets from French aircraft carrier as Hollande launches coalition effort

France launched its first airstrikes from an aircraft carrier against ISIS on Monday as President Francois Hollande began a diplomatic offensive to persuade world leaders to join a coalition fighting the terror group.

Warplanes took off from the aircraft carrier Charles De Gaulle in the eastern Mediterranean and attacked ISIS targets in Iraq and Syria, the French Defense Ministry said.

With the addition of carrier-based aircraft to its fleet attacking ISIS by air, France now has 38 aircraft carrying out bombing raids against the terror group. Their targets Monday were in the Iraqi cities of Mosul and Ramadi and the Syrian city of Raqqa, the ministry said.

The latest wave of airstrikes come as the French President pushes to form a multi-national force to fight ISIS after the terror organization claimed responsibility for the November 13 attacks that left 130 dead in Paris.

Hollande will visit Washington to meet with U.S. President Barack Obama on Tuesday, then meet with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday and travel to Moscow to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday.

Hollande met with British Prime Minister David Cameron earlier Monday and they agreed to a pan-European effort for stronger external EU border controls, a more effective way of screening people and greater information sharing, Cameron said.

Cameron will make a case for the United Kingdom to start bombing ISIS positions in Syria on Thursday, he said Monday as he presented the country’s defense spending review in Parliament.

Russia may be showing signs of warming up to a coalition with France. The Russian Defense Ministry released photos on Monday that showed the words “For Paris” written on Russian missiles that will target ISIS positions.

Police: Article resembling suicide vest found

Security measures remain tight in France, which has been under a state of emergency since the attacks.

An area in the Paris suburb of Montrouge was sealed off Monday night after the discovery in a garbage can of an article resembling a suicide vest, Paris police told CNN.

Investigators were trying to determine whether the article contained explosives. A bomb disposal team on site removed the article.

CNN affiliate BFMTV reported that the article contained bolts and TATP, the same explosive found in the suicide belts used by Paris attackers.

Could the find in Montrouge have anything to do with the Paris attacks?

Authorities haven’t said. But BFMTV and the French newspaper Le Monde reported Monday night that suspect Salah Abdeslam’s cell phone was tracked to the area soon after the attacks.

Suspect charged in connection with Paris attacks

Belgium’s capital also remained tense Monday amid warnings of a possible terrorist attack.

Authorities charged a suspect in connection with the Paris killings, Belgium’s Federal Prosecutor Office said, and the nation’s prime minister said Brussels will remain at the highest terror level until at least next Monday.

In Brussels, fears of a terror attack will keep schools and the metro closed until Wednesday at the earliest, Belgium’s Prime Minister Charles Michel announced Monday.

That means soldiers and heavily armed police will remain in force on the streets and people will be urged to avoid large gatherings. The U.S. Embassy announced that its consular section would close Tuesday because of the high threat level.

French authorities have said the Paris attacks were organized in Belgium, with jihadists taking advantage of intelligence gaps and the absence of border controls between the two countries to slip into France undetected.

Several of the men believed to have taken part in the attacks have strong ties to Brussels, notably its suburb of Molenbeek, which has a history of links with terrorism plots.

The Paris attacks have spurred a series of raids across Belgium as authorities search for suspects.

So far, the operations haven’t uncovered Salah Abdeslam, a key suspect in the November 13 attacks on Paris who remains on the loose.

CNN terrorism analyst Paul Cruickshank said there’s “unprecedented concern” among Belgium authorities.

“The worry is that there’s another attack team out there, that they have explosives, that they have weapons,” he said Monday morning on CNN’s “New Day.” “Belgian police don’t have a handle on where these guys are and that’s why they’re shaking the tree so hard.”

Report: Third terrorist registered as refugee

The German publication Der Spiegel reported Monday that a third suspect in the Paris attacks may have entered France as a refugee.

According to the publication’s online report, investigators recently discovered the third terrorist had been registered as a refugee on the Greek island of Leros. Based on fingerprints and a Serbian passport, the investigators had determined that two men who blew themselves up near the Stade de France had also been registered as refugees there, Der Spiegel said.

Greek police did not confirm a third suspect came through the island of Leros. However, Alternate Citizen Protection Minister Nikolaos Toskas confirmed Monday that two of the Stade de France suicide bombers entered the European Union through Leros on October 3.

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