Book Read Free

ISIS

Page 40

by Jessica Stern


  ISIS disavowed by, 6, 43, 69, 85, 180

  in Jordan, 19

  and local insurgencies, 59, 61

  and Maliki, 30

  media messages of, 56, 101–6, 108, 119, 120, 194, 195

  nihilism of, 73

  numbers of, 54

  obedience (bayah) to emir of, 54, 65, 179

  obstacles to membership in, 73

  old guard in, 187–91, 192–93

  and populism, 61, 73, 195

  possible outcomes of, 192, 195

  recruitment, 191–93, 194

  secrecy of, 53, 55, 56, 65, 73, 124, 185, 244

  security precautions of, 58, 124

  September 11 attacks, 56–57

  The State of the Ummah, 101–3

  and Taliban, 179

  training camps of, 54, 59, 65, 73

  and Twitter, 135

  U.S. embassies bombed (1998), 55, 56

  U.S. responses to, 56, 57–58, 125, 177, 252

  USS Cole bombing (2000), 56

  as vanguard movement, 55–56, 73

  vision of, 178, 192

  West targeted by, 59, 94, 108–9, 179

  World Trade Center bombing (1993), 55, 179

  al Qaeda Central (AQC):

  affiliates of, 42, 43, 50

  control by, 65

  and Hammami, 63–64

  messages from, 105–6

  and Nusra, 42–43, 48, 58, 61, 66

  recruitment by, 60–61, 108

  and social media, 67, 68–70

  and violence, 104–5, 224–25

  Zarqawi’s independence from, 16–17, 22, 25, 62, 277–78

  al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), 13–31, 41

  border crossings by, 152

  and fitna, 62

  foreign fighters in, 21–22

  formation of, 21, 58

  ideology of, 38

  and ISIS, 66

  marketing via Internet, 22, 24

  as precursor of ISIS, 2, 28

  and Salafism, 275

  and suicide bombings, 277

  targeting top leaders of (decapitation), 26

  terrorist activities of, 21, 22, 24–25

  videos by, 2, 103–5

  violence of, 104–5

  and Zarqawi, see al Zarqawi, Abu Musab

  al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), 58, 59–60, 61, 62, 89, 97, 114, 132, 180, 181, 187, 189, 194

  al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent, 58, 180

  al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), 58, 61, 62, 96, 114, 180, 181, 189

  al Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers (Tanzim Qaedat al Jihad fi Bilad al Rafidayn), 21

  al-Samarrai, Ibrahim Awwad Ibrahim Ali al-Badri, see al Baghdadi, Abu Bakr

  al Shabab, 61, 63–67, 70, 89, 135, 143–45, 160, 163, 180, 191

  al Shamukh, 68

  “Ambush at Bardale,” 63

  Amman, Jordan, hotels bombed in, 19

  Amnesty International, 31

  Amr (child soldier), 212

  Anghel, Itai, 210

  Ansar al-Islam, 17

  Ansar al-Shariah in Tunisia (AST), 182–83

  Ansar Bayt al Maqdis (ABM), 185, 234

  Antichrist, 229

  apocalypse, 219, 221–28

  expectations of, 231, 252

  millenarian projects, 230

  Protestant cults, 228–30

  simplistic narration of, 244

  Appleby, Scott, 264

  Apuzzo, Matt, 8

  Arab League, 39, 40

  Arab Spring, 39–40, 106, 109, 151–52, 179, 185, 191, 195

  Archive.org, 134

  Arendt, Hannah, 205

  Armed Islamic Group of Algeria, 22

  Armenia, Turks in, 236

  Armstrong, Karen, 233, 242

  Asawirti Media, 167

  ask.fm, 160

  al Assad, Bashar, 40, 49, 152, 238, 239

  al Assad, Hafez, 40

  Assad regime, 40, 42, 50, 83, 85, 152, 222, 238, 254

  asymmetrical warfare, 191–92

  Atran, Scott, 82–83, 207

  Aum Shinrikyo, 230

  Australia, terrorists in, 95, 97, 98, 200

  Authentic Tauheed, 183

  Awakening Councils, 28

  Awakening Movement, 28, 30, 44

  al Awlaki, Anwar, 62, 130–33, 183

  Azzam, Abdullah, 9, 55, 76, 220, 272, 273, 274, 276

  Azzam the American, 103 (see also Gadahn, Adam)

  Ba’athists, 6, 19, 37, 38

  Babbar Khalsa, 138

  al Badri, Ibraham Awad Ibrahim, 34

  Badr Organization, 29

  Baghdad, UN center bombed in (2003), 21

  al Baghdadi, Abu Bakr, 33–39, 68

  and al Qaeda, 180

  as “Caliph Ibrahim,” 46–47, 86, 116, 118–19, 157, 279

  in detention center, 34–35, 36–37

  education of, 37

  and end times, 231

  as “invisible sheikh,” 38, 105, 107

  and ISIS expansion, 184

  as ISIS leader, 7, 33, 37–39, 42–43, 51, 105, 178

  loyalty oaths to, 180, 182, 185

  rumors of death, 184

  speeches of, 107, 124, 166

  and Syrian civil war, 41

  on Twitter, 161

  al Baghdadi, Abu Omar, 26, 33, 37

  Bahrain, unrest in, 39

  Bakos, Nada, 25–26

  Balkhi, Abdulqahar, 135

  Balochi, Nasser, 147

  Bangladesh, Pakistanis in, 236

  al Banna, Hasan, 266, 272

  Barber, Matthew, 216

  Barkun, Michael, 226

  Baron-Cohen, Simon, 206

  Barrett, Richard, 38

  Bashir, Abu Bakar, 181, 182

  Beam, Louis, 60

  beheadings:

  believed to be Western propaganda, 223

  by Chechen insurgents, 2, 84

  as punishment for crimes, 209–10

  and Salafism, 276

  as theater, 243

  videos of, 1–3, 4–5, 48, 72, 96, 104, 120–23, 125, 143, 151, 159, 164, 168, 186, 197, 203, 243–44, 246

  Belmokhtar, Mokhtar, 62, 189

  Ben Ali, Zine al-Abidine, 152

  Berg, Nicholas, 2, 4, 104, 169

  al Beshi, Muhammad Saad, 210

  Betancourt, Teresa, 214

  Better Angels of Our Nature, The (Pinker), 206, 207

  Big Data analytics, 140

  Bilad al Shaam, 161

  bill of rights, 256

  al Binali, Turki, 33

  bin Laden, Osama:

  alliance of Zarqawi and, 17, 21, 43, 58

  and al Qaeda, 54, 56, 59, 61

  bayah to, 17, 21, 22, 54, 61, 179

  death of, 22, 26, 103, 130, 191

  education and experience of, 37, 61

  and holy war, 272

  and ISIS ideology, 194

  meeting of Zarqawi and, 16, 17

  and Salafism, 267, 274, 275

  and security concerns, 124

  and September 11 attacks, 17

  and ultraviolence, 224, 277

  on videos, 102, 103, 106

  and World Islamic Front, 178–79

  Bloom, Mia, 91, 211

  Boko Haram, 182

  Bolger, Daniel, 239–40

  Bosnia:

  al Qaeda in, 55, 59

  dilemma of, 254

  genocide in, 82, 99, 193

  jihadist video in, 2, 103

  money laundering in, 55

  The Martyrs of Bosnia, 101

  Branch Davidian cult, 225

  “Breaking Down the Walls,” 39, 107, 109–10

  Bremer, L. Paul, 19

  Bush, George W., 18, 255

  Bush administration:

  and exit from Iraq, 29

  and Zarqawi, 17–18

  caliph:

  choosing, 258–59

  as leader of Muslims, 19–20

  caliphate, 112–20, 260–61

  abolishment of, 266

  achievemen
t of, 27, 195

  al Qaeda’s goal for, 277

  announcement of, 46–47, 69, 85–86, 113, 116–17, 119, 157, 158, 161, 166, 177, 180, 182, 183, 184, 186, 223, 233

  claims to, 278–79

  and end of days, 221

  institution of, 19–20, 83

  reaction to announcement, 117–19, 180–81

  religious justification for, 120

  significance of, 69

  Umayyad, 161, 261

  Call to a Global Islamic Resistance, A (Suri), 223–24

  Cameron, David, 122

  Camp Ashraf, 35

  Camp Bucca, 34–35, 37, 38, 41

  Camp Cropper, 35

  Canada, terrorists in, 96, 200, 201

  Cantlie, John, 123

  capital punishment, 209

  Carothers, Thomas, 255

  Caucasus Emirate, 189

  censorship, 246–47

  Cerantonio, Musa, 183–84

  Charlie Hebdo attack, 98

  Chechen insurgents, beheadings by, 2, 84

  children:

  child pornography, 141, 246

  education of, 210–11

  institutionalized slavery of, 48

  ISIS use of, 10–11, 115, 210–13, 237

  Kazakh fighters, 92–93

  kidnapping of, 212, 216

  long-term effects of violence on, 213–15

  in slavery, 216–17

  as soldiers, 10, 92–93, 213–15

  China, beheading as punishment in, 209

  Choudary, Anjem, 183

  CIA, 57, 136

  Clanging/Clash of the Swords, The, 106–12, 113, 121, 164–65

  Cockburn, Patrick, 31

  cognitive dissonance, theory of, 228

  collective historical trauma, 217–18

  Comey, James, 79

  Conrad, Joseph, 237

  constitutional liberalism, 255–56

  Cook, David, 221

  Costolo, Dick, 138

  countering violent extremism (CVE), 248–49

  Couture-Rouleau, Martin, 96–97, 196

  Crocker, Ryan, 29

  al Dabash, Ahmed, 34

  Dabiq, 119–20, 166, 194, 216, 224

  Daesh, 8

  DawlaNoor, 148

  Dawn of Glad Tidings, 148–50, 157–58, 165, 166, 174

  Day of Judgment, 119, 219, 224, 229

  democracy, promotion of, 254–56

  Dempsey, Martin, 234

  Denmark, deradicalization in, 98

  Diaspora (social network), 178

  Donner, Fred, 273

  dread, creation of, 10, 237

  Egypt:

  Ansar Bayt al Maqdis in, 234

  apocalypse, 219, 221–28:

  ISIS obsession with, 224, 230–31, 251

  messianic expectation, 222–23

  millenarian projects, 230

  Protestant cults, 228–30

  Arab Spring in, 39, 151, 152, 195

  Islamic State in, 184

  Luxor massacre (1997), 197

  Muslim Brotherhood in, 195

  wilayat groups in, 184, 185

  Egyptian Islamic Group, 197

  Einstein, Albert, 207–8

  empathy, 206–7, 209, 214, 215, 218, 243

  Enlightenment, 207

  evil:

  dread of, 205–9

  good and evil, 244, 250

  metaphysical, 205

  moral, 205

  natural, 205

  extremist groups:

  and extremist mind, 241–44

  names, 8–9

  targeting top leaders of (decapitation), 26, 190–91

  see also specific groups

  Facebook, 89, 96, 130, 134, 136, 137, 138, 139, 144, 158, 159, 161–62

  Fadl, Khaled Abou El, 269

  Faisal, Abdullah, 183

  Falaha, Taha Sobhi, 105

  Faraj, Mohammad Abd al Salam, 272, 274

  FBI, 161

  Festinger, Leon, 228

  Filiu, Jean-Pierre, 220, 223

  Filkins, Dexter, 30

  Final Battle, 216, 219–31

  Fishman, Brian, 26–27

  fitna (internal dissent), 61–63, 64, 66, 68, 70, 85, 89, 177, 201, 238

  “Flames of War,” 124, 151

  Foley, James, 1–2, 4, 77, 94, 120–21, 123, 168–70

  foreign fighters, 75–99

  in Afghanistan, 53

  Americans, 79–80

  angry, maladjusted young men, 72

  British, 80, 84, 95, 183, 249

  Canadian, 80, 86

  French and German, 80, 249

  hijra, 75–76, 273

  how many?, 78–81

  in Iraq and Syria, 200

  in ISIS, 85–88

  lone wolves, 94–99, 195–98, 200–201

  media attention to, 83–85

  reasons for joining, 81–85

  recruitment, 193

  returnees, 94, 98–99, 197, 200, 201

  and Twitter, 158–59

  videos of, 76–77, 122–23

  women’s brigades, 89–93, 167

  Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), 164, 253

  France:

  guillotine in, 209

  terrorists in, 80, 94, 95, 98

  Free Syrian Army (FSA), 42, 153

  French Revolution, 209

  Freud, Sigmund, 207–8

  Friendica, 168

  FSB (Russian intelligence service), 168

  fundamentalist movements, 233, 241–44, 264

  Gadahn, Adam, 70, 103, 130

  Gadhafi, Moammar, 237, 254

  Garner, Jay, 19

  Gelb, Leslie, 240

  Germany, beheading in, 209

  Ginges, Jeremy, 207

  Godane, Ahmed, 63–64, 67, 191

  Goffman, Erving, 211

  Golden Rule, 207

  good and evil, 244, 250

  Google, 132, 139, 150

  Google Ideas, 138, 171

  Grand Mosque siege, Mecca (1979), 226–27

  Greater Signs of the Hour, 221–22

  Guantanamo, 36

  guillotine, 209

  Hadid, Shaykh Umar, 104

  Hadith, 262–63

  Haditha, Iraq, combat scenes from, 107–8

  Haines, David, 122, 123

  al Hakim, Ayatollah Muhammad Bakr, 21

  Hale-Bopp comet, 225

  Hamas, 138

  al Hamd, Shayba, 172

  Hammami, Omar, 63–64, 66–67, 70, 135

  Hamza, Umm, 91

  Hashimi, Tariq, 30

  Hatem, Mamoun, 181, 182

  hate speech laws, 141

  Heaven’s Gate, 225

  Hegghammer, Thomas, 77, 99, 193, 226, 227

  Henning, Alan, 122, 123

  Hezb-e-Islami, 182

  Hezbollah, 138, 222, 246

  hijra, 75–76, 258, 273

  Hitler, Adolf, 208

  Horgan, John, 81, 82, 211

  horror, 206, 237, 254

  Hosseinian, Rohollah, 222

  House of Saud, 265

  @HSMPress, 143, 144

  Humanitarian Revolution, 206

  Human Rights Watch (HRW), 30, 40–41, 210, 212

  Husayn, 259

  Hussein, Saddam, 17–18, 19, 20, 25, 30, 38, 255

  Hydra metaphor, “whack-a-mole,” 136–38

  Ibn Taymiyyah, Taqi al-Din Ahmad, 264, 265, 266, 267, 276, 278

  identity-based extremism, 195

  Ikhwan Revolt (1920s), 226

  India, terrorists in, 200

  Indonesia:

  terrorists in, 182

  Year of Living Dangerously, 236

  Inspire, 60, 97, 132

  Instagram, 84, 158

  insurgency:

  definition of, 11

  and terrorism, 9–10, 235

  integrative complexity, 243

  Intelwire.com, 7

  International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), NATO, 135

  Internet:

  accountability on, 150


  al Qaeda use of, 64–65, 89, 137

  blogs on, 132, 164

  bots on, 71–72, 150–51, 165, 170, 171, 173, 174

  and copyright violations, 133, 139

  forums in, 66–67, 70, 137

  “ghost” bots, 174

  government power over, 247

  hackers on, 150, 173

  jihadist uses of, 4, 65–66, 120, 140

  and message control, 65, 130

  online bayah via, 65

  online predators on, 134

  phishing attacks via, 141

  precursors to, 127–28

  spambots, 246

  spam on, 150, 171

  viruses on, 150

  see also social media

  Iran:

  militias of, 29

  Revolution (1979), 219

  and Shi’a Muslims, 20, 44–45

  Iranian Revolution (1979), 20

  Iraq:

  army of, 28

  attempts to institute democracy in, 20, 254–55

  border with Syria, 19, 41, 44

  civil war in, 19, 21–25

  and Day of Judgment, 219

  destabilization of, 19, 254

  elections in, 25

  ISIS control of segment of, 4, 42, 47, 72, 88, 196–97, 234, 278

  Islamic State in, 240

  Kurds in, 47

  living conditions, 241

  Mosul, see Mosul

  Multi-National Forces in, 35

  Shi’a persecuted in, 20, 28

  Sunni Arab tribes in, 44

  terrorism in, 17, 18–19

  unrest in, 39

  U.S. air strikes in, 48, 95, 159, 186

  U.S. exit from, 29–30

  U.S. invasion of (2003), 6, 13, 17, 18, 19, 20, 34, 58, 199, 223, 237–40, 254–55

  U.S. support of army in, 45

  U.S. troops in, 95, 152, 240

  al Iraqi, Abu Ayman, 38

  Irish Republican Army (IRA), 138

  ISIS (Islamic State of/in Iraq and Syria):

  accountability of, 98–99

  al Qaeda disavowal of, 6, 43, 69, 85, 180

  apocalyptic views, 224, 230–31, 251

  AQ-ISIS war, 177–98

  Ba’athification of, 38

  black flag of, 45, 88, 235

  and caliphate, 46–47, 70, 94, 116–17, 157, 158, 233

  children used by, 10–11, 115, 210–13, 237

  and civil society, 72, 73–74, 85–88, 113, 114

  competing with al Qaeda, 157

  continuity of, 234–35

  countermeasures, 171–75, 243, 250–52

  currency minted by, 88

  and Dawn of Glad Tidings, 148–50, 157–58, 165, 166, 174

  defiance of, 277–78

  distribution strategy of, 165, 245–46

  emergence of, 13, 28, 39, 94, 145, 177, 230–31, 233

  English-speaking radical communities, 183

  expansion of, 48, 51, 66, 95–96, 184

  external operations, 95

  families recruited into, 92–93

  goals of, 73, 235, 249–50

  hierarchy of, 172

  ideology of, 194–95, 233, 235–36

  influence of, 6, 7, 51, 97–99, 200–201

  internal battles in, 43

  and lone wolves, 194

  media attacks on, 70

 

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