Book Read Free

ISIS

Page 41

by Jessica Stern


  and media propaganda, 73, 125

  message of, 101–25, 196–97, 248–52

  names of, 8–9, 28, 47, 63, 116, 166

  as new paradigm, 235

  as non-state actor, 11

  numbers in, 51, 278

  oaths of loyalty to, 234

  oil smuggling, 46, 88

  possible outcomes of, 192

  propaganda of, 106, 114–16, 118, 119, 249–50

  psychological warfare, 199, 208–18, 236

  publications of, 113–14, 116, 119–20

  publicity of, 3, 73, 74, 236–37, 243, 244–48, 251

  purification as goal of, 195, 218, 230, 233, 254

  recruitments, 88, 99, 197–98, 231, 236, 243, 249

  rhetoric of the absolute, 178

  rise of, 3–4, 6, 7, 13, 33–51

  and Salafism, 268–69

  and security concerns, 124

  smart mobs of, 71

  social media exploited by, see social media; Twitter

  and Sunni Arabs, 31, 44–45

  surveillance of, 251

  territories controlled by, 4, 39, 44, 47, 72, 88, 110, 184–87, 220, 236, 237, 278

  theocratic rule of, 48

  U.S. air strikes on, 4, 48, 50, 95, 121, 125, 234

  U.S. military preparations against, 189

  utopian vision of, 6, 73

  videos of, see videos

  violence of, 43, 72, 77, 113–14, 116, 197, 198, 234, 243

  vision of, 178, 192

  wealth of, 46

  West as target of, 200, 201–2, 233, 254

  wilayat structure of, 51, 184–87

  women’s brigades, 89–93

  and World Cup (2014), 147, 156

  Islam:

  brief history of, 257–63

  core beliefs of, 261–63

  end times prophecy, 119, 220

  Five Pillars of, 263

  split of Shi’a and Sunni, 19–20, 258–60

  Islamic Army of Iraq, 34

  Islamic Courts Union, 63

  Islamic Front, 49

  Islamic Group, 179

  Islamic Jihad, 179

  “Islamic State Electronic Army,” 173

  Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), see ISIS

  Islamic State of (or in) Iraq (ISI), 62–63

  air strikes against, 37

  civilians targeted by, 27

  expansion of, 39, 41, 42, 48

  formation of, 26

  leadership of, 37–38, 39, 105

  Nusra merger with, 42–43

  reorganization of, 39, 41

  territories of, 39

  violence used by, 38, 48

  Islamic State of (or in) Iraq and Syria, see ISIS

  Islamic State of Iraq and al Sham, see ISIS

  Islamist groups, funding of, 41, 46

  Islam Report, 128

  J, and Twitter, 148–50

  Jabhat al Nusra, see Nusra

  Jamaat Jaysh Ahl al Sunnah wa-al-Jamaah (Army of the Sunni People Group), 34

  Jaman, Ifthekar, 84

  Japan, beheading as punishment in, 209

  al Jawlani, Abu Mohammed, 41, 42

  Jemaah Islamiyah, 181

  Jesus Christ, second coming of, 219

  Jewish Museum of Belgium, 94, 201

  Jibril, Ahmad Musa, 183–84

  jihad, 271–74

  defensive, 108, 272–73

  five-star, 84, 85

  global, 274

  and hijra, 76

  individual interpretations of, 13

  spiritual, 14

  targets of, 278

  ultraviolent, 197

  use of term, 9

  waging war, 274–77

  “Jihadi John,” 77, 244

  jihadi Salafism, 15, 46, 257, 265, 268, 271–72, 274–77, 278, 279

  jihadist struggle:

  expanding, 53

  letting them rot, 241, 252

  as millenarian movement, 235

  simplistic, 243

  splintering and separation, 177–78, 182, 190, 235

  stages of, 23, 54

  Jordan:

  protests in, 19, 39

  refugees in, 238

  terrorism in, 15, 200

  Jubayr, Sa’eed ibn, 67

  Juhayman al ’Utaybi, 226, 227

  Jund al Khilafah, 96, 185–86, 234

  “just war,” use of term, 10

  Kahneman, Daniel, 203–5

  al Kalaylah, Ahmad Fadhil Nazzal, see al Zarqawi, Abu Musab

  Kassig, Abdul-Rahman (Peter), 122–23, 224, 244

  Keech, Marian (pseud.), 227–28

  Kenya:

  U.S. embassy bombed in, 55, 56

  Westgate Mall, Nairobi, 145, 163

  Kernberg, Otto, 212, 218

  Khadija (pseud.), 91–92

  Khalilzad, Zalmay, 29

  Khmer Rouge, 211

  Khobar Towers bombing (1996), 10

  Khorasan Group, 50

  killer self, creation of, 229

  Klasen, Fiona, 213

  Kobane, 221

  Koresh, David, 225

  Ku Klux Klan, 192

  Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), 48

  Kuwait, protests in, 39

  Lahoud, Nelly, 272

  leaderless resistance, 24, 60–61, 72

  Lebanon, ISIS in, 200

  Lesser Signs of the Hour, 221

  al Libi, Abu Yahya, 90

  Libya:

  intervention (2011) in, 237, 239, 240, 254

  Islamic State in, 184, 185, 200, 278

  unrest in, 39

  Lieberman, Joe, 131

  Lifton, Robert J., 230

  Liht, Jose, 243

  Lister, Charles, 50–51, 238–39

  lone wolves, 24, 94–99, 193–98, 200–201

  Lynch, Mark, 195

  Mahdi, coming of, 219–20

  Mahmood, Aqsa, 89–90

  Malaysia:

  and Day of Judgment, 219

  terrorists in, 95, 182

  Mali, social services in, 114

  al Maliki, Nuri, 25, 28–31, 39, 44, 240

  Management of Savagery, The (Idarat al Tawahhush) [Naji], 23–24

  on hostage taking, 122

  on media compaigns, 73, 117, 252

  on “paying the price,” 48

  simplistic thinking in, 243–44

  on the use of violence, 24, 115

  Mansfield, Edward, 255

  Mao Zedong, 236

  al Maqdisi, Sheikh Abu Muhammad, 15, 21, 90, 277–78

  Martin, Dorothy, 227

  martyrdom, 242, 276–77

  Martyrs of Bosnia, The, 101

  mass suicide, 225

  Mawdudi, Sayyid Abu’l A’la, 270–71

  McCain, Douglas McAuthur (sic), 160

  McCants, Will, 88, 118, 220, 224, 229

  McMaster, H. R., 213

  Meccan Rebellion (1979), 226, 227

  “Message to America, A,” 120–21, 159, 168–70

  Metcalf, Barbara, 14

  Metzger, Tom, 60

  Middle East, boundaries in, 240

  Milennium Plot, 16

  Miller, William, 206

  Minneapolis, ISIS operatives in, 160

  miracles, belief in, 207

  Moghadam, Assaf, 276

  Mohammed, Abdullah bin, 66, 68

  Mongol Empire, 264

  moral injury, 214–15

  Mosul:

  deteriorated living conditions in, 241

  ISI/ISIS in, 41, 93, 147–48

  ISIS capture of, 45–46, 50, 150, 165

  march on, 156, 158, 165–66

  video of, 165–66

  Mother Jones, 138

  Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God, 225

  Muasher, Marwan, 233, 256

  Mubarak, Hosni, 151–52

  al Muhajir, Abu Hamza, 26

  Muhajir, Azzam (pseud.), 148

  Muhammad, 257–58

  and Day of Judgment, 229

  death
of, 19

  descendents of, 33, 259

  escape to Mecca, 76, 119–20, 273

  and Qur’an, 262

  successors to, 19–20

  tribe of, 261

  Mujahideen Shura Council, 26

  Muslim, Abu, 86

  Muslim Brotherhood, 195, 266, 267

  Muslims:

  and caliphate, 118

  and end of days, 219, 221, 227

  and extremist groups, 9, 73, 105, 123, 180, 256

  hijra of, 119–20

  jihadist targeting of, 22, 275–76, 278

  as peaceful people, 9

  in Philippines, 59, 182

  propaganda aimed at, 102–3

  ummah (global community), 55

  see also Islam

  Myspace, 133–34

  al Naji, Abu Bakr (pseud.), 23–24, 73, 115, 117, 243

  Nasr, Vali, 20–21

  al Nasser, Abu Suleiman, 138

  national security letters (NSLs), 164

  nation building, 249

  NATO, International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), 135

  al Nazari, Harith bin Ghazi, 186

  Nazi Germany, 115, 209, 236

  Nemmouche, Mehdi, 94, 98

  neo-Nazi movement, 10, 192

  Neumann, Peter, 83

  news media:

  atrocities covered by, 4, 5

  ISIS goals reinforced by, 250

  and perception of risk, 202–3

  Nieman, Susan, 205

  Nigerian oil scams, 141

  19 Martyrs, The, 103

  Nolen, Alton, 195–96

  noncombatants, definitions of, 10

  Nostromo (Conrad), 237

  al Nusra, Jabhat, 41–44

  and al Qaeda, 42–43, 48, 58, 61, 66

  and ISIL, 42–43

  and ISIS, 43–44, 63, 66, 68, 69, 157, 188

  and social media, 154–55, 157

  and Syria, 153, 188, 238–39

  and U.S. air strikes, 49–50, 196, 238, 238–39

  Obama, Barack, terrorist messages to, 5

  Obama administration:

  and ISIS, 3–4, 8, 49, 234

  pressure on, 49

  and troop withdrawal, 29

  Omar, Mullah, 16–17, 179

  Ottoman Empire, 261, 266

  Pakistan:

  ISIS supporters in, 200

  Taliban in, 188

  Paltalk Forum, 183

  People’s Protection Unites (YPG), 48

  Persian Gulf War (1991), 20

  Petraeus, David, 27, 240

  Philippines, Muslim separatists in, 59, 182

  Pinker, Steven, 206, 207, 236

  polarization, 243

  political Salafism, 266–67, 268

  Pol Pot, 211, 236

  Ponzi schemes, 141

  Poulin, Andre, 86–87

  Powell, Colin, 18, 240

  privacy, 245

  psychological warfare, 199–218

  psychopathy, 206, 209, 214, 218

  public executions, 209–10

  purification, 195, 218, 230, 233, 254

  al Qahtani, Abu Walid, 165, 167

  al Qahtani, Muhammad, 227

  quietist Salafism, 226, 265–66, 267, 268, 272

  Quitter, 168

  Qur’an, 221, 258, 262–63, 273

  Quraysh, 261

  Qutb, Sayyid, 267, 271–72, 274

  Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), 78–79

  Rafiq, Arif, 190

  Rahman, Omar Abdel “blind sheikh,” 55

  Rana, Muhammad Amir, 188

  rapture, 228–29

  Raqqa:

  deteriorated living conditions in, 241

  ISIS in, 44, 50–51, 93

  religious belief, 207, 229–30, 233

  fundamentalist, 233, 241–44, 264

  Protestant cults, 228–30

  Resurgence, 124

  Revolution Muslim, 183

  Rheingold, Howard, 71

  Riecken, Henry, 228

  risk:

  of evil, 205–9

  perception of, 202–5, 237

  risk analysis, 203

  risk assessment, 202

  Rosen, Nir, 15–16

  Rothkopf, David, 253

  Rummel, Rudolf J., 209

  Rwanda, 254

  Sadat, Anwar, 10

  Salafism:

  declaring war, 269–74

  defining, 263–64, 265–69

  jihadi, 15, 46, 257, 265, 268, 271–72, 274–77, 278, 279

  political, 266–67, 268

  quietist, 226, 265–66, 267, 268, 272

  as response to the pain of modernity, 242

  Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat, 58

  Salil al-Sawarim, see Clanging/Clash of the Swords

  Saud, Muhammad bin, 265

  Saudi Arabia:

  Grand Mosque siege (1979), 226–27

  protests in, 39

  public beheadings in, 210, 276

  and Salafism, 268

  Savage, Sara, 243

  Schachter, Stanley, 228

  Science of Evil, The (Baron-Cohen), 206

  “Second Coming, The” (Yeats), 253–54

  sectarian violence, 25

  September 11 attacks:

  and al Qaeda, 56–57

  and bin Laden, 17

  images of, 203

  post-9/11 era, 5, 17, 57–58, 64–65, 70, 101, 128, 179, 222, 223, 248, 252, 253

  praise for, 278

  scale and complexity of, 201

  videos about, 103

  Shami (Syria) Witness, 165, 167

  Shariah:

  children’s camps, 210–11

  interpretation of, 15, 38, 44, 114, 210, 216, 230

  Shariah courts, 35

  Shekau, Abubakar, 182

  Shi’a Muslims:

  ISIS vs., 44, 116, 230, 244, 251

  and Salafism, 276

  split from Sunni branch, 19–20, 258–60

  targeted by Zarqawi, 16, 24

  Shia Revival, The (Nasr), 20–21

  Sinai Wilayat of the Islamic State, 185

  Sistani, Grand Ayatollah Ali, 31

  slavery, 194, 215–17

  Smart Mobs (Rheingold), 71

  Smyth, Phillip, 20, 29

  Snyder, Jack, 255

  social media, 127–45

  accounts suspended in, 5, 130, 133, 138, 139, 141, 142–45, 150, 154, 163–64, 167, 246

  administrators of, 129

  AQC use of, 67, 68–70

  and Arab Spring, 151–52

  as business, 138–42, 245, 247

  and censorship, 246

  chat rooms, 128

  connections via, 137–38, 159

  development of, 128

  ethical standards in, 247, 252

  fingerprinting techniques on, 133

  foreign fighters on, 83–85

  forums, 128–29, 130, 137

  and free speech, 131–32, 134, 138, 141, 246

  government use of, 130, 137, 141–42, 154, 163–64, 245

  hierarchies of, 129–30

  ideological warfare on, 147

  inner circles, 129–30

  and intelligence services, 130, 140–42, 143–44, 247–48

  ISIS use of, 4, 5, 68, 69, 72, 89, 115, 153–62, 248–52

  and law enforcement, 140–41

  and leaderless jihad, 72

  legal responsibilities of, 247

  lies broadcast on, 140

  marketing via, 69, 74, 140

  message boards, 128

  moderators of, 65, 66, 130

  new developments in, 245

  90-9-1 rule, 155

  open platforms of, 130, 137, 140

  patterns of use, 155

  and pornography, 133, 141, 246

  and privacy, 245

  propaganda videos, 63–64, 70

  publicity via, 244–48

  recruitment via, 89, 159–61

  risks in, 135

  terms of service, 246

  an
d terrorism, 133–36, 138, 141

  threads, 128–29

  see also specific platforms

  Somalia:

  al Shabab in, 63, 64, 191

  Hammami in, 64

  Sons of Iraq, 28

  Sotloff, Steven, 4–5, 94, 121, 123

  Soufan Group, 80–81

  Soviet Union, in Afghanistan, 14, 53, 82, 101, 103, 268, 272

  spree killers, 195–96

  Stalin, Joseph, 236

  State Department, U.S., Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications, 249

  State of Law coalition, 28–29

  State of the Ummah, The (al Qaeda), 101–3

  Stone, Douglas, 35–36, 37

  Struggle for Iraq’s Future, The (al-Ali), 28

  Suedfeld, Peter, 242–43

  suicide bombings, 21, 38, 276–77, 278

  Sunnah, 262, 263

  Sunni Awakening, 28, 30

  Sunni Muslims:

  extreme jihadists, 16, 28

  ISIS massacres of, 251, 256

  purged by Maliki, 30–31

  pushed toward ISIS, 31, 44–45

  recruitment of, 27

  split from Shi’a branch, 19–20, 258–60

  al Suri, Abu Khaled, 43, 68–69, 70

  al Suri, Abu Musab, 18, 24, 60, 72

  A Call to a Global Islamic Resistance, 223–24

  Suri, Jeremy, 34

  Switzerland, terrorists in, 94

  Syria:

  al Nusra Front in, 153, 188, 238–39

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

  border with Iraq, 41, 44

  civil war in, 39, 40–44, 83, 123, 151, 152–54, 158, 196, 254

  deteriorated living conditions in, 241

  Hezbollah in, 222

  ISIS in, 44, 63, 88, 99, 188, 196–97, 200, 234, 278

  radicalization in, 193

  recruitment in, 160

  refugees from, 238

  and U.S. air strikes, 48, 49–50, 234

  U.S.-led coalition action in, 238–39

  Syrian Islamic Front, 153

  Tablighi Jamaat, 14

  takfir, 269–71, 273, 278

  disagreements about, 22

  license to kill, 22, 62

  Talabani, Jalal, 25

  Taliban:

  and al Qaeda, 179

  Omar as leader of, 16–17, 179

  Pakistani, 188

  on Twitter, 134–35

  and Zarqawi, 17

  Tamil Tigers, 138

  Tanzania, U.S. embassy bombed in, 55, 56

  Teausant, Nicholas, 161

  Tehrik-e-Taliban (TTP), 182

  terrorism, 233–56

  accountability for, 98–99

  asymmetrical warfare, 191–92

  characteristics of, 10

  current U.S. strategy against, 191

  and CVE, 248–49

  definitions of, 9–10

  and focus-group testing, 70–71, 157

  function of, 55, 142

  and insurgency, 9–10, 235

  and military policies, 133

  as psychological warfare, 199–200

  and Reign of Terror, 209

  savagery as weapon of, 22

  and social media, 133–36, 138, 141, 142

  “whack-a-mole” vs., 136–38

 

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