Wednesday, 6 June 2018

Evolution of the Islamic State after its Territorial Defeat




By Jennifer Dhanaraj
RSIS Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses
Volume 10, Issue 5 | May 2018

The Islamic State (IS) lost its most prized battlefield victories in Mosul and Raqqa by November 2017, effectively ending the physical Islamic “caliphate three years after it was proclaimed. This, as widely acknowledged, does not mean that IS has been decisively defeated. While their networks and financial sources have been disrupted and some of their top leaders were killed, IS continues to pose a security threat. But IS’ mastery of modern technologies such as open social media platforms and closed messaging applications are key tools used to radicalise individuals and create a virtual tribe

 Introduction

IS defeat in Iraq and Syria has not stopped the group from continuing to espouse its radical Islamist ideology to radicalise people through its skilful use of social media. The resulting virtual tribe becomes a perceived kinship that will continue to inspire more people to become lone wolf terrorists or to form small, autonomous cells that will be part of a larger leaderless jihad movement. As IS no longer controls territory and will likely find it difficult to establish a physical “caliphate” in the near future, the group will continue to use social media to exploit indigenous grievances. The resulting intensification of kinship bonds will motivate IS lone wolves and autonomous cells to perpetrate violent attacks in their own countries.

IS Use of Social Media and a Sense of Belonging

An increasingly globalised world has resulted in a more homogenised identity that threatens and dilutes local cultural identities and ethnicities in favour of a larger, unifying culture that is often dominated by the Western world. As a result, racial diasporas and minorities often find that their cultural values are being threatened or side lined by the forces of globalisation, causing feelings of marginalisation or discrimination within their societies. In part, this phenomenon leads to a vulnerable segment of the Muslim community seeking a sense of belonging, thus increasing IS ’ attractiveness and ability to radicalise. IS also provides this group with a sense of solidarity and unity against Western influence and perceived immoralities. IS has been able to capitalise on the alienation of some Muslims within their communities and has tailored its propaganda to evoke a sense of belonging to lure potential jihadists into joining its virtual tribe. Virtual tribe, in this case, refers to a group that consists of potentially vulnerable members that are tied together by their religion. They do not have a physical space, but instead organise and communicate in the cyber space. The creation of a virtual tribe is triggered by disassociation and alienation from their communities.

 IS has achieved the creation of a virtual tribe through their regular publication of well - designed magazines, which are produced in various languages including English, Malay, French and German. The diversity of languages has helped IS target Muslim majority  and minority communities in different parts of the world. IS publications and videos often show fighters relaxing and singing with each other and this depicts a sense of brotherhood and camaraderie that potential jihadists may feel is lacking in their own exploits to target new recruits. He added that the group focuses on recruiting foreign fighters to replenish its ranks. During its growth from 2014 to 2015, IS used Facebook and Twitter to spread its message and effectively cement its branding as a social movement. On Twitter, IS had about 46,000 overt supporter accounts and a maximum of 90,000 supporter accounts from September to December 2014. Each account had an average of about 500 -1,000 followers each, which was higher than the normal average for the typical Twitter user. This shows how social media has amplified IS’ branding and its message. Research by Jeffrey Kaplan and Christopher P. Costa suggests that terrorists seek to become a part of a movement that will change the world. Potential lone wolf attackers as well as individuals looking to form small autonomous cells subscribe to IS ’ propaganda of establishing a caliphate
because they want to become a part of a cohesive and supportive milieu While Al -Qaeda had also inspired attacks by recruiting lone wolves and creating small autonomous cells, these attacks were often undertaken for the ideology and not for Al- Qaeda as an organisation. However, IS ’ virtual tribe of followers are willing to perpetrate violent attacks in the name of IS.

This can be seen in the case of Omar Mateen, the lone wolf terrorist behind the fatal shootings at a nightclub that killed 49 people in Orlando, Florida in 2016. Omar Mateen was a lone wolf who was inspired by IS to conduct violent attacks in the hope that he could be part of a virtual tribe. He was born and raised in the United States (US), but experienced alienation and a ck of belonging. He was also taunted for being a Muslim while he was at work, making him feel marginalised and discriminated. Omar’s experience in the US may have made him more receptive to extremist material online and this eventually resulted in his radicalisation. In a 911 call during the attack, Mateen described himself as an Islamic soldier and pledged allegiance to “Abu Bakr al –Baghdadi …on behalf of the Islamic State ”,which indicates his desire to belong to a group or IS ’ virtual tribe. He also said that the US military operations against IS in Iraq and Syria motivated him to carry out the attacks. These actions also fall in line with the characteristics of lone wolves as described by Ramon Spaaij. Spaaij asserts that lone wolf terrorists often combine their own personal vendettas with broader political or religious grievances, which is apparent in Mateen’s case.

 In addition, the strikes in Syria made him identify with the Muslims there, after which he took action to avenge the attacks and join the group. As IS espoused values that made him feel like he belonged to a group, Mateen carried out the attack on behalf of the organisation that gave him an identity, while the role of ideology was secondary. In the 911 call, he also referred to the Tsarnaev brothers, who were the perpetrators of the Boston Marathon bombings. They were radicalised by Inspire, an English -language Al-Qaeda magazine made available online. Mateen’s inability to distinguish between Al-Qaeda and IS shows that ideology did not play a huge role in his radicalisation. Instead, it can be argued that a desire to belong was one of his primary motivations. This was also evident in his  Facebook posts written just after the attack. He wrote “Now taste the Islamic State vengeance”, and also denounced “the filthy ways of the west”. This clearly indicates that he does not identify with the West even though he was born and grew up there. He also added: “You kill innocent women and children by doing us [sic] airstrikes”. This further confirms that he developed a ‘Us Versus Them’ thinking where he identified as a Muslim whose group tent was being threatened in Iraq and Syria. This perceived threat then spurred him to act. 

Forging an Aspirational Tribe

IS’ creation of such a virtual tribe after declaring a “caliphate” in 2014 has helped to compensate for its subsequent losses in Iraq and Syria. IS had been developing its virtual tribe since its creation, but has now been forced to largely rely on it as a means of showcasing its strength in view of its territorial losses. IS has now projected an image of success by indirectly ‘carrying out’ high-profile operations with mass casualties and high media visibility as well, especially in the West. This ensures that the group does not lose relevance and more importantly, is still able to attract recruits. To continue attracting recruits, IS needs to show that it has a strong tribe that many will aspire to be a part of. Kaplan and Costa argued that there were two main types of tribalism: ascriptive tribalism and aspirational tribalism. Ascriptive tribalism refers to groups that are formed based on primordial ties like blood and racial ethnicity. Aspirational tribalism, on the other hand,constitutes groups made up of actors, both actual and virtual, that are ‘born outside of the  tribal system’ but desire to be part of the tribe. While they can aspire to be part of an ascriptive tribe, it is more common for them to aspire to be a part of an aspirational tribe, whose messages are usually broadcasted globally through social media. Such aspirational tribes are usually formed with the use of both traditional platforms and social media applications like Facebook and Twitter and encrypted messaging applications.

 IS has masterfully exploited these tools to create a strong aspirational tribe that lone wolf terrorists and small, autonomous cells desire to be a part of. The group projects the image of IS as a ‘messianic organisation’ as opposed to a group that is simply perceived to be Al-Qaeda’s political rival. In addition, much of IS’ success also stems from its ability to declare a “caliphate” by securing territories and this is what their branding relies on, even now. It is important to note that the image of IS as a ‘messianic organisation’ and a virtual tribe is not just made possible by the dissemination of information from the group’s official social media channels. A large part of why the group has seen so many aspirants is because IS supporters on social media share personalised information, including poetry, memes, photos and video montages derived from official propaganda. The creation of such content is more appealing, personalised and is more likely to inspire others. Even though IS material is taken down regularly, the shelf life of such material is lengthened as members download and share it on personal messaging applications. These posts on social media are also able to reach a much larger group as opposed to just their official propaganda on magazines or official social media channels. As such, social media allows anyone to publish posts or disseminate information to a ‘limitless audience’ and in an interactive and two-way exchange. Social media and messaging applications are inexpensive and accessible and so they allow individuals and communities to ‘share, co-create, discuss and modify content’. The content that results from such engagement helps to further sharpen and focus the image of IS as an aspirational tribe that has already been disseminating its official material.

Creating a Geographical Space for IS’ Virtual Tribe

Social bonding plays an important role in the online radicalisation process, and this cements bonds within a virtual tribe. Gabriel Weimann argues that online radicalisation is a multi-step process which begins with the group uploading videos on all platforms, including websites, YouTube and Facebook to cast a wide net. But this does not necessarily radicalise all individuals who come across the material. It is the interactivity that the internet and social media applications provide that encourage interested individuals to cultivate the mind-set of a terrorist. Individuals who are receptive to the material posted on the wider platforms will begin to seek out one another and go through processes of “social bonding” where they exchange their grievances and expose one another to similar ideological material. The next step occurs when selected target members are directed to further self-radicalise through “continuous exposure to online radical material” and online guidance, which may include virtual packs that may guide potential lone wolf terrorists on how to conduct attacks. Virtual packs refer to guides and instructions, including bombmaking recipes or methods of perpetrating violence, which are published online by terrorist groups. For example, Sayfullo Saipov, the perpetrator behind the New York truck attacks in 2017 was self-radicalised online and was exposed to virtual packs. As such, he “followed exactly almost to a ‘T’ the instructions that ISIS has put out in its social media channels before, with instructions to their followers on how to carry out such an attack”. As Facebook and Twitter continue to crack down on accounts supporting IS, social bonding now takes place on encrypted messaging applications such as Whatsapp and Telegram. Telegram is arguably the more popular of the two because Facebook owns Whatsapp and terrorist groups are deterred by the possibility of their conversations being monitored by a technology giant. Telegram, on the other hand, has consistently insisted that the core strength of the application is user anonymity, making it the preferred tool for jihadists. 

Arguably one of Telegram’s most important features that has helped to facilitate the growth of IS’ virtual tribe are its public channels that were first launched in 2015. Telegram’s public channels enable private one-to-one conversations as well as one-to many communications, and this has allowed IS followers and affiliates to disseminate and distribute information without the instructions or directions from a more central command. The free exchange of information on the application has created a semblance of geographical space that enables the social bonding that strengthens the virtual tribe. This space transcends traditional boundaries, but still functions like a geographic space where people can exchange opinions, information and even assemble. While the members of the tribe lack primordial ties, they are instead bound together by their “internet ethnicities”, a phenomenon that was discussed by Mark Juergensmeyer in his book “Terror in the Mind of God”. People who do not share primordial ties, are bonded culturally through the internet despite the fact that they have diverse places of residence. People who have such Internet ethnicities transcend borders and physical boundaries and are instead united by social media. However, they should not be dismissed just because they may not resemble typical traditional societies. Their ties are still strong and exist in reality as ‘extensions of traditional societies’ whose cultures are dispersed throughout the world. This is exemplified in the increasing popularity of ‘virtual seminaries’ that refer to exclusive, invite-only ‘mentoring circles’ and closed social media group pages that do not outwardly indicate any links to IS. Instead, any dissemination of IS ideology is only done through peer-to-peer interactions.

Leaderless Jihadi Movements: Not Just Leaderless

Arguably, while other online networks are restricted to a specific ethnicity, the IS network is extremely diverse. As such, a tribe filled with people who identify with having an ‘internet ethnicity’ should not be dismissed, as they form a much stronger and even coordinated leaderless jihad movement that can pose a significant threat to state security agencies. “Leaderless jihad” is a term coined by Marc Sageman and the concept is based on leaderless resistance, developed by Louis Beam, who was the leader of a right-wing militia. Beam argued that a leaderless resistance is necessary to continue the fight against the FBI opposition. In addition, amid heightened global security, Al-Qaeda’s Abu Musab al-Suri also advocated for a leaderless jihad strategy in his book, The Call to Global Islamic Resistance. Sageman stated that leaderless jihad can be identified as, “a strategy of fighting an overwhelming enemy using self-organising clandestine networks”. The strategy was a result of desperation because it was becoming easier for law enforcement agencies to detect traditional hierarchical organisations.

 Once the leaders of those organisations were decapitated, the group was operationally weakened and it became more difficult for them to plan high level terrorist attacks. Leaderless jihad movements, which can comprise lone wolf actors and small, autonomous networks, are much more likely to survive and adapt. If members of a particular group are detained, the other networks are protected from detection by law enforcement agencies as they operate independently. Though they can adapt easily, Sageman stated that leaderless jihad movements could also be weak due to the lack of clear direction and political goals. However, I argue that as IS continues to strengthen its virtual tribe, the lone wolf actors and clandestine networks within this imagined community will begin to form loose, abstract structures and become harder to detect, therefore increasing their effectiveness. However, Sageman argues that as disparate lone wolf actors conduct attacks with different, seemingly random targets, weapons or locations, that leaderless resistance can ultimately become a message-less resistance. There are no clear political messages that can be derived from such seemingly random attacks, even if they were meant to be acts of terror. More importantly, such acts of message-less resistance do not inspire others within the movement to act. This can be seen in the example of serial killer Joseph Paul Franklin, who was a member of the National Socialist White People’s Party in 1966. Franklin was a lone wolf actor, who conducted shooting rampages on random targets in different locales. It was only when fellow white supremacist William L. Pierce wrote the book, Hunter, based on Franklin’s killings that more people were motivated to emulate his example.

 IS lone wolves often use similar methods for killing (knives or vehicle-ramming) and commit acts of terror, that have gained attention worldwide. It is therefore possible that their attacks might become more coordinated in the form of timing, for example, to heighten the impact of the attacks. Encrypted messaging applications such as Telegram and more recently, Zello, a walkie-talkie application that allows for large groups to communicate regardless of distance, enable IS to broadcast its message to the tribe and glorify it. They facilitate the formation of these loose structures within a tribe. These actors are still able to act on their own and are not limited to instructions or directions from anyone else. However, the level of coordination among these actors should be a cause for concern as it poses a much bigger threat than that of a typical leaderless jihad movement. Technology now allows one actor to motivate another actor while giving him or her guidance on how to conduct specific attacks. For example, a plot to attack an exhibition of pictures of the Prophet Mohammad by three men in Garland, Texas was uncovered in May 2015. It was first classified as an attack that was planned entirely inside the country, and merely inspired by IS. However, later developments showed that Junaid Hussain, a Syria-based IS follower, had given the men very specific directions, including the choice of target. This shows how virtual networks can coordinate attacks, targets, weapons, locations, and even timings so that the impacts of these violent acts can be enhanced. They may in turn inspire more lone-wolf actors and autonomous cell networks to carry out their own attacks. As such, it can be argued that the resistance has become less “leaderless”. More accurately, they are virtual networks that have the characteristics of a leaderless resistance movement, but social media and messaging applications permit them to be more interactive and therefore more organised. Members of these networks focus on providing logistical support to one another. This support can include tactical guidance such as the choice of weapons or methods for conducting attacks as well as theological advice.There have also been concerns that previous terror attacks that were believed to be conducted by lone wolf actors and were classified as ‘IS-inspired’ attacks were actually planned with the help of high-level operatives. 

An April 2017 terror attack in Stockholm where the suspect Rakhmat Akilov ploughed into a busy shopping street and killed four, was initially believed to be an IS inspired attack. However, investigations revealed that Akilov was in “direct contact with high-level members of IS before, during and after the April 2017 attack”. Akilov said that he received guidance from Abu Osama Noraki, who he believed was the ‘Emir’ of Tajikistan. It was also reported that Akilov was in contact with other high-level non-Arab leaders in Mosul, indicating that it was a coordinated attack. This shows that seemingly leaderless resistance movements, with the help of social media and messaging applications, are becoming less leaderless as lone-wolf actors can now seek guidance from high-ranking members.

IS Not Completely Defeated

Adapting itself as a partially leaderless resistance movement is IS’ strategy, but it is one borne out of weakness and loss. Ultimately, IS wants to  aintain its position as the leader of the global Salafi-jihadist movement. However, to be the true leader of the movement, IS recognises the importance of declaring a caliphate and securing territory in different parts of the world. In order to achieve that, IS will regroup, recoup and recover. It has already been reported that some IS foreign fighters have not returned to their home countries after the group lost control of Raqqa, the group’s self-proclaimed capital. Instead, many fighters have escaped and gone into hiding near the Syrian capital of Damascus and the country’s northwest. These fighters would continue to wait for orders sent by insurgent leaders on encrypted communications channels and are ready to fight in the future. The Vice -Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Paul J. Selva, has said that the senior IS leadership is maintaining ‘fairly robust’ communications with its network of fighters, who are now on the run. The New York Times also reported that IS has been placing more importance on asymmetric tactics like “suicide bombings against soft targets in government-secured areas like Baghdad”. As it attempts to regroup, IS will use its virtual tribe to  achieve real-world objectives. IS will now be relying more on successful terrorist operations. These operations are now a strategic necessity.

Policy Implications

In order to prevent the creation of social bonds in the online space and a stronger virtual tribe, it is necessary for technology companies to work with law enforcement agencies to regulate the ‘geographical spaces’ that allow the free exchange of ideas, information, opinion and the freedom to assemble. This could assist in weakening the virtual tribes and in turn reduce the impact of leaderless jihad movements. When such movements are weakened, the relevance of groups like IS would likely decrease as there will be less recruits willing to join them. In addition, it is also important for states to combat the global Salafi-jihadist movement as a whole. IS and Al-Qaeda are representatives of the movement that continues to garner great support by bereaved and alienated individuals. However, even if specific groups are decimated, it is possible that another group will rise to assume the leadership of the global Salafi-jihadist movement.


About the author

Jennifer Dhanaraj is a Research Analyst with the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research (ICPVTR), a constituent unit of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.

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