What
drives Islamic State?
S P
SETH
Islamic State (IS) is the stuff that nightmares are made of. We
don’t know much about its working, though some recent studies and reporting is
starting to throw some light on it. What is generally known about IS, though,
is that it is a killing machine given to beheading, maiming and whatever else
might create the maximum fear among its enemies. And as part of creating fear,
it encourages its followers/sympathizers to act in any way that will terrorize
people, such as a ‘lone wolf’ attack and/or blowing up Shia mosques. These and
other acts are designed to make even ordinary people going about their ordinary
lives imbibe a sense of terror lurking anywhere and everywhere. Saudi Arabia is
a case in point, where IS activists/jihadis wrought havoc recently in a series
of explosions targeting the country’s Shias and their places of worship. Saudi
Arabia has reportedly arrested hundreds of suspected IS operatives.
Another recent example is the bombing of a cultural centre in a
Turkish town on Syria-Turkish border targeting Kurdish activists gathered there
to help their fellow Kurds across the border in reconstruction of their
shattered lives and battered town. This has brought Turkey into direct
conflict, surprisingly, with both the Kurds and IS. Ankara was hoping they
would tear each other out, with Turkey standing aside as an observer and/or
occasionally nudging one or the other in the desired direction. It has
obviously not worked. And IS continues to make waves. So much so, here in
Australia, the country’s prime minister is warning people that IS is coming
after each and everyone.
In a similar situation when al Qaeda sprung upon the world stage
with the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the US, they were seen as larger than life.
And despite the elimination of Osama bin Laden, the al Qaeda brand is still
around here and there. However, it is largely eclipsed by IS. And one important
reason is that, unlike al Qaeda, IS a territorial entity where its writ runs
while al Qaeda leadership was on the run or sheltering in Pakistan after the US
invasion of Afghanistan. And by continuing not only to exist but, at times, to
expand their territory and message, IS tend to perpetuate their cause and myth.
And by announcing their self-styled caliphate, they have pronounced a future to
revive and recreate the glory of an Islamic past.
Which resonates with many Muslims even though most Muslims would be
appalled by their methodology of terrorist violence. And it resonates with many
Muslims because they feel a great sense of injustice and humiliation since the
fall of the Ottoman Empire and the caliphate. The period following that saw the
division of the remnants of the Ottoman territory of the Middle East into
British and French colonial outposts, and the emergence of an independent
Israel out of the Palestinian territory. The imposition of a Jewish state largely
supported by the US and its allies in the midst of a Muslim world, only added
to the outrage and humiliation of a people that were still wrestling with their
downsizing. And this hurt continues with Israel still running riot with the
Palestinian land by building more and more settlements to virtually negate the
idea of a sovereign Palestinian homeland. The IS is championing the Palestinian
cause too, even seeking to supplant Hamas in the Gaza Strip. The oil rich
states of Saudi Arabia and its Gulf partners are also in IS’s sight. In other
words, IS is tapping into the deeply humiliated psyche of the Muslim world.
But in the process it is also antagonizing many in the Muslim world
by its wanton and ghoulish use and display of violence. And such representation
of Islam certainly doesn’t strike chord with many Muslims. It is important to
remember that Muslims are not an undifferentiated lot that might fit into an
image created and projected by IS. While most of them follow their faith, their
interpretation and practice of their religion is practical and reflect local
characteristics. Besides, they have their national and sectarian divide and differences.
Therefore, this fundamentalist view of a global Muslim community just pining to
rally under the IS flag is overly done.
Having said this, it is also worth noting that within their
territorial entity, IS is trying to run a brutal, but in its own way, efficient
governing machine that works as long as those under its control follow rules
and edicts couched as Islamic precepts. According to Tim Arango, reporting from
Istanbul quoting one Raqqa resident (IS’s de facto capital in Syria), “You can
travel from Raqqa to Mosul and no one will dare to stop you even if you carry
$1millon.” It is partly because the IS functions at a certain level according
to their own raw morality but, partly, because of widespread fear of draconian
punishments if caught. Arango adds that, “Now there is a limited sense of
order…, a low bar, perhaps, but a reality amid years of war and anarchy…”
against the backdrop of more than ten years of war in Iraq and a brutal civil
war in Syria for the last 4 years. This makes people feel that “[in IS] there
is a functioning state.” And as long as people “avoid any dissent, they can
largely go about their lives.”
According to a new book, Islamic State: The Digital Caliphate, by
Abdel Bari Atwan (to be published in September and previewed in The New York
Review of Books), the IS is a well structured entity with two deputies
(formerly members of Saddam Hussein’s
Baath Party) who assist the caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi with a hierarchical
structure down the line. There are said to be advisory councils and several
departments run by committees, with leaders of each department sitting in
Baghdadi’s “cabinet”. And the most powerful of these councils is the Sharia
Council, which is said to oversee draconian implementation of the penalties for
“crimes against God’s limits” that include amputations and capital punishment.
According to Atwan’s account, the display of horrific atrocities put
up on the Internet are part of a coherent strategy. To quote the author,
“Crucifixions, beheadings, the hearts of the rape victims cut out and placed
upon their chests, mass executions, homosexuals being pushed from high
buildings, severed heads impaled on railings or brandished by grinning
‘jihadist’ children… these gruesome images of brutal violence are carefully
packaged and distributed via Islamic State’s media department.” He adds, “As
each new atrocity outdoes the last, front page headlines across the world’s
media are guaranteed.” With an estimated force of anywhere between 30,000 and
100,000, IS has certainly been able to create a larger than life image through
gruesome images that also strike terror and revulsion among people.
At the same time, for its followers IS is “an emotionally attractive
place where people ‘belong’, where everyone is a ‘brother’ or ‘sister’…” and
where the glory of ‘martyrdom’ is within easy reach. And this governing machine
has its own sources of revenue through illicit sale of oil and through taxes.
Its budget is said to be managed by an Economic Council. In January 2015, for
instance, overall receipts were reported to be $2 billion, with a surplus of
$250 million added to the war chest. Therefore, it is a well-oiled machine in
all its aspects and seems to strike a chord among a section of the dispossessed
and disenchanted among the Muslim youth in the Middle East and elsewhere in the
world. Those working for it and affiliated with it feel empowered striking
terror among its hapless victims.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au
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