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  1. #1
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    I've been posting a bunch of video that might be of interest.

    DUKE VIDEO: ISIS Terrorism At And Abroad Jessica Stern
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...nd-abroad.html

    INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR COUNTER-TERRORISM VIDEO: Islamic State Future of Global Jihad?
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...r-counter.html

    ASIA SOCIETY VIDEO: ISIS Implications In Asia
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...ations-in.html

    NYU SCHOOL OF LAW VIDEO: Iran, ISIS and the Future of Gulf Security
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...-isis-and.html

    CSIS: What ISIS Really Wants
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...lly-wants.html

    WASH INST FOR NEAR EAST POLICY VIDEO: Fight Against ISIL Shiite Militias & The Coalition Effort
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...icy-video.html

    H VAN LYNDEN LECTURE VIDEO: Jihad on Our Doorstep: Inside the Minds of Jihadis in Syria and Iraq
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...ad-on-our.html

    H VAN LYNDEN LECTURE VIDEO: ISIS Tilting The Chess Board Dawn Of A New Middle East
    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...s-tilting.html

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    Just did a very interesting interview with Australian National University's Haroro Ingram about Islamic State's information campaign. Thinks that follows traditional insurgent/revolutionary doctrine on use of propaganda and presents people with rational choice decisions to win over local support. Here's a link.

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    New video up on ISIS that includes Fmr Amb Robert Ford from World Affairs Council in Atlanta

    http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/20...yria-iraq.html

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    Just interviewed Charlie Winter of the Quilliam Foundation about his recent study of info output by the Islamic State. Here's a link.

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    Quote Originally Posted by JWing View Post
    Just interviewed Charlie Winter of the Quilliam Foundation about his recent study of info output by the Islamic State. Here's a link.
    Much thanks to JWing for sharing this pithy and valuable interview. Some key excerpts I found valuable:

    First, it seems that in the West we only see the ultra violent propaganda ISIL promotes, and we're left wondering how that draws thousands of recruits. The reality is that their propaganda is much broader in scope and depth.

    First off, brutality is far from prominent. Indeed, often, it doesn’t come up at all. Far more important is the content that prioritises conveying the themes of victimhood, war and civilian life. On a daily basis, numerous visual reports emerge of dead or maimed children and decimated infrastructure in the ‘caliphate’, things that are instrumentalised in order to legitimise and justify Islamic State’s very existence. . . . Most prominent by far, though, are depictions of civilian life – . . . The intention of this content is obvious: Islamic State’s ‘state’ is being sold as a true utopia, a viable, practicable alternative to the status quo.
    In ‘The Virtual Caliphate: Understanding Islamic State’s Propaganda Strategy’, . . . I identified six key themes of the Islamic State narrative – mercy, belonging, brutality, victimhood, war and utopia.
    These days, the spectre of ultraviolence remains, however, since mid-April 2015, the target audience has become decidedly more regional, as the motivations behind Islamic State’s brutality have erred away from global provocation towards local deterrence.
    He provided some recommendations at the of the interview.

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    There is a thread on the Quilliam report and an excellent BBC article by Charlie Winter. It is in the media arena:http://council.smallwarsjournal.com/...ad.php?t=22783
    davidbfpo

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    IS confirmed the death of its #2 leader Abu Muslim al-Turkmani in recent audio tape. US said they killed him in a drone strike outside Mosul in August 2015. The problem was this was his 3rd reported death, but now acknowledged by group. Turkmani was second to Baghdadi and in charge of Iraq operations. Read the full report here.

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    MIT VIDEO: ISIS Apocalypse William McCants

    Will McCants talks about his new book ISIS Apocalypse at MIT.

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    Cross posting this over in this thread as well.

    I just interviewed Foreign Reports' Matthew Reed about the Islamic State's oil industry. He thinks that the group is mostly selling crude to local refiners in Syria and the Syrian government rather than smuggling it abroad due to local demand and coalition air strikes. Here's a link to the interview.

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    An insightful Frontline special on the Islamic State in Afghanistan. They filmed and interviewed an IS member training Afghan children. The virus continues to spread.

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl...n-afghanistan/

    ISIS in Afghanistan

    17 NOV 15

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    Default One day when the war machine is defeated

    Via Kings of War the author, Jill Sergeant asks a hard question:
    how the various parties – local, regional, and global – will move forward when the war machine is defeated.....can we imagine any space for humanity for Iraq’s lost generation swept along by the currents of an abhorrent promise?
    Link:http://kingsofwar.org.uk/2015/11/ccl...iers-of-isis/?

    A recent article from The Nation is cited:
    What I Discovered From Interviewing Imprisoned ISIS Fighters (sub-titled)They’re drawn to the movement for reasons that have little to do with belief in extremist Islam.
    Link:http://www.thenation.com/article/wha...sis-prisoners/

    For economy of effort this is the key passage:
     These boys came of age under the disastrous American occupation after 2003, in the chaotic and violent Arab part of Iraq, ruled by the viciously sectarian Shia government of Nouri al-Maliki. Growing up Sunni Arab was no fun. A later interviewee described his life growing up under American occupation: He couldn’t go out, he didn’t have a life, and he specifically mentioned that he didn’t have girlfriends. An Islamic State fighter’s biggest resentment was the lack of an adolescence. Another of the interviewees was displaced at the critical age of 13, when his family fled to Kirkuk from Diyala province at the height of Iraq’s sectarian civil war. They are children of the occupation, many with missing fathers at crucial periods (through jail, death from execution, or fighting in the insurgency), filled with rage against America and their own government. They are not fueled by the idea of an Islamic caliphate without borders; rather, ISIS is the first group since the crushed Al Qaeda to offer these humiliated and enraged young men a way to defend their dignity, family, and tribe. This is not radicalization to the ISIS way of life, but the promise of a way out of their insecure and undignified lives; the promise of living in pride as Iraqi Sunni Arabs, which is not just a religious identity but cultural, tribal, and land-based, too.
    davidbfpo

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    Just did a new interview for Musings On Iraq. I talked with Kyle Orton about the role of Baathists in the Islamic State and how Saddam's Faith campaign created a generation of Iraqi Islamists that would joint the insurgency. Here's a link.

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    Thanks to a twitter "lurker" who recommends readers that the free, online publication Perspectives on Terrorism has a special issue on ISIS, including a bibliography:http://www.terrorismanalysts.com/pt/.../issue/view/53
    davidbfpo

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    There's some great articles and resources in that issue.

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    Three articles that are worth reading, all were written after Paris:


    1. From Lawfare 'We Were Wrong About ISIS' and the Editor's intro explains:
      For over a decade, the Islamic State and its predecessors focused almost exclusively on Iraq, Syria, and their neighbors. The downing of the Russian airplane over the Sinai Peninsula and especially the recent killing spree in Paris suggest that the Islamic State is now going global. Jennifer Williams, long my Lawfare colleague and now at Vox, explains why I and other terrorism experts may have missed this change.
      Link:https://www.lawfareblog.com/we-were-wrong-about-isis
    2. From Shiraz Maher of ICSR, Kings College 'Why Isis seeks a battle with Western nations - and why it can't be ignored'. Link:http://www.newstatesman.com/world/mi...ant-be-ignored
    3. A long critical commentary in The London Review of Books, worth reading as an alternative narrative. Link:http://www.lrb.co.uk/v37/n23/adam-sh...ing-about-isis
    davidbfpo

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    From Lawfare 'We Were Wrong About ISIS' and the Editor's intro explains:
    I'll read the article, but it makes one wonder how people come to these conclusions to begin with? Perhaps the prevailing myth that politics are local? Perhaps it was just was just hope? It also could be part of our pseudo-intellectual cult in the think tanks, where members pretend to be experts by down playing the threat despite all the evidence that point to anything but a localized revolution.

    ISIL is spread rapidly to Libya, it is clearly in the Sinai, Boku Haram in West Africa (they have spread beyond Nigeria) is aligned with ISIL, ISIL is in Afghanistan (and their influence is growing there), there are also in Yemen. Beyond that we have foreign fighters joining their ranks from around the world, and now that their operation in France and possibly planned operation in Belgium has finally put to bed the rest that these foreign fighters won't bring trouble back to their countries of origin. We need to watch countries like Indonesia carefully since they have hundreds of foreign fighters in Syria. We're seeing claims of ISIL in Bangladesh, but it seems a bit early to state that is a fact, but evidence is mounting.

    Bush was wrong to invade Iraq in my view, but what he did get right after 9/11 is when he said this would be a different kind of war. I think for the most part we appreciate that, but we still don't understand it.

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    Default Childrend of ISIS

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/fi...ldren-of-isis/

    An 11 minute special on the children of ISIS.

    Below is a link to the transcript

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/fi...sis/transcript

    He says he refused to join and was sentenced to a horrifying
    punishment.

    OMAR: They gathered the people, they tied my hand and leg. They put my hand on a wooden block, and cut my hand off with a butcher's knife, then cut off my foot and put them in front of me to see.

    These photos show Omar's actual amputation, and the man, known as "the Bulldozer," who severed his limbs.
    Another lost generation in the making. This reminds me of how the child soldiers in Sierra Leone were coerced into fighting.

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