New
Report Confirms IPT Analysis on Spread of Islamist Terror
by Pete Hoekstra • Jun 22, 2016
at 5:05 pm
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A new congressional
report confirms forecasts by the Investigative Project on Terrorism
(IPT) concerning disturbing trends in the global spread of Islamist terror
in 2016-2017.
The IPT compiled its analysis from extensive research, sources and
multiple databases such as the University of Maryland's Global Terrorism Database and
published it in March.
The Congressional Research Service (CRS) report finds that the Islamic
State (ISIS) has expanded beyond its initial base in Iraq and Syria to
field six effective militias in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia.
In addition to its declared caliphate in Iraq and Syria, the CRS paper
counts ISIS affiliates in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Libya, Nigeria, Libya,
Afghanistan and Yemen as among the most significant and capable of its 34
pledged offshoots.
The IPT's
research indicated that governments which failed to provide stability
or security for its citizens became an outsized factor in determining where
ISIS would flourish, which the CRS brief reflects. The IPT found that more
than half of all jihadist assaults since 2012 occurred in the failed states
of Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen, Iraq and Syria.
"To date, the Islamic State organization and its regional adherents
have thrived in ungoverned or under-governed areas of countries affected by
conflict or political instability," stated the CRS document, titled
"The Islamic State and U.S. Policy."
Formerly known as Ansar Bayt al Maqdis, the Islamic State in Egypt
emerged after the Egyptian revolution in 2011 with up to 1,000 radicalized
indigenous Bedouin Arabs, foreign fighters and Palestinian militants. It
claimed credit for destroying Metrojet Flight 9268 over the Sinai Peninsula
on Oct. 31 in a strike that killed all 224 passengers.
The Islamic State in Saudi Arabia claimed responsibility for multiple
attacks in the kingdom since 2014, including suicide bombings against Shia
mosques and assaults against Saudi security forces, according to the CRS
findings. A suicide bomber connected to ISIS successfully detonated himself
in a Kuwaiti mosque in June 2015, killing more than two dozen and wounding
hundreds.
ISIS declared
its second caliphate along the Mediterranean in Libya in 2015 following
coalition airstrikes against its territory in Iraq and Syria. Western
officials estimate that 6,000 ISIS fighters moved there. Its new dominion
reaches as close to 200 miles from the vulnerable southern border of
Europe.
Boko Haram – the ISIS affiliate in Nigeria and the deadliest jihadist
group in the world – has destroyed large areas in Nigeria and neighboring
Cameroon, Chad and Niger. It first appeared in 2009 when it launched its military
campaign for Islamist rule in attacks that killed hundreds. It has
murdered 15,000 people over the past five years and displaced more than 1.6
million.
The Islamic State-Khorasan Province named itself after a region that
once included parts of modern day Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Initially
comprised of several small Afghan Taliban and other militant factions, it
announced its affiliation with ISIS in 2013.
It grew as additional Taliban factions broke away, and in 2015 ISIS
headquarters began sending it financial resources. U.S. officials estimate
that it supports between 1,000 and 3,000 fighters in Afghanistan.
The Islamic State in Yemen has exploited the ongoing proxy war between
Saudi Arabia and Iran to repeatedly bomb Shia mosques and target supporters
of the Iranian-backed Houthi Movement in northern Yemen, the CRS report
states.
Beyond the recent carnage in the U.S. and Europe, the IPT further
predicts that jihadist attacks will continue to surge in lethality and
geography throughout Africa and Middle East, as well as South and Southeast
Asia. They will encompass countries such as Algeria, Jordan, Tunisia,
Turkey, Bangladesh, Chad, Indonesia and Thailand.
Pete Hoekstra is the Senior Shillman Fellow at the Investigative
Project on Terrorism and the former Chairman of the U.S. House Intelligence
Committee. He is the author of "Architects
of Disaster: The Destruction of Libya."
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