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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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February 5, 2018
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New
Study: ISIS Media Production Quality Reflects Organizational Trajectory
by IPT News • Feb 5, 2018 at
12:47 pm
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Since ISIS lost most of its territory in Syria and Iraq, the terrorist
organization has faced other considerable setbacks. For example, it is
desperately scrambling for new revenue sources – even trying to sell its own minted currency as memorabilia.
ISIS's media network has taken a big hit as well. With the demise of its
"caliphate," there has been a noticeable and significant
reduction in the quantity and quality of ISIS media production, a new study from the Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism
Information Center finds.
The latest ISIS media reports are shorter in length, featuring poor
production quality and growing inaccuracies. More importantly, these
reports adopt an increasingly defensive narrative – reflecting the group's
setbacks.
At its height, ISIS used its media network to brag about its governance,
encouraging others from around the world to join the "new
Caliphate" and build a fundamentalist Islamic state. Now, ISIS
primarily calls on its adherents to carry out terrorist attacks abroad and
be patient while the group goes through a period of reconstruction.
But by the end of 2017, the ISIS media network showed some signs of
revival. Most of its websites and media institutions are fully functioning
again and the quality of its publications improved. These improvements are
noticeable in Syria and Iraq, along with some of its key regional
affiliates including in the Sinai Peninsula and the Afghanistan/Pakistan
region.
The Meir Amit Center study finds that improved media production is
generally associated with higher levels of ISIS activity and terrorist
operations in those Islamic State provinces. Therefore, the quality and
frequency of ISIS' media output can be seen as a proxy for the
organization's durability.
Despite its territorial loses, ISIS remains a major threat to regional
and international stability. Without a "state" to defend and
manage, it can now focus on conducting terrorist attacks across the Middle
East, its other regional affiliates, and in the West.
The study is based on primary research of various ISIS media outlets and
other prominent research on the subject. It is divided into four parts
exploring ISIS's media network at its organizational peak, features of its
current media landscape, media activity within ISIS regional affiliates,
and social network communications.
Click here to read the full Meir Amit Center report.
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