x

Like our Facebook Page

   
Early Times Newspaper Jammu, Leading Newspaper Jammu
 
Breaking News :   Air Pollution Damaging Brain Health; Worsening Disease Burden in India | Ah, Appropriate Time ! | Health Of Citizens | Piyush Pandey Passes Away: Advertising Legend with a Heart and a Jammu and Kashmir Connection | Bickering erupts in Congress over appointment of Rajouri district chief | Sonu Nigam’s Srinagar concert will boost tourism, local artistes: LG Sinha | Mian Altaf backs Ruhullah, warns CM Omar on governance, jobs | MP Ruhullah hits out at CM Omar for mocking people who elected him | Mehbooba accuses NC of betraying Budgam | ‘Darbar Move’ to Jammu in full swing after 4-year break | True empowerment lies in health of citizens: Rajnath Singh | Study links bright light at night with 56% higher risk of heart failure | NC candidate who lost RS Poll says some MLAs promised support but ‘backstabbed’ | Op Sindoor, eradication of Naxalism added colour to festivals: PM Modi | 3 drug peddlers held | BSF seizes pistols, drones, heroin | Mahindra Scorpio JK14A-7380 seized for illegal Khair Billets Transport | NC Minority Wing holds meeting, urges support for Aga Syed Mehmood in Budgam By-Election | EC to hold presser on pan-India SIR of voters' list on Monday evening: Officials | Garhmukteshwar fair to reflect devotion, discipline and cleanliness: CM Adityanath | J&K witnessing transformation from separatism to self-reliance under PM Modi: Tarun Chugh | Century Bank Brokers hold meeting | Delhi man arrested for robbing, abducting truck driver; four absconding | Three killed, five injured as SUV rams into parked truck in UP's Jaunpur | Changemakers igniting transformation across Uttar Pradesh's villages | Peace Conference on Communal Harmony held to Mark Sir Syed's 208th Birth Anniversary | Modi govt has taken the health sector to new heights in 11 years: Balbir | Sarveshwar Group organised Basmati Export Promotion Programme | Accession Day celebrated at Udhampur | Centre has given Rs 4,500 crore to PWD since 2023: Himachal Pradesh minister | Unseasonal rains: 'Yellow' alert issued for Nanded between Oct 26-29 | Wanted criminal arrested by Delhi Police in Badarpur after brief encounter | Supplementary Randomization of EVMs Conducted at Budgam | JBM launched membership drive at Sunderbani | Jewar Airport to set a new benchmark in digital connectivity | IIPA J&K Regional Branch organizes lecture | Dr Tarunjit Singh Butalia receives lifetime achievement award at global interfaith conference | IWC Jammu Sampark visited Old Age Home Kot-Bhalwal | DC Baramulla chairs meeting at Gulmarg | Indian Army conducted a 30-day cutting, tailoring course for empowering women | United Nations Day Celebrated at Government High School, Upper Dharana at Rajouri | NFR to observe Vigilance Awareness Week | Indian Army on Alert for Cyclone "Montha" - Coordinated Readiness Along East and West Coasts | Rang-e-Chinar' 2.0 concludes at NIT Srinagar with vibrant performances, massive participation | Back Issues  
 
news details
Threat from ISIS not on battlefield but in civilian spaces: Book
1/17/2020 4:47:49 PM


New Delhi, Jan 17: The immediate threat from ISIS is not on the battlefield anymore, but in civilian spaces, says a new book which seeks to explore the psychology of South Asian jihadists.
"The ISIS Peril: The World''s Most Feared Terror Group and its Shadow on South Asia" tries to uncover the ideological underpinnings of the movement in South Asia, deconstruct its strengths and expose its fault lines.

"The Islamic State’s designs and methods were ambitious, perhaps too ambitious, which is why its fall was prophesied early into its rise itself. Recapturing territory from the Islamic State was never going to be the difficult job, the difficult job of fighting ISIS starts now," writes Kabir Taneja.

He argues that just because a US declaration pronounced the end of the Islamic State and Russian bombings of the same do not mean the organisation has taken the defeat in its stride and retired into history.

The author feels that while for India, "Pakistan-based terror groups may be trying to infiltrate the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir or the international border in Punjab, others such as ISIS have created direct access using the power of modern communication tools, the internet, and so on to get access to our living rooms".

From the Holey Bakery attack of 2016 in Bangladesh to Easter weekend 2019 in Sri Lanka, from the flag-waving in Kashmir to the Twitter accounts in Bengaluru, from the young converts of Kerala to online recruitment by way of Facebook and Telegram, the book explores the psychology of the jihadists.

According to the author, there are hundreds, if not thousands, of ISIS fighters today who are unaccounted for, or those who have melted away into obscurity of refugee camps and general towns and villages of both Iraq and Syria.

"These people may be former citizens of the caliphate, but their commitments to ISIS and its ideologies would more often than not remain strong," he says.

That means a situation has come forth where revival of cities and towns in Iraq and Syria affected by ISIS would also include ISIS fighters themselves, the book says.

There is no way of knowing whether they have now decided not to commit themselves towards the caliphate or they are just waiting for the opportune time to strike once again, with the ‘black flag’ in tow, it adds.

"The immediate threat from ISIS is not on the battlefield anymore, but in civilian spaces. The SDF (Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces) along with the few international aid organisations working on the ground have been left with the job of taking care of the land and people in a post-ISIS region, capacity that the Kurds-led group does not have," the book, published by Penguin Random House, says.

"With hundreds of people living in makeshift camps, and many ISIS fighters being held in makeshift prisons, in close proximity with each other, there is complete confusion on how to handle these camps, who will pay for them and what to do with the ISIS fighters," writes Taneja.

"In fact, the celebrations of an ISIS defeat at this rate could be short-lived, as the Kurds, who first took on the weight of actually defeating ISIS and now are having to host the stateless citizens of the caliphate may have no choice but to slowly release these radicalised people back into society," he says.

According to Taneja, most ISIS fighters in captivity would still be what they set out to be, those who believed in the caliphate and would still like to see it make a return. And considering the political landscape in both Syria and Iraq, many would also like to think that resurgence is fully plausible.

"ISIS may be defeated geographically, but as an idea it persists. This persistence will have no easy solutions, and the world has a long battle against an idea in front of it," he says
  Share This News with Your Friends on Social Network  
  Comment on this Story  
 
 
 
Early Times Android App
STOCK UPDATE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
Home About Us Top Stories Local News National News Sports News Opinion Editorial ET Cetra Advertise with Us ET E-paper
 
 
J&K RELATED WEBSITES
J&K Govt. Official website
Jammu Kashmir Tourism
JKTDC
Mata Vaishnodevi Shrine Board
Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board
Shri Shiv Khori Shrine Board
UTILITY
Train Enquiry
IRCTC
Matavaishnodevi
BSNL
Jammu Kashmir Bank
State Bank of India
PUBLIC INTEREST
Passport Department
Income Tax Department
JK CAMPA
JK GAD
IT Education
Web Site Design Services
EDUCATION
Jammu University
Jammu University Results
JKBOSE
Kashmir University
IGNOU Jammu Center
SMVDU