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ISLAMIC CALIPHATE (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   139028


Al-Qaeda and the rise of ISIS / Holbrook , Donald   Article
Holbrook , Donald Article
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Summary/Abstract Ayman al-Zawahiri’s leadership of al-Qaeda has been beset by a series of calamities that threaten the viability of the movement’s core group and its legacy. Zawahiri was always more suited to be second in command, offering dense strategic and ideological deliberations rather than acting as the public face of a global Islamist militant movement. Replacing the charismatic Osama bin Laden was thus always going to be a challenge. The fact that secular Arab rulers, especially in Egypt (Zawahiri’s native land and a consistent preoccupation of his), have been toppled on his watch through popular uprising and military intervention – as opposed to jihadist coercion – has further undermined Zawahiri’s position as al-Qaeda leader. The Arab Spring uprisings demonstrated the success of regime-change methods that al-Qaeda had consistently dismissed, while removing some of the main protagonists of its grievance narrative.
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2
ID:   139122


Concept of an Islamic caliphate / Punjabi, Riyaz   Article
Punjabi, Riyaz Article
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3
ID:   132456


Game changer: will the United States full support to the beleaguered Iraq help scuttle the ISIS dream of establishing an Islamic caliphate from Iraq to Syria? / Ali, Mahir   Journal Article
Ali, Mahir Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Key Words Iraq  United States  Syria  Ayman al-Zawahiri  Tel Aviv  ISIS 
Islamic Caliphate  Sunni Provinces 
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4
ID:   139029


ISIS and the killing fields of the Middle East / Cheterian , Vicken   Article
Cheterian , Vicken Article
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Summary/Abstract There is something nauseating about the violence of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS). Its celebration of brutality – decapitating prisoners and burning them alive, crucifying and exhibiting its victims – sickens even from a distance. In June 2013, ISIS fighters executed 15-year-old street-coffee vendor Mohammad Kattaa in front of his parents in Aleppo, for using an expression they considered blasphemous. On the central square in Raqqa where ISIS had displayed its rivals’ crucified corpses, Australian fighter Khaled Sharrouf photographed his seven-year-old son holding a decapitated head, posting his child’s lost innocence on the Internet for all to see.
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