[Xmca-l] Fwd: Paris and the Islamic State

mike cole mcole@ucsd.edu
Mon Nov 16 18:28:56 PST 2015


Perhaps of interest.
mike
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Scott Atran <satran@umich.edu>
Date: Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 5:51 PM
Subject: Paris and the Islamic State
To: COG-SCI-REL-L@jiscmail.ac.uk


Dear Colleagues

FYI

 [image: Inline image 1]

*Paris: The War ISIS Wants*

*Scott Atran
<http://www.nybooks.com/contributors/scott-atran/?tab=tab-blog> and Nafees
Hamid <http://www.nybooks.com/contributors/nafees-hamid/?tab=tab-blog>*


The shock produced by the multiple coordinated attacks in Paris on
Friday—the scenes of indiscriminate bloodshed and terror on the streets,
the outrage against Islamic extremism among the public, French President
Francois Holland’s vow to be “merciless” in the fight against the
“barbarians of the Islamic State”—is, unfortunately, precisely what ISIS
intended. For the greater the hostility toward Muslims in Europe and the
deeper the West becomes involved in military action in the Middle East, the
closer ISIS comes to its goal of creating and managing chaos.

This is a strategy that has enabled it to confound far superior
international forces, while enhancing its legitimacy in the eyes of its
followers. The complexity of the French plot also suggests how successful
ISIS has been at cultivating sources of support within the native
populations of secular Western countries. Attacking ISIS in Syria will not
contain this global movement, which now includes more than two thousand
French citizens.

As our own research has shown—in interviews with youth in Paris, London,
and Barcelona, as well as with captured ISIS fighters in Iraq and Jabhat
an-Nusra (al-Qaeda) fighters from Syria—simply treating the Islamic State
as a form of “terrorism” or “violent extremism” masks the menace.
Dismissing the group as “nihilistic” reflects a dangerous avoidance of
trying to comprehend, and deal with, its profoundly alluring mission to
change and save the world. What many in the international community regard
as acts of senseless, horrific violence are to ISIS’s followers part of an
exalted campaign of purification through sacrificial killing and
self-immolation. This is the purposeful violence that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,
the Islamic State’s self-anointed Caliph, has called “the volcanoes of
Jihad”—creating an international jihadi archipelago that will eventually
unite to destroy the present world to create a new-old world of universal
justice and peace under the Prophet’s banner.

Indeed, ISIS’s theatrical brutality—whether in the Middle East or now in
Europe—is part of a conscious plan designed to instill among believers a
sense of meaning that is sacred and sublime, while scaring the hell out of
fence-sitters and enemies. This strategy was outlined in the 2004
manifesto *Idharat
at Tawahoush*(The Management of Savagery), a tract written for ISIS’s
precursor, the Iraqi branch of al-Qaeda;*tawahoush* comes from *wahsh* or
“beast,” so an animal-like state. Here are some of its main axioms:

Diversify and widen the vexation strikes against the Crusader-Zionist enemy
in every place in the Islamic world, and even outside of it if possible, so
as to disperse the efforts of the alliance of the enemy and thus drain it
to the greatest extent possible.

To be effective, attacks should be launched against soft targets that
cannot possibly be defended to any appreciable degree, leading to a
debilitating security state:

If a tourist resort that the Crusaders patronize…is hit, all of the tourist
resorts in all of the states of the world will have to be secured by the
work of additional forces, which are double the ordinary amount, and a huge
increase in spending.

Crucially, these tactics are also designed to appeal to disaffected young
who tend to rebel against authority, are eager for for self-sacrifice, and
are filled with energy and idealism that calls for “moderation” (
*wasatiyyah*) only seek to suppress. The aim is

to motivate crowds drawn from the masses to fly to the regions which we
manage, particularly the youth… [For] the youth of the nation are closer to
the innate nature [of humans] on account of the rebelliousness within them.

Finally, these violent attacks should be used to draw the West as deeply
and actively as possible into military conflict:

Work to expose the weakness of America’s centralized power by pushing it to
abandon the media psychological war and war by proxy until it fights
directly.

Eleven years later, ISIS is using this approach against America’s most
important allies in Europe. For ISIS, causing chaos in France has special
impetus. The first major military push by the Islamic State Caliphate in
the summer of 2014 was to obliterate the international border between Syria
and Iraq—a symbol of the arbitrary division of the Arab and Muslim world
imposed by France and Great Britain after the defeat of the Ottoman Empire,
seat of the last Muslim Caliphate. And because the lights of Paris
epitomize cultural secularism for the world and thus “ignorance of divine
guidance” (*jahiliyyah*), they must be extinguished until rekindled by
God’s divine radiance (*an-Noor*).

The fact that The EU’s replacement rate is 1.59 children per couple and the
continent needs substantial levels of immigration to maintain a productive
workforce—at a time where there is a refugee crisis and amid greater
hostility to immigrants than ever—is another form of chaos the Islamic
State is well-positioned to exploit. French authorities have found the
passport, possibly doctored, of one Syrian national associated with the
Paris attacks, as well as two fake Turkish passports, indicating that ISIS
is taking advantage of Europe’s refugee crisis, and encouraging hostility
and suspicion toward those legitimately seeking refuge in order to further
drive a wedge between Muslims and European non-Muslims.

Today, France has one of the largest Muslim minorities in Europe. French
Muslims are also predominantly a social underclass, a legacy of France’s
colonial past and indifference to its aftermath. For example, although just
7 to 8 percent of France’s population is Muslim, as much as 70 percent of
the prison population is Muslim, a situation that has left a very large
number of young French Muslims vulnerable to absorbing radical ideas in
prison and out. Within this social landscape, ISIS finds success. France
has contributed more foreign fighters to ISIS than any other Western
country.

One attacker at the Bataclan concert hall, where the highest number of
people were killed, was twenty-nine-year-old Ismaël Omar Mostefaï, a French
citizen of Algerian and Portuguese origin from the Paris area. He had a
criminal record and had traveled to Syria for a few months between 2013 and
2014—a profile similar the two Kouachi brothers, also French nationals of
Algerian origin living in Paris proper, who had trained with al-Qaeda’s
affiliate in Yemen before carrying out the *Charlie Hebdo* attacks in Paris
in January.

Other presumed plotters of Friday’s attacks include two brothers, Salah
Abdeslam Salah, twenty-six, who remains at large, and his brother Ibrahim,
thirty-one, who detonated a suicide bomb near the Stade de France soccer
stadium. Although French citizens, the Abdeslam brothers had been living in
Molenbeek, a poor Brussels barrio populated by Arab immigrants. In the last
year, weapons from that neighborhood have been linked to Parisian-born
Amedy Coulilaby, a thirty-three-year-old of Malian descent who had been a
jail buddy of one of the Kouachi brothers and who carried out the lethal
January attack on a Kosher supermarket in Paris; and Mehdi Nemmouche,
twenty-nine, a French national of Algerian origin who spent a over a year
with ISIS in Syria and was responsible for the deadly shootings at the
Jewish Museum of Belgium. Another of the Paris suicide bombers,
twenty-year-old Bilal Hadfi, was also a French national who fought with the
Islamic State before returning to Belgium, which has the highest per capita
rate of jihadi volunteers from Europe. Two other Belgians, one of whom was
eighteen, were also involved in the Paris attacks, as well as a
twenty-seven-year-old Egyptian, Yousef Salahel.

As with the 2004 Madrid train bombings and the 2005 London Underground
bombings, what seems to be emerging from the fragmentary reports so far is
that the Paris attacks were carried out by a loose network of family,
friends, and fellow travelers who may have each followed their own,
somewhat independent paths to radical Islam before joining up with ISIS.
But their closely coordinated actions at multiple sites in Paris indicate a
significant degree of training, collective planning, and command and
control by the Islamic State (including via encrypted messages), under the
likely direction of Abdelhamid Abaooud, known as Abu Omar, “The Belgian,” a
twenty-seven-year-old of Moroccan origin from Molenbeek, who is now in
Syria.

Such coordination has been facilitated by the very large contingent of
French foreign fighters in Syria. In April, French Senator Jean-Pierre Suer
said
<http://news.yahoo.com/nearly-half-european-jihadists-syria-iraq-french-report-175845419.html>
that
1,430 men and women from France had made their way to Iraq and Syria, up
from just twenty as of 2012. About 20 percent of these people are converts.
The latest report from West Point’s Center for Combating Terrorism
<https://www.ctc.usma.edu/posts/ctc-perspectives-the-french-foreign-fighter-threat-in-context>,
which has detailed records on 182 French fighters, notes that most are in
their twenties. About 25 percent come from the Paris area, with the rest
scattered over smaller regions throughout France. According toFrance’s
Interior Ministry
<http://api.fidji.lefigaro.fr/media/figaro/orig/2015/11/14/INF06ec3c2e-8adb-11e5-a10a-89234e47f14a-300x640.jpg>,
571 French citizens or residents are presently in Syria and Iraq, some with
al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat an-Nusra, but most with ISIS. More than 260
people are known to have returned to France, and more than 2,000 people
from France have been directly implicated in the jihadi pipeline to and
from the region, which extends across Europe: police have already made
arrests in Belgium and Germany related to the Paris attacks, and traced the
entry into Europe of one of the attackers, a Syrian national, through
Greece.

French counterterrorism surveillance data (FSPRT
<http://www.numerama.com/politique/129033-surveillance-modification-secrete-du-fichier-secret-fsprt.html>)
has identified 11,400 radical Islamists, 25 percent of whom are women and
16 percent minors—among the minors, females are in a majority. Legal
proceedings are now underway against 646 people suspected of involvement in
terrorist activity. French Prime Minister Manuel Valls conceded after
Friday’s attacks that even keeping full track of those suspected of being
prone to violent acts is practically impossible: around-the-clock
surveillance of a single individual requires ten to twenty security agents,
of which there are only 6,500 for all of France.

Nor is it a matter of controlling the flow of people into France. France’s
Center for the Prevention of Sectarian Drift Related to Islam (CPDSI)
estimates that 90 percent of French citizens who have radical Islamist
beliefs have French grandparents and 80 percent come from non-religious
families. In fact, most Europeans who are drawn into jihad are “born again”
into radical religion by their social peers. In France, and in Europe more
generally, more than three of every four recruits join the Islamic State
together with friends, while only one in five do so with family members and
very few through direct recruitment by strangers. Many of these young
people identify with neither the country their parents come from nor the
country in which they live. Other identities are weak and non-motivating.
One woman in the Paris suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois described her conversion
as being like that of a transgender person who opts out of the gender
assigned at birth: “I was like a Muslim trapped in a Christian body,” she
said. She believed she was only able to live fully as a Muslim with dignity
in the Islamic State.

For others who have struggled to find meaning in their lives, ISIS is a
thrilling cause and call to action that promises glory and esteem in the
eyes of friends, and through friends, eternal respect and remembrance in
the wider world that many of them will never live to enjoy. A July 2014
poll by ICM
<http://www.icmresearch.com/media-centre/press/isis-poll-for-rossiya-segodnya>
Research
suggested that more than one in four French youth of all creeds between the
ages of eighteen and twenty-four have a favorable or very favorable opinion
of ISIS. Even if these estimates are high, in our own interviews with young
people in the vast and soulless housing projects of the Paris banlieues we
found surprisingly wide tolerance or support for ISIS among young people
who want to be rebels with a cause—who want, as they see it, to defend the
oppressed.

Yet the desire these young people in France express is not to be a “devout
Muslim” but to become a *mujahid*(“holy warrior”): to take the radical
step, immediately satisfying and life-changing, to obtain meaning through
self-sacrifice. Although feelings of marginalization and outrage may build
over a long time, the transition from struggling identity to *mujahid* is
often fast and furious. The death of six of the eight Paris attackers by
suicide bombs and one in a hail of police bullets testifies to the
sincerity of this commitment, as do the hundreds of French volunteer deaths
in Syria and Iraq.

As one twenty-four-year-old who joined Jabhat an-Nusra in Syria told us:

They [Western society] teach us to work hard to buy a nice car and nice
clothes but that isn’t happiness. I was a third-class human because I
wasn’t integrated into a corrupted system. But I didn’t want to be a street
gangster. So, I and my friends simply decided to go around and invite
people to join Islam. The other Muslim groups in the city just talk. They
think a true Muslim state will just rain from heaven on them without
fighting and striving hard on the path of Allah.

French converts from families of Christian origin are often the most
vociferous defenders of the Islamic State. There’s something about joining
someone else’s fight that makes one fierce. When we asked a former body
builder from Epinay-sur-Seine, a northern suburb of Paris, why he converted
to Islam he said that he had been in and out of jail, constantly getting
into trouble. “I was a mess, with nothing to me, until the idea of
following the *mujahid*’s way gave me rules to live by”: to channel his
energy into jihad and defend his Muslim brethren under attack from infidels
in France and everywhere, “from Palestine to Burma.”

Because many foreign volunteers are marginal in their host countries, a
pervasive belief among Western governments and NGOs is that offering
would-be enlistees jobs or spouses or access to education could reduce
violence and counter the Caliphate’s pull. But a still unpublished report
by the World Bank shows no reliable relationship between increasing
employment and reducing violence, suggesting that people with such
opportunities are just as likely to be susceptible to jihadism. When I
asked one World Bank representative why this was not published, he
responded, “Our clients [that is, governments] wouldn’t like it because
they’ve got too much invested in the idea.”

As research has shown with those who joined al-Qaeda, prior marriage does
not seem to be a deterrent to those now volunteering for ISIS; and among
the senior ranks of such groups, there are many who have had access to
considerable education—especially in scientific fields such as engineering
and medicine that require great discipline and a willingness to delay
gratification. If people are ready to sacrifice their lives, then it is not
likely that offers of greater material advantages will stop them. (In fact,
our research shows that material incentives, or disincentives, often
backfire and increase
<http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2015/07/245403.htm>commitment
by devoted actors).

In its feckless “Think Again Turn Away” social media program, the US State
Department has tried to dissuade youth with mostly negative anonymous
messaging. “So DAESH wants to build a future, well is beheading a future
you want, or someone controlling details of your diet and dress?” Can
anyone not know that already? Does it really matter to those drawn to the
cause despite, or even because of, such things? As one teenage girl from a
Chicago suburb retorted to FBI agents who stopped her from flying to Syria:
“Well, what about the barrel bombings that kill thousands? Maybe if the
beheading helps to stop that.” And for some, strict obedience provides
freedom from uncertainty about what a good person is to do.

By contrast, the Islamic State may spend hundreds of hours trying to enlist
single individuals and groups of friends, empathizing instead of lecturing,
to learn how to turn their personal frustrations and grievances into a
universal theme of persecution against all Muslims, and thus translate
anger and frustrated aspiration into moral outrage. From Syria, a young
woman messages another:

I know how hard it is to leave behind the mother and father you love, and
not tell them until you are here, that you will always love them but that
you were put on this earth to do more than be with or honor your parents. I
know this will probably be the hardest thing you may ever have to do, but
let me help you explain it to yourself and to them.

And any serious engagement must be attuned to individuals and their
networks, not to mass marketing of repetitive messages. Young people
empathize with each other; they generally don’t lecture at one another.
There are nearly fifty thousand Twitter accounts supporting ISIS, with an
average of some one thousand followers each.

In Amman last month, a former imam from the Islamic State told us:

The young who came to us were not to be lectured at like witless children;
they are for the most part understanding and compassionate, but misguided.
We have to give them a better message, but a positive one to compete.
Otherwise, they will be lost to Daesh.

Some officials speaking for Western governments at the East Asia summit in
Singapore last April argued that the Caliphate is traditional power
politics masquerading as mythology. Research on those drawn to the cause
show that this is a dangerous misconception. The Caliphate has re-emerged
as a seductive mobilizing cause in the minds of many Muslims, from the
Levant to Western Europe. As one imam in Barcelona involved in interfaith
dialogue with Christians and Jews told us: “I am against the violence of
al-Qaeda and ISIS, but they have put our predicament in Europe and
elsewhere on the map. Before, we were just ignored. And the Caliphate…. We
dream of it like the Jews long dreamed of Zion. Maybe it can be a
federation, like the European Union, of Muslim peoples. The Caliphate is
here, in our hearts, even if we don’t know what real form it will finally
take.”

France, the United States, and our allies may opt for force of arms, with
all of the unforeseen and unintended consequences that are likely to result
from all-out war. But even if ISIS is destroyed, its message could still
captivate many in coming generations. Until we recognize the passions this
message is capable of stirring up among disaffected youth around the world,
we risk strengthening them and contributing to the chaos that ISIS
cherishes.

November 16, 2015, 10:30 a.m.

http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2015/nov/16/paris-attacks-isis-strategy-chaos/





-- 

It is the dilemma of psychology to deal as a natural science with an
object that creates history. Ernst Boesch
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image.png
Type: image/png
Size: 14816 bytes
Desc: not available
Url : https://mailman.ucsd.edu/mailman/private/xmca-l/attachments/20151116/9692db1c/attachment.png 


More information about the xmca-l mailing list