The brutal slaughter, by radical Islamic Jihadists, of over
129 French citizens, visitors, students and tourists in Paris, was both
eerily similar to, and yet different from 9/11.
Both
of them were well planned, well prepared and well executed multiple
target attacks. Both were perpetrated by extreme Islamist terrorist
groups, Al-Qaeda and ISIS, and both were part of the all-out war
declared by radical Islamic spiritual leaders against Western cultures,
values and religions.
The
difference between them is that while Al-Qaeda has, to date, focused
mainly on attacking the US (9/11, Khobar towers, the Cole, the shoe
bomber, the underwear bomber, Times Square, etc.), ISIS has declared
both in videos and social media that the downing of the Russian airliner
with an on-board bomb and the recent attacks in Paris are just the beginning
of an ongoing and sustained campaign of terrorism strikes against every
member of the US lead coalition air strikes in Syria, as well as
against Russia and Iran.
So to be clear, there is no doubt in my mind that ISIS and its world-wide radicalized, in-country affiliates are currently preparing multi-target,
mass casualty terrorist attacks in: the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom,
Australia, United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Turkey (again), France (again),
Russia (again), Saudi Arabia (maybe), Qatar (maybe) Morocco, Bahrain
and - though with very little chance of success - Israel.
Can
these attacks be thwarted? Yes, at least some can - but not by dropping
a few bombs here and there in Syria, or building a broader "coalition",
and certainly not by declaring that the goal of the US is to: "degrade, and ultimately destroy ISIS". That just pisses them off and draws thousands more to their ranks.
Like Eli Wallach, as "Tuco", said in "The Good the Bad and the Ugly": "When you have to shoot, shoot, don't talk".
The
military power of ISIS can be destroyed by less talk and by sending
tens of thousands of US and coalition troops into Syria and Iraq, with
much more massive air support, and with full Russian and Iranian
coordination and participation. This very hypothetical operation, like
the "D-Day" invasion during WW2, will recapture critical cities and
bases from ISIS, kill as many of their fighters and leaders as possible,
including any radicalized Western Jihadis they find.
They
should then establish separate interim Sunni, Alawite, Kurdish Yazidi
and Druze autonomies under a strong UN or NATO peace-keeping mechanism,
or even better - individual foreign temporary mandates, like after WW1.
- Russia - the Alawite autonomy
- Turkey - the Sunni autonomy
- Israel - the Druze autonomy
- US (temporarily) the Kurdish/Yazidi autonomy, until a time in the future when Kurdistan can be reunited.
This
fantasy military operation will only degrade and probably destroy the
physical Islamic State. But it will have no effect on the ISIS ideology
which is deeply rooted in traditional Islam, the Quran and the early
reliable scriptures. It's these beliefs and ideologies that motivate and
drive the thousands of ISIS influenced Islamic Jihadist in North
America, Europe and the Middle East, that are at this moment preparing
to fulfill their Caliph's recent orders to: "kill the enemies of ISIS
with bombs, guns, knives, stones or your bare hands."
Robust,
ongoing anti-Islamist/Jihadist police operations, based on excellent
and actionable intelligence, can, in most cases (but not all!) prevent
these inevitable terrorist attacks.
But to stop the "cancer" of extreme, radical Islamic Jihadism,
as described by many commentators over the past weekend, its core
source of influence must be eradicated, and that is not the Islamic
State, but the so called "Caliphate".
The
"Islamic State" controls large areas of Iraq and Syria. So by
definition it is a "state". However a "Caliphate" has to have a "Caliph"
who: (1) cannot be self-appointed and (2) must fulfill certain
criteria. Abu-Bakr al-Baghdadi is a false Caliph, who not only appointed himself, but also does not meet the full qualification test.
So
if al-Baghdadi can be convincingly delegitimized and disgraced, then
his whole compelling narrative about the prophesized reestablishment of
the Caliphate becomes a lie, and fallacy. Hopefully this will damage the
ISIS brand.
But the US can't do that, neither can any non-Moslem. But the religious leaders of Saudi Arabia can.
This kind of religious ruling, or Fatwa, can only be issued by a high ranking experts on Sunni Islam like Ahmed
Al-Tayeb, the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar University in Cairo and Saudi
Arabia's Grand Mufti, Sheik Abdulaziz Al al-Sheik, the highest religious
authority in the country.
Both
have strongly condemned ISIS and Al-Qaeda as "enemies of Islam". But to
date neither has demanded the removal of al-Baghdadi as an imposter nor
initiated the complex mechanism to install a legitimate Caliph.
So
even if someone kills al-Baghdadi, and then kills the next
self-appointed leader of ISIS, and then the next one and the next one,
the terrorist attacks won't end. As long as the false dream of
the "new caliphate" is alive and well in the Cyber world, and the
tempting, heavenly "benefits" that Islamic "martyrdom" bestows on those
who "earn them" attract disenfranchised and marginalized young people
from all over, we can expect many more ISIS ideology-driven attempts at
mass casualty terrorist attacks.
ISIS
and its followers will not stop with Paris. Its next targets are listed
above. They said they will do it, and I have no reason to doubt them.
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