New article from Dr. Iyād Qunaybī: "Why Do We Talk About the Announcement Of the Caliphate?"

:UPDATE 8/17/14 12:27 PM: Here is an English translation of the below Arabic article There exist pressing motives for why we are addressing the recent issue of declaring the Caliphate=&0=&إبطال الجماعات والتنظيمات القائمة على ثغور جهاد وإلزامها بطاعة من ادُّعِيَت له إمارة المؤمنين. وهو ما سيستجيب له من يرونها خلافة ويمتنع منه من يعلمون أنها ليست بخلافة، وهذا يعني شق الصف في الساحات الجهادية وإضعافها بدعوى باطلة، وليس جمع الكلمة كما يتوهم المفتونون بالشعارات. =&1=& التنزيل الخطير لنصوص نبوية في غير محلها، مثل ((من أتاكم وأمركُم جميعٌ على رجلٍ واحدٍ، يريدُ أن يشقُّ عصاكُم أو يفرقَ جماعتكُم فاقتلوهُ)) (مسلم). والجماعة هنا هي الأمة. ففي الحديث الصحيح أيضا: ((مَنْ خرجَ علَى أُمَّتِي وهم جميعٌ فاقتُلُوهُ كائنًا مَنْ كانَ)) (صحيح). فكأن بعض ضعاف العقول يدعون أن أمر الأمة قد اجتمع على من ادعيت الخلافة له وأنها آلت إليه بشكل شرعي، ثم رتب عليها مشروعية قتل من شق الصف! وما تعريف شق الصف في هذه الحالة؟ متروك لاجتهاد كل أحد. والضوء الأخضر معطى بفلق هامه بالرصاص واستخراج ما فيه ولا كرامة!! بإطلاقات حماسية عاطفية تصير بيئة خصبة للتطبيقات الشائهة.  

ففي “اجتهاد”

Minbar al-Tawḥīd wa-l-Jihād presents a new statement from Shaykh Abū Muḥammad al-Maqdisī: "And Do Not Be Like She Who Untwisted Her Spun Thread After It Was Strong"

UPDATE 8/2/14 12:06 PM: Here is an English translation of the below Arabic statement:
Click the following link for a safe PDF copy: Shaykh Abū Muḥammad al-Maqdisī — “And Do Not Be Like She Who Untwisted Her Spun Thread After It Was Strong” (En)
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NOTE: The title of this release comes from the Qur’anic verse 16:92.


Click the following link for a safe PDF copy: Shaykh Abū Muḥammad al-Maqdisī — “And Do Not Be Like She Who Untwisted Her Spun Thread After It Was Strong”
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al-Batār Media Foundation presents a new article from Abū 'Umar al-Ḥalabī: "When It Is Distorting the Facts To Undermine the Islamic State and Its Mujāhidīn"

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Click the following link for a safe PDF copy: Abū ‘Umar al-Ḥalabī — “When It Is Distorting the Facts To Undermine the Islamic State and Its Mujāhidīn”
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To inquire about a translation for this article for a fee email: [email protected]

The Clairvoyant: Colonial Caliphate: The Ambitions of the "Islamic State"

Colonial Caliphate: The Ambitions of the “Islamic State”
By Aaron Y. Zelin
By now, many have seen the variations of maps that “Islamic State” (IS) activists have posted online showing aspirational future areas of conquest. This genre usually encompasses areas that have been under historical Caliphates shaded in black, including places such as Spain or Greece that do not even have a Muslim plurality of the population today. Ultimately, IS (as well as other Sunni jihadi groups) hopes the entire world comes under its dominion. This is nothing new. But what are IS’s short to medium-term goals and how are they attempting to achieve them?
In short: its slogan baqiya wa tatamaddad (remaining and expanding).
All of this, is of course, contingent on any level of success and legitimacy, which at this juncture will be difficult in the face of most Muslims rejecting its “Caliphate” announcement as well other Islamist groups including pro-al-Qaeda jihadis.
The “Caliphate project” is a unique enterprise and one that does not necessarily play by the same rules most follow, since ultimately its goal is to overthrow the Westphalian nation-state model and the post-World War II American international system. The announcement of the renewed “Caliphate” could signal something more akin to a colonial project where the “Islamic state” seeks to incorporate non-contiguous territories. Already in Iraq and Syria, the areas it has taken control of are not all contiguous. Therefore, it is plausible that factions or groups in other locales could conceivably take territory and, having pledged bay’a (an oath of loyalty) to the Islamic State’s self-proclaimed Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, thereby expanding the State’s Caliphate.
Where Could This Occur? Would It Be Sustainable?
Beyond IS’s hope to “remain and expand,” I have a nascent hypothesis about its unique use of foreign fighters. Unlike al-Qaeda, which has mainly used its foreign fighter contingents to train, plan, and then execute attacks in the West or Arab countries over the years, IS might have bigger plans for them. While IS would have no problem with dispatching foreign fighters for terrorist attacks out of theater (more on this below), they might also order their foreign fighter cadres to build up capacities for the expansion of its state once they return home. Further, it may also use them to infiltrate and subvert al-Qaeda branches and cells as part of its broader war with al-Qaeda for supremacy over the global jihadi movement.
The Islamic State’s colonial Caliphate project would find the most fertile ground in the Northern Sinai, Eastern Libya, and some of the neighborhoods in poor areas of Western European cities that are Muslim-majority. None of this is inevitable. In fact, the Islamic State would have some serious difficulties in pulling it off, especially in Western Europe. But the jihadi movement has never let feasibility stand in the way of its ambitions. Like many jihadi strategists have proposed in the past, they would hope to set off a backlash that could lead to destabilization and chaos. This is exactly what jihadis thrive off. We have already seen failed attempts in England to establish “sharia zones” by local jihadis like the UK-based Anjem Choudary, who has cautiously spoken out in favor of the Caliphate claim.
Besides the Islamic State’s ideological and narrative appeal, one of the biggest sources of its strength comes from its economic independence. Due to the spoils of war and criminal enterprises, they are far less reliant on private donors than al-Qaeda. Why is this relevant? Unlike al-Qaeda, the Islamic State has funding and can use its extra coffers to offer money to potential affiliates. It is a new center that can give resources to the periphery. In recent years, al-Qaeda has had more difficulty doing that.
The Islamic State’s economic independence is also germane because many foreign fighters have criminal pasts and therefore would have experiences and have no issue with getting involved in criminal activities if and when they return home. Additionally, those outside the center of the Islamic State’s gravity can leverage the criminal networks in locales like the Sinai and Libya. There has already been signs that jihadis have attempted to graft onto those criminal networks with varying success.
Similarly, one could see a scenario where Europe’s foreign fighters — many of whom have deep criminal pasts — return home and set up business rackets and other illegal ventures in certain neighborhoods in areas where they are from and run them like mafia bosses or gangsters. This could lead to a chilling effect such as no-go zones where European police are not comfortable entering or operating. Again, this is all hypothetical and not the current reality, but setting up such independent economic hubs in “statelets” could further the reach of the Islamic State, which has no time frame on its project. The success of such an undertaking would likely have an easier chance of working in the Sinai/Libya scenario due to lack of full state writ already.
Baghdadi’s Target Countries?
Following the announcement of the Islamic State’s self-proclaimed Caliphate, its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi delivered a Ramadan address, which was filled with the usual jihadi platitudes. It also included specific “shout outs” to areas where Muslims are suffering and could be a clue to areas it hopes to expand its influence or compete with al-Qaeda. For instance, Baghdadi specifically notes the suffering of Sunnis in Burma, the Philippines, Indonesia, Kashmir, Bosnia, the Caucasus, Palestine, Egypt, East Turkistan (China), Iran, France, Tunisia, and Central African Republic. There is already known public support for the Islamic State or has foreign fighter networks that have fed itself in Iraq and Syria in the Philippines, Indonesia, Bosnia, the Caucasus, Palestine, Egypt, Iran, France, and Tunisia. Therefore, if one wants to look to areas that are not in surrounding countries to Iraq or Syria these are potentially more immediate targets.
Closer to home, though, the Islamic State hopes to expand its reach in terms of linking up contiguous territory over “Sykes-Picot” borders. More recently, for the first time publicly the Islamic State has announced a presence in the Qalamoun region on the Lebanese-Syrian border as well as claiming responsibility for an attack in Beirut. If it hopes to expand into Lebanon, it will have to compete with the Qaeda-aligned Abdullah Azzam Brigades, which has years of experience recruiting. Similarly, while there has been support in Ma’an, Jordan for the Islamic State, this is a minority sentiment in the broader Jordanian jihadi current, which has been closer to and more supportive of Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria.
The biggest prize beyond targeting Israel (more on this below) would be provoking violence against the Saudi regime and claiming Saudi territory. The majority of the 1,400+ Saudis that have gone to fight in Syria (and now Iraq) have joined the Islamic State rather than Jabhat al-Nusra. Additionally, hundreds in the last decade fought with the group when it was called al-Qaeda in Iraq. Among them, some then went onto fight with al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). There are also number of its foreign fighters that have returned home and other soft support inside the Kingdom. Therefore, it is possible that the Islamic State may rely on those already inside Saudi, Yemen, and its own soldiers in Iraq to create a three-pronged attack. While the Saudi government would have air superiority, it has no significant experience in quelling an insurgency (though Saudi has been successful in counterterrorism

al-Furqān Media presents a new video message from the Islamic State’s Abū Bakr al-Ḥussaynī al-Qurayshī al-Baghdādī: "Khuṭbah and Jum'ah Prayer in the Grand Mosque of Mūṣul (Mosul)"

UPDATE 7/27/14 6:34 PM: Here is an English translation of the below Arabic video message:
Click the following link for a safe PDF copy: Abū Bakr al-Ḥussaynī al-Qurayshī al-Baghdādī — “Khuṭbah and Jum’ah Prayer in the Grand Mosque of Mūṣul (Mosul)” (En)
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