Future of ISIS and fears of systematic recruitment
ISIS has been emerging as a powerful terrorist organization
since the establishment of its alleged state in 2014, when it extended its
influence over vast areas in Iraq and Syria. Although it has suffered
successive losses and its caliphate collapsed in March 2019 in Syria, ISIS
supporters are still recruiting new followers to carry out attacks here and
there.
A report entitled "How the Islamic State see the
future” issued by the European Union Institute for Security Studies (EUISS)
stressed that ISIS is still alive and represents a great danger despite its
defeat in Syria and Iraq and the flight of the rest of its members to different
parts of the world. The terrorist organization believes that it still has the
opportunity to return again, especially after it succeeded in attracting 27,000
recruits from children and teenagers, as well as the sons and supporters of
terrorists, some of whom are still detained in camps in Syria, including 600
European citizens.
The report stated that ISIS’s loss of lands that it had
seized by force in Syria and Iraq did not in any way harm its strength or
resources, as it was able to renew itself, update its misleading account of
jihad, with new powers and strategies, to carry out the ultimate goal: the
conquest of the European continent.
The report explained how terrorist organizations were able
to re-adapt themselves and to exploit the concept of jihad in a way other than
its intent, in order to influence the minds of young people and attract them.
Thus, the name of ISIS’s online magazine changed its name in 2016 from Dabiq to
Rumiyah (meaning Rome), in a sign from the organization that its new target is
the center of global Christianity.
Alan Duncan, former British Minister of State for Europe and
the Americas, also made a documentary about his visit to the Al-Hol refugee
camp in Syria, known as the “womb of ISIS”, which includes a number of children
and women from the organization. The documentary shows some 10-year-old boys
bragging about their fighting spirit in front of the cameras. When asked about
the meaning of these signs, they answered, “It means that ISIS is still alive,
and we want to fight the apostates!” The cameras also show a woman wearing a
black burqa saying, “I want my children to be Mujahideen, to fight the
infidels!”
In March 2021, a British government report indicated that
during the past 12 months, children’s exposure to ISIS terrorist recruitment
via the internet increased by up to 7% compared to 2020. Hence, the EUISS
report confirmed that terrorist organizations such as ISIS and others are
working silently and tirelessly, noting that 27,000 young people, most of whom
are children of militants who were born in the ISIS lands and grew up amid the
battles waged by the organization, should not be underestimated. The report
emphasized that even if the vast majority were minors, this does not
automatically mean that they are innocent or have innocent intentions, because
the principle that most of them adhere to is life under ISIS.
The Al-Azhar Observatory stressed that training children is
not new, as ISIS trained children during its period of power and used them as
spies or suicide bombers. In July 2019, a 13-year-old boy blew himself up during
a wedding party in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar, killing five
people and wounding 40 others. The scene was filmed and propagated in favor of
the terrorist organization, in a heinous abuse of humanity and the innocent
spirit of childhood.
In 2006, the United Nations condemned the presence of
250,000 children worldwide who were recruited to fight in nearly 20 conflicts.
At that time, ISIS was just an idea, but in a short time it already had in the
first months of 2015 more than 1,500 children fighting on the front line, and
more than 1,000 other children who were trained as suicide bombers.
So, the most dangerous thing about ISIS’s recruitment of
27,000 people is that the recruits are of young ages. This means that the
terrorist organization is adopting a new strategy that will attract more
children to the organization who can carry out attacks that are less deadly but
more frequent. Unfortunately, anti-extremism programs and prevention measures
are not specifically designed for children. Also, it is not only about new
children recruits, but also about resources, as the organization has
approximately $300 million in cash.
In fact, the question is no longer how ISIS is able to
recruit so many children, but when will it launch its next attacks?
In past years, children's participation was limited to
propaganda for the organization and bragging about it on an almost daily basis.
Children were always present in multiple contexts, such as attending
executions, being in training camps, advocacy campaigns and more.
Accordingly, EUISS tries to put European politics on alert,
as the report states, “Europe will have to brace itself for more attacks. The
following considerations should be borne in mind by policymakers as a way to
manage this:
·
Accept that the survival of
ISIS is not contingent on its status as a proto-state and develop a long-term
strategy aimed at undercutting its recruitment efforts in Europe.
·
Develop capacities to
detect, monitor and manage the early radicalization of juveniles.
·
Prioritize youth
unemployment in post-Covid-19 recovery efforts.
·
Swiftly implement the new
EU legislation allowing for the removal of online terrorist content.
·
Prepare for attacks on
‘softer’ targets such as railways and motorways.”
Therefore, the Al-Azhar Observatory has stressed the need to
continue international efforts to combat this malignant epidemic. The
Observatory also called for concerted efforts among all countries militarily
and intellectually, maximizing and activating the role of respected religious
institutions in this fight, supporting rehabilitation and integration programs
for these young people and children, and using all available means to achieve
that. The danger of abhorrent terrorism is not confined to Europe alone, as the
Arab and Islamic countries have been the most affected by it. His Eminence the
Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Dr. Ahmed al-Tayyeb said, “It is necessary for officials
in Europe to be convinced and realize that terrorism does not represent Islam
or Muslims. Muslims are the primary victims of terrorism, our country is a
victim of terrorism and our economy is affected by terrorism, and this
terrorism exists among the followers of every religion and system.”