West Point study reveals details of ISIS recruiting
The Counter-Terrorism Center of the US West
Point Military Academy has released a new study on the "Aleppo
Documents" of ISIS operatives' data, which were recorded after the person
was recruited into the organization.
The new study included an analysis of the
content of 27 data documents of elements who joined the Islamic State, and the
Pentagon obtained the documents, after the control of a number of strongholds
of the terrorist organization in Syria in 2016.
The Counter-Terrorism Center said the Islamic
State took advantage of previous mistakes made by al Qaeda in Iraq and the
Islamic State of Iraq and sought to establish itself as a state within the
territory it controlled in Iraq and Syria.
The Center added that the documents included
the personal data of the fighters of the terrorist organization (name, country,
blood type, etc)as well as personal armament, saying that these documents
reveal the seriousness of everyone within the organization.
The Center considered that the documents
issued by the Office of Human Resources of what was known as the state of
Aleppo, reveal that ISIS was only a "terrorist organization", and did
not succeed in becoming a "state."
Text of documents
The documents included in the study involved a
picture of ISIS logo and slogan and the title of the document. It also
contained data including the name and previous titles that were nicknamed
Daeshi before joining the organization, and the type of weapon and vehicle in
possession.
Some of the documents contained information
about the so-called ISIS states that the ISIS fighter moved into, and the
extent to which he could be allowed to travel outside ISIS strongholds.
The counter-terrorism center of the West Point
military academy said the data in the 27 documents could be used to undermine
ISIS from within, depending on the difference in treatment between foreign
fighters within the organization and local fighters, a point against which
terrorism can be built.
Exploitation of competencies
The documents revealed that ISIS sought to
exploit the military and administrative competencies of the so-called
Da'wishis. The documents contained data on the individual's military service in
his country of origin and whether he had previous experience in combat and war.
ISIS Homeland Security
The documents included information about the
organization's security, which focused on the way it traveled to
ISIS-controlled territory, the person it recommended to join ISIS, and whether
the individual was inside Turkey before Syria or traveled after entering Syria
to Turkey specifically.
According to the Counter-Terrorism Center, the
points contained in the document are aimed at securing individuals within the
organization and detecting intrusion attempts by anti-ISIS actors.