Daesh future amid pruning, expanding following leader death
The killing
of the leader and founder of Daesh, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, raised several
questions regarding the future of the organization and its members. A research
by Colin P. Clarke at RAND traced the closest scenarios in this regard.
Although
there may be many consequences for Daesh as an organization over the next
several months, according to the report, there is one potential international
consequence worth considering.
The death of
Baghdadi will likely weaken the organization's command and control network and
cause some of its affiliates to either assert more independence or retreat into
the localized conflicts they were previously engaged in.
Baghdadi was
radicalized after the U.S. invasion of Iraq in March 2003, and his religious
training set him apart right away as an individual who would have an important
future in the jihadi movement. Baghdadi was captured by U.S. forces and
transferred to the famous “jihadi university” of Camp Bucca, the U.S. detention
center in Iraq that housed some of the Iraq War's most radical captives, in
February 2004.
In the camp,
as the journalist Joby Warrick has observed, the young Baghdadi learned quickly
that his religious and academic training gave him some degree of credibility,
and he was able to interpret and translate sharia to make it more accessible to
aspiring jihadis. In fact, he was considered so bookish that the Americans
released him from prison in December 2004.
While in
prison, though, the medical team at Camp Bucca took cheek swabs and collected
his DNA, a move that would prove particularly useful after the raid that killed
him over the weekend.
What happens
next to Daesh could closely mirror the trajectory of al Qaeda following the
killing of Osama bin Laden in May 2011. After his death, bin Laden's longtime
deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, was appointed to lead al Qaeda into its next phase.
Zawahiri lacked both charisma and the ability to offer a unifying presence to
keep the group's transnational network together.
As with the
case of al Qaeda, such splits can lead affiliates in far-flung locales to
pursue more parochial interests and rebuff advice from central leadership holed
up thousands of miles away. During the height of the Iraq War in the mid-2000s,
for example, al Qaeda in Iraq chieftain Abu Musab al-Zarqawi famously shrugged
off the admonition from Zawahiri to tone down his group's sectarianism. And
thus the Islamic State was born from the split between al Qaeda in Iraq and its
parent organization, the report further said.
Baghdadi's
death could also lead to an uptick in Islamic State-inspired attacks in the
near term, primarily as a reaction to the news that he was killed by U.S.
special operations forces. But over the longer term, the death of Baghdadi
could have an attenuating effect on the group's inspirational pull, given the
way that Baghdadi specifically resonated with legions of supporters throughout
the West and the broader Islamic world.
Previous
announcements of his death never had this effect, but mostly because these
rumors were squashed relatively soon after they spread.