Jump to content

Is This The First Large Scale Attack By Them Outside Their Land?


Recommended Posts

Posted

ninna paris dhani midha valle responsibility teesukunnaru kadha....so ippati varaku individual ga westerners ni kidnap chesi champevallu ippudu direct country lo ki enter ayyaru...

 

looks like airopa daathithe first target manadhe anukunta

Posted

thommidhi padhakundu tharavatha idhey peddhadi pachima desallo.. middle east and south east lo ilaantivi every month untaayi anuko

Posted

thommidhi padhakundu tharavatha idhey peddhadi pachima desallo.. middle east and south east lo ilaantivi every month untaayi anuko

asalu WW2 tarvatha france lo intha pedda attak idhe anta.....

 

ee news chudu

 

 

Islamic State 'goes global' with Paris attacks

Isis is following al-Qaida’s tactics, adopting ‘direct action’ to terrorise the west and inspire sympathisers

 
 
 
 
 
Play Video
Play
Mute
 
Current Time0:00
/
Duration Time0:50
Loaded: 0%
 
Progress: 0%
Fullscreen
 
French police raid Bataclan concert hall on Friday evening

Jason Burke

 

Saturday 14 November 2015 09.43 EST Last modified on Saturday 14 November 201510.11 EST

The downing of the Metrojet Airbus full of Russian holidaymakers over Egypt two weeks ago – probably the work of an Islamic State affiliate there – indicated an evolution in the group’s strategic thinking. A local target hit by a local group for local reasons, it was not definitive proof of a new international strategy.

Events in Paris confirm that Isis has “gone global”.

In this, Isis is following al-Qaida, which it split almost three years ago. Al-Qaidawanted to unite the ummah, the world’s Muslims, in order to overturn “corrupt, hypocrite” regimes, primarily in the Middle East. This was a first step to reclaiming the lost power and glory of the great medieval Muslim empires and refounding the caliphate. A local strategy – working with a multitude individual groups around the Islamic world – brought little success so al-Qaida began targeting the west, and specifically the US.

A steady escalation led to the 9/11 attacks. There were further strikes, in Europe and elsewhere, as a wave of radicalisation in part prompted by the war in Iraq spurred support. But the violence fell away towards the end of the decade as successive Muslim populations turned away from the group and counter-measures wore it down.

Now Isis appear to be following a similar trajectory. A global element has now been added to a local campaign to grab and hold territory that, unlike al-Qaida’s, has been relatively successful. There was no call to local Muslims in France to rise up and strike individually in so-called “lone wolf” attacks in the Isis claim of responsibility on Saturday. This indirect incitement strategy has apparently been replaced by one of direct action that the group no doubt believe will be more effective.

Isis, like all such groups, uses violence purposefully. Its attacks are not random nor indiscriminate. They have three aims: to terrorise, mobilise and polarise. Prompting widespread and irrational fear – terror – in target populations means Isis may force the leaders to make decisions that they would not otherwise have made, such as stopping a bombing campaign in Syria, for example.

The second aim is to inspire existing supporters and attract new ones.

The third aim is to polarise, and is the most important. In Iraq and Syria, Isis has ruthlessly levered any internal tension within a community – sectarian, tribal, ethnic, economic – to open a space it can exploit. It knows that a community divided, where hate is nourished by mutual fear, is a fertile recruiting ground.

In February this year, in a chilling editorial in its propaganda magazine, Dabiq, Isis laid out its own strategy to eliminate what the writer, or writers, called “the grey zone”.

This was, Isis said, what lay between belief and unbelief, good and evil, the righteous and the damned. It was home, too, to all those who had yet to commit to the forces of either side.

The grey zone, Isis claimed, had been “critically endangered [since] the blessed operations of September 11th”, as “these operations showed the world” the two camps that mankind must choose between.

Over the years, since successive violent acts had narrowed the grey zone to the point where by the end of 2014 “the time had come for another event to ... bring division to the world and destroy the grey zone everywhere”.

This event, apparently, was the attack on the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris in January 2015. It did not succeed in polarising French society in the way hoped. Foiled once, the group tried again, with the horrific results we saw on Friday night. There can be little doubt that the new global
campaign will continue until Isis is eliminated – which currently appears a distant prospect – or the group achieves its aims, which is an unthinkable one.

Posted

 

asalu WW2 tarvatha france lo intha pedda attak idhe anta.....

 

ee news chudu

 

 

Islamic State 'goes global' with Paris attacks

Isis is following al-Qaida’s tactics, adopting ‘direct action’ to terrorise the west and inspire sympathisers

 
 
 
 
 
Play Video
Play
Mute
 
Current Time0:00
/
Duration Time0:50
Loaded: 0%
 
Progress: 0%
Fullscreen
 
French police raid Bataclan concert hall on Friday evening

Jason Burke

 

Saturday 14 November 2015 09.43 EST Last modified on Saturday 14 November 201510.11 EST

The downing of the Metrojet Airbus full of Russian holidaymakers over Egypt two weeks ago – probably the work of an Islamic State affiliate there – indicated an evolution in the group’s strategic thinking. A local target hit by a local group for local reasons, it was not definitive proof of a new international strategy.

Events in Paris confirm that Isis has “gone global”.

In this, Isis is following al-Qaida, which it split almost three years ago. Al-Qaidawanted to unite the ummah, the world’s Muslims, in order to overturn “corrupt, hypocrite” regimes, primarily in the Middle East. This was a first step to reclaiming the lost power and glory of the great medieval Muslim empires and refounding the caliphate. A local strategy – working with a multitude individual groups around the Islamic world – brought little success so al-Qaida began targeting the west, and specifically the US.

A steady escalation led to the 9/11 attacks. There were further strikes, in Europe and elsewhere, as a wave of radicalisation in part prompted by the war in Iraq spurred support. But the violence fell away towards the end of the decade as successive Muslim populations turned away from the group and counter-measures wore it down.

Now Isis appear to be following a similar trajectory. A global element has now been added to a local campaign to grab and hold territory that, unlike al-Qaida’s, has been relatively successful. There was no call to local Muslims in France to rise up and strike individually in so-called “lone wolf” attacks in the Isis claim of responsibility on Saturday. This indirect incitement strategy has apparently been replaced by one of direct action that the group no doubt believe will be more effective.

Isis, like all such groups, uses violence purposefully. Its attacks are not random nor indiscriminate. They have three aims: to terrorise, mobilise and polarise. Prompting widespread and irrational fear – terror – in target populations means Isis may force the leaders to make decisions that they would not otherwise have made, such as stopping a bombing campaign in Syria, for example.

The second aim is to inspire existing supporters and attract new ones.

The third aim is to polarise, and is the most important. In Iraq and Syria, Isis has ruthlessly levered any internal tension within a community – sectarian, tribal, ethnic, economic – to open a space it can exploit. It knows that a community divided, where hate is nourished by mutual fear, is a fertile recruiting ground.

In February this year, in a chilling editorial in its propaganda magazine, Dabiq, Isis laid out its own strategy to eliminate what the writer, or writers, called “the grey zone”.

This was, Isis said, what lay between belief and unbelief, good and evil, the righteous and the damned. It was home, too, to all those who had yet to commit to the forces of either side.

The grey zone, Isis claimed, had been “critically endangered [since] the blessed operations of September 11th”, as “these operations showed the world” the two camps that mankind must choose between.

Over the years, since successive violent acts had narrowed the grey zone to the point where by the end of 2014 “the time had come for another event to ... bring division to the world and destroy the grey zone everywhere”.

This event, apparently, was the attack on the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris in January 2015. It did not succeed in polarising French society in the way hoped. Foiled once, the group tried again, with the horrific results we saw on Friday night. There can be little doubt that the new global
campaign will continue until Isis is eliminated – which currently appears a distant prospect – or the group achieves its aims, which is an unthinkable one.

 

next india loney endhukantey all westren countries baaga tight chesthaaru intelligence and security so valla unikini chaatukodaaniki weak borders undey mana laanti desam meedha padathaaru :3D_Smiles_38:
 

Posted

next india loney endhukantey all westren countries baaga tight chesthaaru intelligence and security so valla unikini chaatukodaaniki weak borders undey mana laanti desam meedha padathaaru :3D_Smiles_38:
 

 

 

mana  borders weak endhuku.. inida lo kuda baga strick chesaru kada

Posted

vamerika vaadu ippatikanna vaadi political intrests in middle east pakkana petti peace loving bros isis ni mattu pettali ledhantey long term lo bokka pedathaaru

Posted

mana  borders weak endhuku.. inida lo kuda baga strick chesaru kada

 

:3D_Smiles:

Posted

vamerika vaadu ippatikanna vaadi political intrests in middle east pakkana petti peace loving bros isis ni mattu pettali ledhantey long term lo bokka pedathaaru


Nice joke... aa eyesys ni poshistonde US vadu...
Posted

Hyd lo madhya toorpu paradeseeyulu chaduvu kosam vacchi baga settle autunnaru anta ga

Posted

ninna paris dhani midha valle responsibility teesukunnaru kadha....so ippati varaku individual ga westerners ni kidnap chesi champevallu ippudu direct country lo ki enter ayyaru...

 

looks like airopa daathithe first target manadhe anukunta

 

airopa lo antunnava? madrid train bombing ani choodu untadi. antaku mundu munich olympics lo jewish athletes/coaches ni champaru.

 

world wide ante, sep 11 veetanniti kanna ekkuva

Posted

airopa lo antunnava? madrid train bombing ani choodu untadi. antaku mundu munich olympics lo jewish athletes/coaches ni champaru.

 

world wide ante, sep 11 veetanniti kanna ekkuva

iam not telling this is the largest attack.....nenu anedhi western countries daatithe asia lo soft target manahde kadha excluding all islamic republics..?

Posted

iam not telling this is the largest attack.....nenu anedhi western countries daatithe asia lo soft target manahde kadha excluding all islamic republics..?

 

ok, technically correct, kani ippudu airopa, india renditi meeda chese scene ledu, dabbulu levu vallaki

Posted

ok, technically correct, kani ippudu airopa, india renditi meeda chese scene ledu, dabbulu levu vallaki

iran ni pakkana pedithe migithadhi antha vallake kadha  ...turukodiki dabbulu em takkuva cheppu gallery_8818_6_385253.gif?1367349476

Posted

India is safe , post 2008 manavallu baagane strict measures teesukuntunnaru anukuntunna bye1  

×
×
  • Create New...