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Sunday, 25 October 2015
ISIS’ Brutality In Videos Is “Terrorist Clickbait”
An Islamic State video released Tuesday was the most savage to date,
underscoring the group's pattern of increasingly violent propagandahe Islamic State has beheaded its captives and burned them alive. It’s used child soldiers to shoot people at point blank range and has slaughtered Christians en masse. It’s forced some prisoners to dig their own graves. But after ten months of highly-choreographed killings, videos ISIS
released this week indicate an even greater escalation. On Tuesday, the
terror group released a video in which ISIS fighters in Iraq incinerate, drown and blow up their prisoners. On
Thursday, the group released its latest video, showing for the first
time young men who appeared to be teenagers participating in a mass
beheading. “This is sadism at a clinical level,” John Horgan, a psychologist and
terrorism researcher at Georgia State University, tells Vocativ. “It’s
material I would have previously ascribed to child pornographers or
serial killers.” In one scene of the video released on Tuesday, ISIS fighters force
prisoners into a car, strapping their wrists to the handles inside,
before it is hit with a rocket-propelled grenade. The captives can be
heard screaming as the vehicle burns. Seven other men perish
once explosives are placed around their necks and detonated. A final
clip reveals five men locked in a black cage equipped with cameras that
film them flailing and thrashing underwater before finally succumbing. “It’s terrorist clickbait,” says Horgan. “And they know we’ll walk right into it, time and time again.” But while ISIS releases these videos with a mind to please its many
followers, their horror-film approach could backfire with anyone they’re
hoping to recruit.
Arie Kruglanski, a psychology professor at the University
of Maryland, College, Park, noted that ISIS’ punitive videos put the
group on ideologically shaky ground among some Islamic militants. In a
recent research project, Kruglanski says he examined the perceptions
militants held of ISIS, al-Qaeda and Jemmah Islamiyah, a
Southeast Asian terror group. While al-Qaeda was viewed as adhering to
Islamic doctrine, those studied perceived ISIS to be powerful and cruel,
but less devout Muslims.
“The brutalities of ISIS could backfire
and they could be perceived as espousing a flawed impure ideology that
is contrary to the teachings of Islam,” Kruglanski tells Vocativ. “This is a potential weakness and should be used in counter-radicalization and in counter-messaging against them.”
The Islamic State has demonstrated its savvy with its followers
during controversial moments already. When the group captured Jordanian
pilot Muath al-Kaseasbeh late last year, it reached out on social media for ideas on how to kill him. After ISIS filmed him being burned alive inside a cage, the group circulated talking points justifying its method. Since ISIS first released its video depicting the death of James
Foley, an American journalist, last August, it has relied on
increasingly gruesome forms of execution to provoke, instill fear and
also appeal to possible new members. After beheading prisoners one or
two at a time, the group released a video in November that showed them
killing 16 Syrian soldiers at once. In January, a video depicted a
little boy shooting a Russian soldier through the back of the head. Last
month, the group forced one prisoner to dig his own grave before
decapitating him.
The fear of irrelevance or viewer fatigue could also be
factors behind ISIS’ sensational displays of violence, says Horgan. Yet
the militant group could risk undermining its own propaganda, terrorism
experts tell Vocativ.
“The conventional wisdom is that ISIS is
almost unstoppable because it uses violence in such a brutal manner and
because it’s been so effective in disseminating its propaganda,” says
Max Abrahms, a professor of political science at Northeastern
University. “But they also tend to be counterproductive across all sorts of dimensions.”
One example, says Abrahms, is the fact the Islamic State’s
execution videos have galvanized military forces around the world to
fight them. Foley’s execution spurred the United States into confronting
the terror group. Similarly, Jordan had remained relatively lukewarm to
the threat ISIS posed until the militants burned al-Kaseasbeh
alive. Following the execution of 21 Coptic Christians later that
month, Egypt’s president ordered air strikes on the Libyan town believed
to be the scene of their murder, and called for Arab forces to join against the Islamic State.
“Every single country targeted by ISIS has been less
politically compliant and more militarily mobilized,” Abrahms says,
citing a recent figure that 10,000 Islamic State fighters have been
killed in Iraq and Syria by coalition forces.
At the same time, the Islamic State and its barbarity
continues to attract new loyalists throughout North Africa and Asia. In
just the last week, militants in Tunisia and the Caucuses joined the terror group’s spreading network. To keep attracting their ilk, it is inevitable that more violent execution videos will follow, says Horgan.
“They’ll be banking on the predictability of our behavior,” he said.
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