|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This examination of al-Qaeda's decline since the 9/11 attacks
focuses on the terror organization's mutation and fragmentation. It
looks at its partnership with the local and regional jihadist
networks that played a pivotal role in the Madrid, London, and Fort
Hood attacks, arguing that, although initially successful, such
alliances actually unraveled following both anti-terror policies
and a growing rejection of violent jihadism in the Muslim world.
Challenging conventional theories about al-Qaeda and homegrown
terrorism, the book claims that jihadist attacks are now organized
by overlapping international and regional networks that have become
frustrated in their inability to enforce regime change and their
ideological goals. The discussion spans the war on terror,
analyzing major post 9/11 attacks, the failed jihadist struggle in
Iraq, al-Qaeda's affiliates, and the organization's future
prospects after the death of Osama Bin Laden and the Arab Spring.
This assessment of the future of the jihadist struggle against
Muslim governments and homegrown Islamic terrorism in the West will
be an invaluable resource to anyone studying terrorism and Islamic
extremism.
This book analyses the Islamic State (IS) within a comparative
framework of past Sunni jihadist movements. It argues jihadist
failure to overthrow Muslim apostate states has led to a
progressive radicalization of violent Islamist terror networks.
This outcome has contributed over time to more brutal jihadist
doctrines and tactics contributing to a total war doctrine strategy
targeting Muslim apostate states (the near enemy), non-Muslim
civilizations ( the far enemy) and sectarian minorities (heterodox
Muslims and Christians). These extremist tendencies have been
building for over a generation and have reached their culmination
in the rise and fall of the Islamic State's caliphate. Given past
tendencies the emergence of yet even more radical Sunni jihadist
movement is probable.
This examination of al-Qaeda's decline since the 9/11 attacks
focuses on the terror organization's mutation and fragmentation. It
looks at its partnership with the local and regional jihadist
networks that played a pivotal role in the Madrid, London, and Fort
Hood attacks, arguing that, although initially successful, such
alliances actually unraveled following both anti-terror policies
and a growing rejection of violent jihadism in the Muslim world.
Challenging conventional theories about al-Qaeda and homegrown
terrorism, the book claims that jihadist attacks are now organized
by overlapping international and regional networks that have become
frustrated in their inability to enforce regime change and their
ideological goals. The discussion spans the war on terror,
analyzing major post 9/11 attacks, the failed jihadist struggle in
Iraq, al-Qaeda's affiliates, and the organization's future
prospects after the death of Osama Bin Laden and the Arab Spring.
This assessment of the future of the jihadist struggle against
Muslim governments and homegrown Islamic terrorism in the West will
be an invaluable resource to anyone studying terrorism and Islamic
extremism.
|
|