News Egypt’s Border with Libya, Sudan Ripe for Islamic State...

Egypt’s Border with Libya, Sudan Ripe for Islamic State Expansion

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Egypt may be interested in fighting its own battles, or at least not opening up new international fronts that would stretch its armed forces when it needs them here, but the reality is that the frontline against IS is everywhere. The ingenious use of social mediaby IS has a reach and purpose far greater than simply asking Islamic-minded people to emigrate there; it aims to radicalize locals in other countries to start fighting their un-Islamic governments as well. There are many roads to having other countries join the caliphate, and it’s not only through expanding in the territories around IS' geographical borders, as we are seeing in Libya.

The situation is further complicated once you consider the concept of “bayaa” (swearing fealty) to the caliph in Islam. The bayaa doesn’t require being under the geographical rule of the caliph or being part of his structure; it is a simple act of mutual recognition and loyalty at the price of blood. By swearing bayaa, the people state that they recognize the caliph as their ruler, and therefore he should recognize them as his subjects, and that the caliph’s enemy is their enemy, and their enemies are the caliph’s enemies.

So, for example, if the United States attacks IS, and someone who has sworn bayaa to IS lives in the United States, then by duty, and with no prior corporation or alignment, that someone can commit violent acts against the US government on US soil. Swore bayaa, but live in Ghana? No problem. Attack the local US Embassy, citizens or US-affiliated businesses in Ghana in IS' name, and IS won’t mind or distance itself from the act or deny involvement and most likely will claim responsibility.

What would a group of Egyptian jihad-minded individuals who want to help spread IS to Egypt, but have no actual connection to IS itself, do to achieve this goal? They will quickly realize that three things are required: recruits, money and weapons. With the current state of discontent and disillusionment that young Islamists have in Egypt, coupled with the seductiveness of the caliphate dream, it won’t be hard to find recruits. In the end, it comes down to money to obtain weapons, and since IS will not be sending funds to any ragtag group that claims affiliation, this money will have to be self-raised. How does one raise such an amount of money? Simple: The same three ways IS itself, at its beginning, would acquire money:

Kidnapping: The fastest way to raise money is kidnapping someone and asking for ransom, which is why Iraq suffered an epidemic of kidnapping in the last 10 years. Interestingly, anyone who has been following Egyptian news in the past two months would have noticed the spike in kidnappingscoupled with huge ransoms, especially the kidnapping of children.

Kicking out religious minorities and appropriating their property: This is fairly straight to the point and actually quite common in a country such as Egypt that suffers from sectarianism. While such incidents usually take place in Upper Egypt, in June it took place in Cairo’s underclass neighborhood of Al-Matareya, where an entire Christian familywas forced to leave its home and give up its property — worth millions — to a Muslim family that clashed with it. Why didn’t the police stop this? Because the police facilitated this “conflict resolution” solution in post-June 30 Egypt.

Weapons smuggling: This method gets you both money and weapons, and it’s fairly easy in a country with long, porous borders such as Egypt, particularly when its neighbors are Sudan and Libya, whose governments are not the most functional at the moment. On July 24, 21 Egyptian border guardswere slaughtered at the Farafra checkpoint near the Libyan border. The attackers allegedly left the black IS flag, and a quickly suspended Twitter account called the "Islamic State in Egypt" claimed responsibility. Government critics have been skeptical of the IS Egypt story, contending that it’s the result of an armed clash between the military and smugglers, but there is no reason not to believe that the group may be both.

Keeping in mind that these three methods are already active, where is the best place for IS loyalists to emerge in Egypt? The quick answer is the Sinai Peninsula, but the correct one is Upper Egypt. Upper Egypt already has weapons, hard-line Islamists and very little government control. It’s where Egyptian Islamic Jihad and Gamaa Islamiya emerged back in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when there was no social media and the caliphate was a pipe dream. Imagine how easy it would be now.

For Egypt to prevent such a catastrophe from taking place, its government should take a narrative that is opposed to everything that IS stands for, embracing citizenship rights, liberties and freedoms. Unfortunately, the government is too busy trying to appear as a centrist voice of moderate Islam, and thus cracking down on libertiesand freedom and ignoring citizenship rights (as shown by the Al-Matareyaincident). It is a tactic that was tried and failed in the 1980s and '90s, and that will fail again now. The government supporters’ talking point against those who point this out has been, “At least we are better than Iraq and Syria.” They believe that what the government is doing will stop the emergence of an Egyptian version of IS.

What they fail to understand is that it is already here.

________________________________

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/09/egypt-sudan-libya-border-lack-control-terrorist-expansion.html##ixzz3E9Uwb3m7

?s=96&d=mm&r=g Egypt’s Border with Libya, Sudan Ripe for Islamic State Expansion

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Egypt may be interested in fighting its own battles, or at least not opening up new international fronts that would stretch its armed forces when it needs them here, but the reality is that the frontline against IS is everywhere. The ingenious use of social mediaby IS has a reach and purpose far greater than simply asking Islamic-minded people to emigrate there; it aims to radicalize locals in other countries to start fighting their un-Islamic governments as well. There are many roads to having other countries join the caliphate, and it’s not only through expanding in the territories around IS' geographical borders, as we are seeing in Libya.

The situation is further complicated once you consider the concept of “bayaa” (swearing fealty) to the caliph in Islam. The bayaa doesn’t require being under the geographical rule of the caliph or being part of his structure; it is a simple act of mutual recognition and loyalty at the price of blood. By swearing bayaa, the people state that they recognize the caliph as their ruler, and therefore he should recognize them as his subjects, and that the caliph’s enemy is their enemy, and their enemies are the caliph’s enemies.

So, for example, if the United States attacks IS, and someone who has sworn bayaa to IS lives in the United States, then by duty, and with no prior corporation or alignment, that someone can commit violent acts against the US government on US soil. Swore bayaa, but live in Ghana? No problem. Attack the local US Embassy, citizens or US-affiliated businesses in Ghana in IS' name, and IS won’t mind or distance itself from the act or deny involvement and most likely will claim responsibility.

What would a group of Egyptian jihad-minded individuals who want to help spread IS to Egypt, but have no actual connection to IS itself, do to achieve this goal? They will quickly realize that three things are required: recruits, money and weapons. With the current state of discontent and disillusionment that young Islamists have in Egypt, coupled with the seductiveness of the caliphate dream, it won’t be hard to find recruits. In the end, it comes down to money to obtain weapons, and since IS will not be sending funds to any ragtag group that claims affiliation, this money will have to be self-raised. How does one raise such an amount of money? Simple: The same three ways IS itself, at its beginning, would acquire money:

Kidnapping: The fastest way to raise money is kidnapping someone and asking for ransom, which is why Iraq suffered an epidemic of kidnapping in the last 10 years. Interestingly, anyone who has been following Egyptian news in the past two months would have noticed the spike in kidnappingscoupled with huge ransoms, especially the kidnapping of children.

Kicking out religious minorities and appropriating their property: This is fairly straight to the point and actually quite common in a country such as Egypt that suffers from sectarianism. While such incidents usually take place in Upper Egypt, in June it took place in Cairo’s underclass neighborhood of Al-Matareya, where an entire Christian familywas forced to leave its home and give up its property — worth millions — to a Muslim family that clashed with it. Why didn’t the police stop this? Because the police facilitated this “conflict resolution” solution in post-June 30 Egypt.

Weapons smuggling: This method gets you both money and weapons, and it’s fairly easy in a country with long, porous borders such as Egypt, particularly when its neighbors are Sudan and Libya, whose governments are not the most functional at the moment. On July 24, 21 Egyptian border guardswere slaughtered at the Farafra checkpoint near the Libyan border. The attackers allegedly left the black IS flag, and a quickly suspended Twitter account called the "Islamic State in Egypt" claimed responsibility. Government critics have been skeptical of the IS Egypt story, contending that it’s the result of an armed clash between the military and smugglers, but there is no reason not to believe that the group may be both.

Keeping in mind that these three methods are already active, where is the best place for IS loyalists to emerge in Egypt? The quick answer is the Sinai Peninsula, but the correct one is Upper Egypt. Upper Egypt already has weapons, hard-line Islamists and very little government control. It’s where Egyptian Islamic Jihad and Gamaa Islamiya emerged back in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when there was no social media and the caliphate was a pipe dream. Imagine how easy it would be now.

For Egypt to prevent such a catastrophe from taking place, its government should take a narrative that is opposed to everything that IS stands for, embracing citizenship rights, liberties and freedoms. Unfortunately, the government is too busy trying to appear as a centrist voice of moderate Islam, and thus cracking down on libertiesand freedom and ignoring citizenship rights (as shown by the Al-Matareyaincident). It is a tactic that was tried and failed in the 1980s and '90s, and that will fail again now. The government supporters’ talking point against those who point this out has been, “At least we are better than Iraq and Syria.” They believe that what the government is doing will stop the emergence of an Egyptian version of IS.

What they fail to understand is that it is already here.

________________________________

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/09/egypt-sudan-libya-border-lack-control-terrorist-expansion.html##ixzz3E9Uwb3m7