Latest issue of ISIS’s magazine promotes new terror tactics

non-combatants, including during the use of suicide bombs, should not be considered problematic.

Interestingly, the interview with the unnamed leader of ISIS’ Egyptian affiliate, not to be confused with its Sinai affiliate, provides some clarity, and possibly some intentional frankness. After being asked what the reaction is to operations in Egypt, the emir says that the “prevailing trend in many people’s reactions is that of denunciation, as well as disassociation from these operations in specific, and from the war on the Christians and the tawaghit [literally, exceeding boundaries] in general,” adding that a sense of nationalism leads to the sinful condemnation of ISIS attacks. He tells readers, however, that the attacks are successful nonetheless, as Egyptian security and its “crusader masters” react with a heavy hand, driving people away from the state and towards ISIS. Painting the attacks on Christians and churches as strategic successes, and saying that jihad is growing in Egypt while actively encouraging more violence against state targets, the emir calmly presents a calculated, frank narrative on the group’s objectives in Egypt.

Tactical terror
Kamali notes that in its detailed “Just Terror Tactics” section, which serves as a “start-up guide” for lone wolf attackers, ISIS presents a novel use for the internet and promotes several tactics. The group goes into great detail in advising followers to take hostages and slaughter them to “create as much carnage and terror as one can until… enemies storm the location,” but worryingly presents creative means to lure victims in using the internet.

ISIS encourages the posting of physical and online ads, including job posts, properties for rent, and second-hand sales using online mediums such as eBay and Gumtree as a means to identify potential victims before attacking them. The group chillingly advises followers to “space out applicant appointment times to give oneself more time to subdue each target,” essentially presenting a formula to bring victims to their attackers, rather than the opposite.

This advice is deeply concerning and, if followed, could almost certainly have impact by exposing a weakness in these trust-based sites, effectively turning ‘lone wolf’ jihadis into serial killers. It also provides a timely reminder of how jihadis seek to weaponize an array of technologies and platforms in pursuit of their abhorrent ideological objectives.

The group also encourages the purchasing of weapons and guns by any means necessary, highlighting the ease of purchase in the United States, and due to proximity to conflict zones, countries in Europe. For places such as the United Kingdom, where obtaining firearms is more difficult, ISIS encourages vehicle ramming into hunting shops in order to stockpile weapons. ISIS has also dedicated a full-page infographic to its already successful truck attacks, and lists ideal vehicles, how to acquire a vehicle, and ideal targets.

“The fact that the magazine is still available to those who look hard enough online, its simultaneous circulation in ten languages, and the worryingly detailed accounts on how to carry out attacks in ever-evolving fashions, suggests that setbacks in its territorial heartlands of Iraq and Syria have had little impact on its global ambitions,” Kamali concludes.