The Ideology of The Islamic State PDF
The Ideology of The Islamic State PDF
The Ideology of The Islamic State PDF
Table of Contents
1
Acknowledgements
The Author
Introduction
Part I: Doctrines
17
25
31
36 Conclusion
38 Appendix: The Islamic States Creed and Path
44 About the Project on U.S. Relations
with the Islamic World
45 The Center for Middle East Policy
Acknowledgements
The Author
Most primary texts cited are drawn from the Internet, and all links were functional as of December
2014. I have maintained an archive of all primary
sources in the event that they do not last.
Arabic is fully transliterated in the footnotes but
not in the main text.
Introduction
If one wants to get to know the program of the [Islamic] State,
its politics, and its legal opinions, one ought to consult its leaders,
its statements, its public addresses, its own sources
Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, official spokesman of the Islamic State, May 21, 20121
1.
5. For a comprehensive examination of the Islamic States history see Charles Lister, Profiling the Islamic State, Brookings
Doha Center Analysis AnalysisPaper Number 13, November 2014, http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Research/Files/Reports/2014/11/profiling%20islamic%20state%20lister/en_web_lister.pdf.
Part I
Doctrines
Jihadi-Salafism
The Islamic State, like al-Qaeda, identifies with a
movement in Islamic political thought known as
Jihadi-Salafism, or jihadism for short. The groups
leaders explicitly adhere to this movement. For example, in a 2007 audio address, then-Islamic State
leader Abu Umar al-Baghdadi appealed to all
Sunnis, and to the young men of Jihadi-Salafism
(al-Salafiyya al-Jihadiyya) in particular, across the
entire world.7 In the same year, his deputy described the Islamic States fighters as part of the
current of Jihadi-Salafism.8
These were not idle words. Jihadi-Salafism is a distinct ideological movement in Sunni Islam. It encompasses a global network of scholars, websites,
media outlets, and, most recently, countless supporters on social media. The movement is predicated
on an extremist and minoritarian reading of Islamic
scripture that is also textually rigorous, deeply rooted
in a premodern theological tradition, and extensively
elaborated by a recognized cadre of religious authorities. Only recently has jihadi scholarship, along with
the formation of the jihadi school, been the subject
of serious academic inquiry.9
6. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Wa-yab llh ill an yutimm nrahu, Muassasat al-Furqn, 21 July 2012.
Transcript: https://ia601207.us.archive.org/14/items/2b-bkr-bghdd/143393.pdf.
7. Ab Umar al-Baghdd, Wa-in tantah fa-huwa khayr lakum, Muassasat al-Furqn, 8 July 2007.
Transcript in Majm, 2635.
8. Ab H.amza al-Muhjir, Qul mt bi-ghayz.ikum, Muassasat al-Furqn, 5 May 2007. Transcript in Majm, 147152.
9. See, for example, Daniel Lav, Radical Islam and the Revival of Medieval Theology (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2012), and Joas Wagemakers, A Quietist Jihadi: The Ideology and Influence of Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012).
The Muslim Brotherhood championed the restoration of the caliphate as the ideal system of
government for the Islamic world, a popular
theme in the earlier 20th century. With the dissolution of the Ottoman Caliphate in 1924, various Muslim leaders and groups across the world,
from North Africa to Arabia to Southeast Asia,
called for the reestablishment of the caliphate.10
Yet the Muslim Brotherhoods emphasis on the
caliphate is particularly significant, as the earliest
jihadi ideologues and groups emerged as radical
splinters from the Brotherhood. Jihadi ambitions
for reviving the caliphate would seem to derive
from the Brotherhoods.
The Brotherhoods founder spoke at length
of the caliphate. In one instance he remarked:
Islam requires that the Muslim community
unite around one leader or one head, the head
of the Islamic State, and it forbids the Muslim community from being divided among
states11 Elsewhere Banna commented: The
Muslim Brotherhood puts the idea of the caliphate and work to restore it at the forefront of
its plans.12
Yet in practice, as one historian has noted, the
Brotherhood evinced a relative indifference to
actually restoring the caliphate.13 Building a caliphate was more of a long-term goal than an immediate objective. Banna himself acknowledged
that achieving this goal would require significant
legwork, including convening conferences and
forming political parties and alliances across the
Islamic world. Nonetheless, idealistic talk would
continue to feature in Brotherhood statements,
and occasionally still comes out. As recently as
2012, the Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Guide
spoke of reestablishing the Muslim State.14
10. Madawi Al-Rasheed, Carool Kersten, and Marat Shterin, The Caliphate: Nostalgic Memory and Contemporary Visions,
in Demystifying the Caliphate, ed. Al-Rasheed, et al (London: Hurst & Co., 2013), 130.
11. Quoted in Muh.ammad Abd al-Qdir Ab Fris, al-Niz.m al-sisys f l-Islm (Jordan: n.p., 1980), 169.
12. H.asan al-Bann, Majmat rasil al-imm al-shahd H.asan al-Bann (Beirut: Dr al-Andalus, 1965), 284285.
13. Richard Mitchell, The Society of the Muslim Brothers (London: Oxford University Press, 1969), 235.
14. Muh.ammad Isml and Muh.ammad H.ajjj, Bad: al-khilfa al-rshida wa-ih.y dawlat al-Islm wal-shara hadaf al-Ikhwn,
al-Yawm al-Sbi, 29 December 2011, http://www.youm7.com/news/newsprint?newid=565958.
15. For more on Salafism see Bernard Haykel, On the Nature of Salafi Thought and Action, in Global Salafism: Islams New
Religious Movement, ed. Roel Meijer (London: Hurst, 2009). The term Salaf derives from al-salaf al-s.lih., meaning
the venerable ancestors of the first generations of Islam whom Salafis seek to emulate.
16. Salafis are by no means the only Sunni Muslims to show hostility toward the Shia in Islamic history. Salafis, however,
have made anti-Shiism a central component of their identity.
17. George S. Rentz, The Birth of the Islamic Reform Movement in Saudi Arabia (London: Arabian Publishing, 2004), 227.
18. Yitzhak Nakash, The Shiis of Iraq (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), 28.
19. Guido Steinberg, Jihadi-Salafism and the Shiis: Remarks about the Intellectual Roots of Anti-Shiism, in Global Salafism, 114115.
20. It should be pointed out that many if not most Salafis today are politically quietist, arguing that all forms of overt political
organization and action, let alone violence, are forbiddenand moreover [that] obedience to Muslim rulerseven unjust
onesis religiously mandated. See Haykel, On the Nature of Salafi Thought and Action, 4850.
21. See, for example, Messages to the World: The Statements of Osama Bin Laden, trans. Bruce Lawrence (New York:
Verso, 2005), 121.
22. See Wagemakers, A Quietest Jihadi, and Between Purity and Pragmatism? Abu Basir al-Tartusis Nuanced Radicalism, in
Jihadi Thought and Ideology, ed. Rdiger Lohlker and Tamara Abu-Hamdeh (Berlin: Logos Verlag, 2014), 1636. On jihadi
scholars role in set[ting] the intellectual tone of the movement see Lav, Radical Islam, 23, 170171, and passim.
23. Lav, Radical Islam, 168172.
10
24. See Majm, passim. Some of the more commonly cited Wahhabi authorities are Muh.ammad ibn Abd al-Wahhb himself,
H.amad ibn Atq (d. 1884), and Abd al-Rah.mn ibn Sad (d. 1956).
25. Turk al-Binal, al-Lafz. al-sn f tarjamat al-Adnn, 26 May 2014, 7, http://www.gulfup.com/?ziPYqa.
26. The Islamic State, Vice News, August 2014, https://news.vice.com/show/the-islamic-state.
27. See, for example, the booklet al-T.ght. , Maktabat al-Himma, 2013, https://archive.org/download/Hima-Library/taghout_web.pdf, which is an assemblage of quotations from Muh.ammad ibn Abd al-Wahhb, Abdallh Ab But.ayn (d. 1865),
Sulaymn ibn Suh.mn (d. 1930), and Abd al-Rah.mn ibn Qsim (d. 1972).
28. See Majm, 7075, 15, 82, 14, 3738, and 60.
29. The classic formulation of such defensive jihad was given by the Egyptian Muh.ammad Abd al-Salm Faraj (d. 1982), translated in Johannes J.G. Jansen, The Neglected Duty: The Creed of Sadats Assassins and Islamic Resurgence in the Middle
East (New York: MacMillan, 1986).
30. Ab Umar al-Baghdd, Wad Allh, Muassasat al-Furqn, 22 September 2008. Transcript in Majm, 7682.
31. Baghdd, Qul inn al bayyina min Rabb, Muassasat al-Furqn, 13 March 2007. Transcript in Majm, 1216.
32. On the traditional classifications of offensive jihad (jihd al-t. alab) and defensive jihad (jihd al-daf) see Patricia Crone,
Gods Rule: Government and Islam (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004), 297298 and 363373.
33. Ab Umar al-Baghdd, Adhilla al l-muminn aizza al l-kfirn, Muassasat al-Furqn, 22 December 2007. Transcript in
Majm, 5058. The scholar in question is a Mauritanian named Muh.ammad al-Amn al-Shinqt. (d. 1973).
34. Baghdd, Fa-amm l-zabad fa-yadhhab jufan, Muassasat al-Furqn, 4 December 2007. Transcript in Majm, 4350.
11
a Shiite crescent extending from Tehran to Beirut.35 The Islamic Republic of Iran, Hezbollah
in Lebanon, and the Asad regime in Syria all form
part of this crescent. Irans leaders are aiming to
turn Iraq into a Shiite state, and the United States
is complicit in their plan.36 According to the Islamic State, Iraqs recent historical transition from
a Sunni to a Shiite majority is evidence of a creeping Shiitization. As Abu Umar al-Baghdadi once
asserted, it was only in the last 50 to 70 years that
Sunni conversion to Shiism began.37 Before then,
Iraq was a Sunni country.38
Separately, al-Qaeda and the Islamic State equally
emphasize the need to restore the caliphate, though
they are at odds as to whether the Islamic State has
actually done this.
35. Baghdd, al-Izz bi-s.iynat al-dn wa-l-ird., Muassasat al-Furqn, July 8, 2009. Transcript in Majm, 104112.
36. Ibid.
37. Baghdd, al-Dn al-nas.h.a, Muassasat al-Furqn, 12 February 2008. Transcript in Majm, 5964.
38. Conversion to Shiism in Iraq is more accurately dated to the later 19th and earlier 20th centuries. See Yitzhak Nakash,
The Shiites of Iraq (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), 25.
39. For his biography see Ab Usma al-Gharb, Minnat al-Al bi-thabat shaykhin Turk al-Binal, 2013, https://archive.org/
download/minato.alali001/minato.alali001.pdf.
40. On this rumor see the Tweet from @wikibaghdadi, Twitter Post, 13November 2014, https://twitter.com/wikibaghdady/status/532890372318310401.
41. Turk al-Binal, Shaykh l-asbaq, 31 May 2014, 912, http://www.gulfup.com/?teBfhp. The Yemeni scholar in question is
Muh.ammad ibn Isml al-S.ann (d. 1768),; for further discussion see Bernard Haykel, al-Amr, Muh.ammad b. Isml,
in The Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. Gudrun Krmer, et al, Brill Online, 2014.
12
Part II
Development
13
Zarqawis Path
Born in Jordan in 1966, Ahmad Fadil Nazzal alKhalayila, better known as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
received little formal secular or religious education.43 He nonetheless became a key exponent of
jihadism in Jordan.
In the late 1980s Zarqawi left Jordan to participate
in the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan, where he
42. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Wa-bashshir al-muminn, Muassasat al-Furqn, 9 April2013. Transcript: http://ia600606.us.archive.
org/15/items/w_bsher_1/tcJN8J.pdf.
43. For more on Zarqws life see Jean-Pierre Milelli, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Jihad in Mesopotamia, in Al Qaeda in Its Own
Words, ed. Gilles Kepel and Jean-Pierre Milelli (Cambridge: The Belknap Press, 2008), 237250, and Bruce Riedel, The
Search for Al Qaeda (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2008), 85115.
44. On this group, see Joas Wagemakers, A Terrorist Organization that Never Was: The Jordanian Bayat al-Imam Group,
The Middle East Journal, vol. 68, no. 1, 2014.
45. For more on Zarqws relationship with al-Qaeda during this period see Nelly Lahoud, Metamorphosis: From al-Tawhid
wa-al-Jihad to Dawlat al-Khilafa (20032014), in The Group That Calls Itself a State: Understanding the Evolution and
Challenges of the Islamic State, Combating Terrorism Center, December 2014, 912.
46. Sayf al-Adl, Tajribat ma Ab Mus.ab al-Zarqw, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, May 2005,http://www.tawhed.ws/
dl?i=ttofom6f, 8.
47. Ab Muh.ammad al-Maqdis, al-Zarqw: ml wa-lm, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, July/August 2004,
http://www.tawhed.ws/dl?i=dtwiam56, 8.
14
Zarqawis Anti-Shiism
Zarqawi articulated a strategy of deliberately targeting the Iraqi Shiite community with the intention
of stoking civil war. In a February 2004 letter to
the al-Qaeda leadership, later intercepted by U.S.
forces, Zarqawi attacked the Shia in both theological and political terms, and his arguments remain
a staple of the Islamic States ideology.48 In a February 2012 audio statement, Abu Muhammad alAdnani referred his listeners to Zarqawis lectures
as the definitive word on the Shia.49
Addressing the Shia through a theological lens,
Zarqawi cited a number of classical Sunni Muslim
authorities, including Ibn Taymiyya, to make the
case that the Shia are beyond the bounds of Islam.
He furthermore attributed to them a sinister and
duplicitous role in Islamic history. For example, he
called the Safavid dynasty, the 16th-17th-century
Iranian dynasty that converted Iran to Shiism, a
dagger that stabbed Islam and the Muslims in the
back, and he pointed to a Shiite role in the Mongol sacking of Baghdad in 1258.50 In the present
era, he went on, this age-old Shiite deceit takes
the form of a bid for regional hegemony, through
an attempt to create a Shiite super-state across the
Middle East. Their aspirations are expanding by
the day to create a Shiite state extending from Iran
48. Ab Mus.ab al-Zarqw, Risla min Ab Mus.ab al-Zarqw il l-shaykh Usma ibn Ldin, 15 February 2004, in Kalimt
mud. a, Shabakat al-Burq al-Islmiyya, June 2006, 5876, https://archive.org/download/fgfrt/1a.pdf. Translated excerpts
from the letter can be found in Al Qaeda in Its Own Words, 251267. Kalimt mud. a is a more than 600-page compilation
of Zarqws writings and transcribed speeches.
49. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, al-Irq al-Irq y ahl al-sunna, Muassasat al-Furqn, 24 February 2012. Transcript:
https://archive.org/download/nokbah672/iraq2012.pdf.
50. Zarqw, Risla, 6465.
51. Ibid., 64.
52. Ibid., 62, 74. The translation is in Bernard Haykel, Al-Qaida and Shiism, in Fault Lines in Global Jihad, ed. Assaf Moghadam
and Brian Fishman (London: Routledge, 2011), 194.
53. Zarqw, Risla, 62.
54. Ibid., 73. Translation in Haykel, Al-Qaida and Shiism, 194.
55. Ayman al-Z.awhir, [Letter to Zarqw,] 16 July 2005, 10, https://www.ctc.usma.edu/v2/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/
Zawahiris-Letter-to-Zarqawi-Original.pdf.
15
56. Sayf al-Adl, Tajribat, 20. Adls text does not state whether this conversation with Zarqw in Iran took place in late 2001
or early 2002.
57. Ibid., 22.
58. For more on this letter see William McCants, State of Confusion: ISISs Strategy and How to Counter It, Foreign Affairs,
10 September 2014, http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/141976/william-mccants/state-of-confusion.
59. Z.awhir, [Letter to Zarqw,] 4.
60. At. iyyat Allh al-Lb, [Letter to Zarqw,] 12 December 2005, https://www.ctc.usma.edu/v2/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/
Atiyahs-Letter-to-Zarqawi-Original.pdf., 6.
61. See Kalimt mud. a, 102, 133, 141, 145, 152, 175, and 523.
62. Ab Mud.ab al-Zarqw, Min Ab Mus.ab al-Zarqw li-kalb al-Urdunn Abdallh al-Thn, 15 May 2004, in Kalimt mud. a,
102.
63. Zarqw, al-Mawqif al-shar min h.ukmat Karzy al-Irq, 23 July 2004, in Kalimt mud. a, 141.
64. Zarqw, Kalimat al-shaykh Ab Mus.ab abr shart. Riyh. al-nas. r, 8 August 2004. Transcript in Kalimt mud. a, 149152.
65. Zarqw, Bayn al-baya li-Tanz.m al-Qida bi-qiydat al-shaykh Usma ibn Ldin, 17 October 2004. Transcript in Kalimt
mud. a, 174176.
16
17
20062013 witnessed the establishment of the abortive Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), a group that both
Western and regional media referred to as al-Qaeda
in Iraq. While there were indeed links between alQaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan and the fledgling Islamic State, the latter was from the beginning
never fully subordinate to al-Qaeda. Significantly,
the central al-Qaeda leadership showed only minimal enthusiasm for the establishment of the state
that it had previously called for, likely because it lost
control of the state-building process and tired of the
hardline ideology disposing the Islamic State to ignore orders from the al-Qaeda leadership.
18
Informing Mankind
In January 2007 the Islamic States Sharia Council
issued a lengthy scholarly justification of its statehood claim called Informing Mankind of the
Birth of the Islamic State.81 The treatise attempted
to establish the Islamic States legitimacy in terms
of Islamic law, or Sharia. Sunni literature on government is traditionally ambiguous concerning the
nature of the state in question, so the Islamic State
could thus conveniently draw on such literature to
suggestbut not assertthat it was the caliphate.
The treatise identified three traditionally legitimate
avenues for a ruler to assume power in Islam: (1)
election by an elite group of electors known as the
ahl al-hall wal-aqd (those who loose and bind);
(2) designation by the preceding ruler; and (3) seizure of power by brute force.82 The work argued
that the Islamic State pursued the first course.
19
Initial Reception
The announcement of the Islamic State in Iraq was
celebrated on jihadi media, which recognized the
significance of the states founding. Leading jihadi
online forums soon displayed a banneras they
continue to do socounting the number of days
passed since the states establishment. The banner
reads: [a certain number of ] days have passed
since the announcement of the Islamic State and
the [Muslim] communitys coming hopeand it
will continue to persist by the will of God.93
But outside the narrow world of the jihadi Internet, the announcement of an Islamic state in Iraq
drew little attention. The new entity had difficulty
convincing either Iraqis or outside observers that
it was more than just a new name for al-Qaeda in
Iraq. Abu Umar al-Baghdadi and Abu Hamza alMuhajir both complained that Iraqis and foreigners
wrongly persisted in calling their Islamic State of
Iraq a branch of al-Qaeda.94 Their claim to have
founded a state was not being taken seriously.
The Islamic State even failed to unite the Jihadi-Salafi
groups active in Iraq at the time. One of these, the
Islamic Army of Iraq, issued a searing critique of the
Islamic State in early April 2007.95 This came partly
20
in response to an audio address by Abu Umar alBaghdadi from mid-March labeling as sinners all
members of jihadi groups who failed to carry out the
duty of the agei.e., giving baya to the Islamic
States leader.96 The Islamic Army of Iraq called this
kind of talk dangerous, and accused the Islamic
State of killing more than 30 of its members for refusing to give baya to al-Qaeda, or its other names.
Clearly the Islamic Army did not recognize the establishment of any state. The statement ended with an
appeal to Osama Bin Laden to restrain hisas it was
perceivedIraqi affiliate.97
The scholarly authorities of Jihadi-Salafism, for
their part, offered little commentary on the controversial announcement. The most prominent of
the few scholars to do so was the Kuwaiti Hamid
al-Ali, one of the leaders of Kuwaits Salafi community and a known al-Qaeda sympathizer.98 Like
the Islamic Army of Iraq, Ali likewise took issue
with Baghdadis description of Iraqi Sunnis who
were withholding baya as sinners. In a fatwa issued on his website on April 4, 2007, Ali urged
the Islamic State to renounce its establishment of
a state and return to what it was before, a jihadi
faction among the other jihadi factions.99 From
Alis perspective, the very idea of the Islamic State
of Iraq was problematic, as it suggested itself as the
legitimate imamate known in the Sharia, i.e., the
caliphate. In his view, Abu Umar al-Baghdadis
state did not meet the test of statehood, which
is political capability; as such it was not a state in
any actual sense. Several months later, Ali wrote
a poem ridiculing the Islamic State as imaginary
and existing only online.100
21
late 2007: [al-Qaeda in Iraq] was officially dissolved in favor of the Islamic State.106 Around the
same time Ayman al-Zawahiri remarked that there
is nothing in Iraq today called al-Qaeda. Rather the
group al-Qaeda in Iraq has merged with other jihadi groups into the Islamic State of Iraq, may God
protect it, which is a legitimate emirate.107 Yet the
agreement seemed to end there.
In private, relations between al-Qaeda and the Islamic
State were fraught. Poor communication represented
a problem, as it had during the Zarqawi era. The alQaeda leadership had repeatedly chided Zarqawis
branch for its failure to communicate. In a December 2005 letter to Zarqawi, Atiyyat Allah al-Libi remarked that there was practically no coordination between the leadership and its Iraqi branch, referring to
current disruption and loss of communication. He
gave Zarqawi a direct order to prioritize dispatching
messengers to meet with al-Qaedas leaders. He added
that preparing messengers was far more important
than preparing brothers for certain operations like
the recent Amman hotels [operation], referring to a
series of bomb attacks on hotels in the Jordanian capital in November.108
Relations did not improve with the announcement
of the Islamic State. In March 2008 Zawahiri wrote
to Abu Hamza al-Muhajir requesting comprehensive and detailed reports on your current conditions,
noting that this request had been made repeatedly.109
He attached to his letter an older one from Sayf alAdl, dated November 2007, which likewise urged
Abu Hamza not to forget to communicate, for we
are awaiting your news and reports about your conditionsAll of our previous requestswe are still
awaiting [responses to] them.110
104. Usma ibn Ldin, Al-Sabl li-ih.bt. al-mumart, Muassasat al-Sah.b, December 2007. Transcript: www.tawhed.ws/
dl?i=24041002.
105. Ayman al-Z.awhir, H.aqiq al-s.ir bayn al-Islm wal-kufr, Muassasat al-Sah.b, December 2007. Transcript:
http://www.tawhed.ws/r?i=kdmwdhq2.
106. Ab Umar al-Baghdd, Fa-amm l-zabad fa-yadhhab jufan.
107. Ayman al-Z. awhir, Liq al-Sah.b al-rbi ma al-shaykh Ayman al-Z. awhir, Muassasat al-Sah.b, November/December
2007. Transcript: https://nokbah.com/~w3/?p=110.
108. At. iyyat Allh al-Lb, [Letter,] 3.
109. Ayman al-Z. awhir, [Letter to Ab H
. amza al-Muhjir,] March 10, 2008, http://iraqslogger.powweb.com/downloads/aqi_
leadership_letters_sept_08.pdf, 1. This letter, among others, was obtained by Multinational Forces-Iraq on 24 April 2008
and made available to the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. See Bill Roggio, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, and Tony
Badran, Intercepted Letters from al-Qaeda Leaders Shed Light on State of Network in Iraq, The Long War Journal, 12
September 2008, http://www.defenddemocracy.org/media-hit/intercepted-letters-from-al-qaeda-leaders-shed-light-onstate-of-network-in/#sthash.0xkusSCN.dpuf.
110. Sayf al-Adl, [Letter to Ab H
. amza al-Muhjir,] 26 January 2008, 2. Link in note 109.
22
The exact nature of the relationship between alQaeda and the Islamic State was not revealed to the
public at this time, and continues to be debated. In
2014 Zawahiri would claim that Abu Hamza alMuhajir had conveyed in secret the Islamic States
loyalty (wala) to the al-Qaeda leadership.118 It
appears, however, that the group did not give baya,
the oath of fealty, to al-Qaedas leader, the standard
practice for al-Qaeda affiliates.
In any event, the Islamic States secret loyalty to
al-Qaeda apparently counted for little. By 2011
al-Qaeda leaders were still complaining that the
Islamic State paid them little heed. The American
al-Qaeda spokesman Adam Gadahn even advised
Osama Bin Laden to sever [al-Qaedas] organizational ties with the Islamic State of Iraq, as it
amounted to an imaginary state whose controversial acts of extreme violence were tarnishing
al-Qaedas name. Al-Qaeda had not ordered or advised the Islamic States behavior; in any case, the
ties between the two groups had been effectively
cut for a number of years, and the state of affairs
ought to be made official.119
111. Ab Sulaymn al-Utayb, Rislat al-shaykh Ab Sulaymn al-Utayb lil-qiyda f Khursn, April 28, 2007, http://justpaste.
it/do3r. The letter appeared online on 23 November 2013. I am grateful to Will McCants for bringing it to my attention.
112. Ayman al-Z. awhir, [Letter to Ab H
. amza al-Muhjir,] 25 January 2008, 3, and [Letter to Ab Umar al-Baghdd,] March 6,
2008, 6. Link in note 109.
113. Ab l-Wald al-Ans. r, Rislat nas.h.a li-Ab Umar al-Baghdd min al-Shaykh Ab l-Wald al-Ans. r, Nukhbat al-Fikr, 2014,
https://archive.org/download/Abu.al.Walid.al.Ansari.New/naseha.pdf. The letter appeared online on 22 October 2014. The
context suggests it was written in March or April 2007. On Ans.r see Kvin Jackson, Al-Qaedas Top Scholar, Jihadica,
25 September 2014, http://www.jihadica.com/al-qaedas-top-scholar/.
114. Ans. r, Rislat nas.h.a, 14.
115. Ibid., 12.
116. Ibid.,13.
117. Z. awhir, Shahda, 1.
118. Ibid.
119. Ghadan, [Letter,] 8.
120. Muhjir, al-Liq al-s. awt al-awwal ma al-shaykh Ab H.amza al-Muhjir.
121. S. diq al-Irq, Zawjat Ab Ayyb al-Mas. r: was.aln Baghdd qabl suqt. niz. m S. addm, wa-zawj ghmid. wa-mutashaddid, al-Riyd., http://www.alriyadh.com/520823.
23
In illustration of the groups depreciating political relevance, the Pentagon in February 2008 reduced the bounty on Abu Hamza from $5 million to $100,000. The current assessment, based
on a number of factors, shows that he is not as
an effective leader of al Qaeda in Iraq [i.e., the
Islamic State of Iraq] as he was last year, said a
Pentagon spokesman.122 Meanwhile, Baghdadis
influence appeared so marginal that U.S. officials
in 2007 were led to believe he was an actor playing a fictional character.123 While this turned out
not to be true, rumors of Baghdadis nonexistence persisted into 2009.124
Within a month of their death, the Shura Council of the Islamic State appointed a new emir,
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who remains the groups
leader.125 Like his predecessor, the new Baghdadi claimed descent from Muhammads tribe
of Quraysh and was hailed as the commander
of the faithful. Yet it would be more than two
years before he issued an audio address.126 In the
meantime, the Islamic States media output declined precipitously. Official statements from the
new leadership did not emerge until mid-2011,
when an audio address appeared in the name of
the Islamic States new official spokesman, Abu
Muhammad al-Adnani, a Syrian.127 Baghdadi
and Adnani soon became the two most promi-
122. Reward for Wanted Terrorist Drops, CNN, 13May 2008, http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/05/13/pentagon.masri.
value/.
123. Dean Yates, Senior Qaeda Figure in Iraq a Myth: U.S. Military, Reuters, 18 July 2007, http://www.reuters.com/article/2007/07/18/us-iraq-qaeda-idUSL1820065720070718.
124. Campbell Robertson, Terrorist or Mythic Symbol: A Tale of Iraqi Politics, The New York Times, 30 May 2009.
125. Bayn min Majlis Shr Dawlat al-Irq al-Islmiyya, Markaz al-Fajr lil-Ilm, 16 May 2010, https://shamikh1.info/vb/
showthread.php?t=62187.
126. Baghdad, Wa-yab llh ill an yutimm nrahu. The only previous communication from Baghdd was a written eulogy
for Osama Bin Laden released 9 May 2011. See Bayn an istishhd al-shaykh al-mujhid Usma ibn Ldin, Markaz al-Fajr
lil-Ilm, 9 May 2011, https://shamikh1.info/vb/showthread.php?t=109019.
127. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, Inna Dawlat al-Islm bqiya, Muassasat al-Furqn, 7 August 2011. Transcript: https://archive.
org/download/nokbah565/dawlat.pdf.
128. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, Hdha wad Allh, Muassasat al-Furqn, 29 June 2014. Transcript: http://www.gulfup.
com/?3D7MKR.
129. Ibrahim Awwad Ibrahim Ali al-Badri al-Samarrai, INTERPOL, updated 3 June 2014, http://www.un.org/sc/committees/1267/NSQI29911E.shtml.
130. Turk al-Binal, Mudd al-ayd li-bayat al-Baghdd, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, 5 August 2013, http://tawhed.
ws/r?i=05081301. The original has been deleted but is still available at http://jihadology.net/2013/08/05/minbar-attaw%E1%B8%A5id-wa-l-jihad-presents-a-new-article-from-abu-hamam-bakr-bin-abd-al-aziz-al-athari-extend-our-hands-inbayat-to-al-baghdadi/. For a detailed analysis of this document see Joas Wagemakers, Al-Qaida Advises the Arab Spring:
The Case for al-Baghdadi, Jihadica, September 21, 2013, http://www.jihadica.com/al-qaida-advises-the-arab-spring-thecase-for-al-baghdadi/.
131. Binali, Mudd al-ayd, 24.
132. Ibid., 67.
133. Aaron Zelin, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi: Islamic States Driving Force, BBC, 30 July 2014, http://www.bbc.com/news/worldmiddle-east-28560449.
24
The Comeback
In late January 2012, the Islamic State appeared on
the verge of a comeback.137 The group released a
number of speeches proclaiming its imminent return, adding that it was winning new supporters
daily.138 The [Islamic] State will soon return, God
willing, to all the areas that have been taken from
it, Adnani said in February.139 Baghdadi went a
step further, announcing in July 2012 that the Islamic State is returning anew, advancing to take
control of the ground that it had and moreThe
Islamic State does not recognize synthetic borders,
nor any citizenship besides Islam.140 Drawing on
mounting Sunni resentment toward the sectarian
policies of Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki,
the speeches dwelled on Sunni grievances and the
supposed Shiite expansionist plot. Violence in Iraq
indeed increased dramatically in 2012 with the Islamic States resurgence.141
Meanwhile, in late 2011 Baghdadi had sent a contingent of fighters to Syria to form a jihadi group
called Jabhat al-Nusra (the Salvation Front),
which quickly grew in popularity as the leading
Sunni rebel militant group in the Syrian civil war.142
At the time, however, neither Jabhat al-Nusra nor
the Islamic State acknowledged their relationship.
134. US adds IS Spokesman, al-Nusra Front Rebel to Terrorist List, AFP, 18 August 2014, http://www.afp.com/en/
node/2739191/.
135. Binal, al-Lafz. al-sn f tarjamat al-Adnn, 910.
136. Ibid., 7.
137. While the public push for the comeback did not start till 2012, its groundwork was being laid as early as 2010. See Lister,
Profiling the Islamic State, 1011.
138. See the three speeches of Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, al-n al-n ja l-qitl, Muassasat al-Furqn, 25 January 2012
(transcript: https://archive.org/download/N5bh88/qetal.pdf), al-Irq al-Irq y ahl al-sunna, and Innam aiz.ukum
bi-wh.ida, and the one from Ab Umar al-Baghdd, Wa-yab llh ill an yutimm nrahu.
139. Adnn, al-Irq al-Irq y ahl al-sunna.
140. Bghdd, Wa-yab llh ill an yutimm nrahu.
141. Still Bloody, The Economist, 5 January 2013.
142. Ab Muh.ammad al-Jawln, al-Iln an Jabhat al-Nus.ra, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, 2012, www.tawhed.ws/dl?i=0308141g.
25
Defying al-Qaeda
On April 9, 2013, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi released an audio statement announcing the Islamic States expansion to Sham, the Arabic word
for greater Syria.144 Jabhat al-Nusra, he revealed,
was an extension of the Islamic State of Iraq.
Its emir, Abu Muhammad al-Jawlani, was one of
the Islamic States soldiers, who had been sent
to Syria with a number of colleagues on a secret
mission. The names the Islamic State of Iraq
and Jabhat al-Nusra were hereby void, he said,
and the Islamic State of Iraq was retitled the
Islamic State of Iraq and Sham. The banner
of the new group would ultimately become the
banner of the caliphate, God willing. After six
143. Abdallh ibn Abd al-Rah.mn al-Shinqt. , Tsnm l-Dawla al-Islmiyya f l-Irq wal-Shm, Muassasat al-Ghurab,
1 January 2014, 3, http://www.gulfup.com/?EsyUjG. The author, a pseudonymous jihadi scholar from Mauritania, previously
supported the Islamic State but now sides with al-Qaeda. See his al-Khilfa laysat hiya l-khilf, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd,
10 August 2014, http://www.tawhed.ws/r?i=16081402.
144. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Wa-bashshir al-muminn.
145. Ab Muh.ammad al-Jawln, Kalima s.awtiyya lil-ftih. Ab Muh.ammad al-Jawln, Muassasat al-Manra al-Bayd.,
10 April 2013. Transcript: http://occident2.blogspot.com/2013/04/text-of-jabhat-al-nusras-amir-abu.html.
146. Jawlns claim to be reaffirming his baya to Z.awhir suggests the presence of some confusion in the Islamic State over
the nature of its relationship with al-Qaeda.
147. Ayman al-Z.awhir, [Letter to Ab Bakr al-Baghdd and Ab Muh.ammad al-Jawln,] 23 May 2013, http://www.aljazeera.
net/file/Get/64c64867-0eb8-4368-a1fd-13c7afbc9aa3.
26
On June 15, Baghdadi rebutted Zawahiri, declaring that the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham will
endure, so long as we have a vein that pulses and
an eye that bats.148 Signaling its original expansionist nature, he added that [the Islamic State]
will not retreat from any spot of land to which it
has expanded, and it will not diminish after enlarging. Baghdadi declared Zawahiris directive
unacceptable on account of numerous legal and
methodological objections. He added that the Islamic States decision to defy al-Qaeda was made in
consultation with the Islamic States Shura Council
and Sharia Committee.
In a follow-up audio message to Baghdadis, Adnani denounced Zawahiris edict more aggressively.149 No one, he thundered, will stop us from
aiding our brethren in Syria! No one will stop us
from fighting the Alawis150 and waging jihad in
Syria! No one will stop us from remaining in Syria!
Iraq and Syria will remain one theater, one front,
one command! He elaborated seven objections
to Zawahiris edict: it was an order to commit a sin;
it affirmed the Sykes-Picot division of the Middle
East; it validated those disobedient rebels in the
Jabhat al-Nusra leadership; it set a precedent for rebellion; it was made without properly consulting
the parties to the dispute; it gratified the enemies
of the mujahidin; and it senselessly demanded the
withdrawal of mujahidin from Syria.
148. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Bqiya f l-Irq wa-l-Shm, Muassasat al-Furqn, 15 June 2013. Transcript: http://alplatformmedia.
com/vb/showthread.php?t=24134.
149. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, Fa-dharhum wa-m yaftarn, Muassasat al-Furqn, 19 June 2013. Transcript: http://alplatformmedia.com/vb/showthread.php?t=24303.
150. The Alawites are the largest Shiite sect in Syria and dominate Syrian politics.
151. Bernard Lewis, The Political Language of Islam (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1988), 5859.
152. Three were most prominent: Ab Jafar al-H
. at. t. b, Bayat al-ams.r lil-imm al-mukhtr, Muassasat al-Bayriq, 26 June 2013,
https://archive.org/download/Bayaatu-lamsar/Bayaatu-lamsar.pdf; Binal, Mudd al-ayd li-bayat al-Baghdd; and Ab
l-H
. asan al-Azd, Mjibt al-ind. imm lil-Dawla al-Islmiyya f l-Irq wal-Shm, Muassasat al-Masada, 10 August 2013,
https://archive.org/download/OZOOO67/Xu3F1.pdf.
153. On this rumor see the Tweet from @Kosari_ from 20 February 2014, https://twitter.com/Kosari_/status/436571875813384193.
154. H
. at. t. b, Bayat al-ams. r, 1019.
155. Ibid., 27.
156. Ibid., 2728.
27
In November 2013, the two senior jihadi ideologues Maqdisi and Abu Qatada al-Filastini issued
written statements against giving baya to Baghdadi
in Syria.158
Abu Qatadas short work took the form of an open
letter to the mujahidin in Syria, advising them as a
veteran jihadi and witness to countless battlefield
gains squandered by infighting. Abu Qatada advised fighters to avoid the mistakes of previous experiences, warning that the current disunity and
disputation among Syrian mujahidin terrify and
horrify every admirer.159 He blamed such divisions on jihadi leaders enamored of power, and no
doubt had Baghdadi foremost in mind. Challenging Baghdadis title of commander of the faithful,
Abu Qatada averred: There exists no emir firmly
established such that he should be treated as the
caliphor with similar names and titles. Jihadi
groups are fighting to achieve strength in order to
establish the Islamic state, but no organization is
yet worthy of that name. The Islamic State was not
a real state but merely a battlefield command
like other jihadi groups. In other words, the Islamic
States was only a restricted baya. It was an error for
mujahidin to fight for their organization as if it is
an end in itself and not a means [to an end].160
Abu Qatada criticized fellow jihadi scholars promoting baya to Baghdadi in Syria. Their fatwas,
he said, reflect navet and childishness, and their
authors are elementary students or pretenders to
religious knowledge. By categorically supporting
one side in Syria they were making unity and reconciliation impossible.161
Maqdisis critique, a short memorandum to certain
mujahidin in Syria soliciting his advice, touched on
the same themes in a more measured tone. Maqdisi
likewise denied the Islamic States claim to statehood
or proto-caliphal status, and stressed the clear difference between battlefield commandsand the politically capable state.162 The path to proper Islamic
statehood ought to follow certain stages, he said,
that lead to political capability. Skipping any of
these stagesi.e., declaring a state prematurelywas
dangerous as it would foment civil war.163 Maqdisi
advised our brothers in Jabhat al-Nusra and our
brothers in the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham to
fight under one banner and under one emir. That
emir, however, was not Baghdadi. In an explicit rejection of Baghdadis status as emir, he emphasized that
Syrias jihadi leadership ought to be of Syrian origin,
the better to appeal to the Syrian people.164
Despite Maqdisi and Abu Qatadas attempts to
rein in young, zealous jihadi scholars, the latter remained committed to the Islamic State.
28
166. Umar Mahd Zaydn, al-Naqd li-qawl man jaala -l-khilfa al-Islmiyya min dn al-rafd. , November 6, 2013,
http://www.gulfup.com/?YQHBt1.
167. Ab l-Mundhir al-Shinqt. , Mat yafqahn man l-t. a?, Muassasat al-Ghurab, 4 September 2013, http://www.gulfup.com/?xHA1X4; Raf al-malm an jund Dawlat al-Islm, Muassasat al-Ghurab, 3 December 2013, http://www.
gulfup.com/?YiLPpd; Fus.l f l-imma wal-baya, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, 10 December 2013, http://www.gulfup.
com/?G3IHwf; and Fatw bil t. ayyr, Muassasat al-Ghurab, 8 January 2014, https://archive.org/download/fatawa.bila.
tyar/fatawa.bila.tyar.pdf.
168. Shinqt., Fatw bil t. ayyr, 4.
169. Al-Jabha al-Islmiyya tas.dur baynan bi-shan maqtal al-duktr Ab Rayyn wa-Jamat al-Dawla tut. lib Ah.rr al-Shm
bi-munz.ara alaniyya f awwal bayn lah, H
. alab Niyz, 2 January 2014, http://halabnews.com/news/45625.
170. Ibid.
171. Turk al-Binal, Khat. t. al-midd f l-radd al al-duktr Iyd, December 2013, 15, https://archive.org/download/al-medad/
i4SX1.pdf.
172. Ab Muh.ammad al-Jawln, Allh Allh f sh.at al-Shm, Muassasat al-Manra al-Bayd., 7 January 2014. Transcript:
https://nokbah.com/~w3/?p=4309.
29
and that no organizational ties existed. The statement bracketed the Islamic States name with
quotes and referred to it as a group, clearly dismissing its statehood claim.
Tensions between al-Qaeda and the Islamic State
worsened in mid-2014 when Zawahiri publically
clarified the historical relationship between the two
groups. The Islamic State was no doubt originally a
branch of al-Qaeda, he said.180 To make his case
Zawahiri quoted previous correspondence in which
Islamic State officials addressed the al-Qaeda leadership as our commanders and our leaders.181
In one of these statements from 2010, the Islamic
State had asked al-Qaeda when it should renew its
baya to the group.182
Adnani soon after countered Zawahiris claims in
a heated audio message.183 The [Islamic] State is
no subservient branch of al-Qaeda, nor was it ever
before, he stated. He did not deny that Zawahiris quoted correspondence was genuine, but he
claimed that deferential forms of address were used
only out of respect. Furthermore, he contended,
the Islamic State had never given al-Qaeda baya,
and Zawahiri was unable to prove that it had.
The true nature of the groups relationship, according to Adnani, was that the Islamic State acted
independently within Iraq while deferring to alQaedas leadership beyond. Thus the Islamic State
routinely flouted al-Qaedas orders in Iraq, said Adnani, never following its frequent requests to withhold from targeting the Shia masses. Outside Iraq,
however, the Islamic State acceded to al-Qaedas
173. Hn al-Sib and T.riq Abd al-H.alm, Dawa lil-s.ulh. wal-s.afh. bayn al-mujhidn f l-Shm, 21 January 2014,
http://www.almaqreze.net/ar/news.php?readmore=2348.
174. Ayman al-Z. awhir, Nid jil li-ahlin f l-Shm, Muassasat al-Sah.b, 22 January 2014. Transcript: http://justpaste.it/e6p2.
175. Abdallh ibn Muh.ammad al-Muh.aysin, Mubdarat al-umma, 25 January 2014, http://www.tawhed.ws/r?i=25011403.
176. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Wallh yalam wa-antum l talamn, Muassasat al-Furqn, 19 January 2014. Transcript:
http://www.gulfup.com/?cjuaYo.
177. Ab Muh.ammad al-Maqdis, F bayn h.l al-Dawla al-Islmiyya f l-Irq wa-l-Shm wal-mawqif al-wjib tujhah, Minbar
al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, [May 26,] 2014, http://www.tawhed.ws/dl?i=26051401,8. In the correspondence quoted here, Maqdis
refers to Binal as the Islamic States vaunted Shara official (al-shar al-mubarraz). In his response to Maqdis, Binal
identifies himself as the person in question. See Binal, Shaykh l-Asbaq, 13.
178. Quoted in Maqdis, F bayn h.l, 1112.
179. Bayn bi-shan alqat Jamat Qidat al-Jihd bi-Jamat al-Dawla al-Islmiyya f l-Irq wal-Shm.
180. Z. awhir, Shahda, 1.
181. Ibid., 3.
182. Ibid., 4.
183. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnni, Udhran amr al-Qida, Muassasat al-Furqn, 11 May 2014. Transcript: http://justpaste.it/othran.
For more on this statement see William McCants, State of Confusion, from which several of my conclusions are drawn.
30
Jihadism Divided
184. See, for example, Ab Qatda al-Filast. ns description of the Islamic State leadership as the dogs of the inhabitants of
hellfire (kilb ahl al-nr), a synonym for the Khrijites. Filast. n, Risla il ahl al-jihd wa-muh.ibbhi, Muassasat al-Bas.ra,
28 April 2014, http://www.gulfup.com/?lJgDs9.
185. Maqds, F bayn h.l, 6.
31
Binali had penned an essay arguing that full political capability was not a prerequisite for declaring the caliphate.188 Maqdisi claims to have remarked upon hearing the title of this work: The
announcement declaring their organization the
caliphate must be imminent.189
186. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, [Mosul sermon,] 1 July 2014. Transcript: https://archive.org/download/kutba_j/k_j.pdf. Cf. Ah.mad
ibn Muh.ammad ibn Abd Rabbih, al-Iqd al-fard, Beirut: Dr al-Kutub al-Ilmiyya, 1983f., 4:150. There are other versions of
Ab Bakr al-S.iddqs accession speech, but Baghdd clearly follows the recension of Ibn Abd Rabbih.
187. Adnn, Hdha wad Allh.
188. Turk al-Binal, al-Qiyfa f adam ishtirt. al-tamkn al-kmil lil-khilfa, Muassasat al-Ghurab, 30 April 2014, http://justpaste.
it/g0jn.
189. Ab Muh.ammad al-Maqdis, Hdh bad. m ind wa-laysa kullahu, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, 1 July 2014, http://tawhed.
ws/r?i=01071401.
190. Adnn, Hdha wad Allh.
32
The Islamic State ordered all able Muslims to emigrate to the territory under its control. Baghdadi
stated in an audio address a few days after Adnanis:
O Muslims in all places. Whoso is able to emigrate
to the Islamic State, let him emigrate. For emigration to the Abode of Islam is obligatory.191
Al-Qaeda, in the Islamic States view, had become
irrelevant to the pursuit of global jihad. Its affiliates
were being ordered to dissolve themselves and join
the Islamic State.
Al-Qaedas Counter-Caliph
The central al-Qaeda leadership reacted to the June
29 caliphate declaration in unforeseen fashion.
Rather than immediately denouncing the Islamic
191. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Risla il l-mujhidn wal-umma al-Islamiyya f shahr Raman, Muassasat al-Furqn, 1 July 2014.
Transcript: https://archive.org/download/K_R_abubkr/et34.pdf.
192. mm al-jama aml al-umma, Muassasat al-Andalus, 4 July 2014, http://justpaste.it/g82p.
193. Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, Bayah to Baghdadi: Foreign Support for Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and the Islamic State (Part 2),
Syria Comment, 27 September 2014, http://www.joshualandis.com/blog/bayah-baghdadi-foreign-support-islamic-state-part-2/.
194. Saud Al-Sarhan, A House Divided: AQAP, IS, and Intra-Jihadi Conflict, King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies,
November 2014, http://rd.alfaisalmag.com/all-commentaries-pdf/Commentaries-1.pdf, 4.
195. Links to audio of the bayas are found at http://minbar-alansar.blogspot.com/2014/11/blog-post_85.html.
196. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Wa-law kariha l-kfirn, Muassasat al-Furqn, November 13, 2014. Transcript: http://www.gulfup.
com/?wTJX2C.
197. On the implications of this expansionist effort see Aaron Zelin, Colonial Caliphate: The Ambitions of the Islamic State, Jihadology, July 8, 2014, http://jihadology.net/2014/07/08/the-clairvoyant-colonial-caliphate-the-ambitions-of-the-islamic-state/.
198. Sees H
. tims Tweets (now deleted) from 11 November 2014: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/B2LoFNmCcAAZg1N.jpg,
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/B2LpjmOCAAEsG8X.jpg, and https://pbs.twimg.com/media/B2LpjmOCEAApMzW.jpg.
199. H
. rith al-Naz.r (d. 2015), Bayn bi-shan m warada f kalimat al-shaykh Ab Bakr al-Baghdd Wa-law kariha l-kfirn,
Muassasat al-Malh.im, 21 November 2014. Video available at http://shabakataljahad.com/vb/showthread.php?t=41954.
33
States new caliphate, al-Qaeda responded by proposing its own counter-caliph: Taliban leader Mullah Muhammad Umar, head of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan since 1996.200 Like the Islamic
States Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, Mullah Umar holds
the title commander of the faithful, which previously seemed merely ceremonial. Beginning in
mid-July, however, al-Qaeda began to play up the
caliphal implication in the title.
On July 13, al-Qaeda released an old video of
Osama Bin Laden describing Mullah Umar in
nearly caliphal terms.201 The poor-quality film,
from mid-June 2001, shows Bin Laden delivering
a lecture on the significance of a recent meeting
between George W. Bush and Russian President
Vladimir Putin. In the question-and-answer session following, Bin Laden is asked to clarify the
nature of his baya to Taliban leader Mullah Umar.
While widely known that al-Qaeda members in
the Afghanistan-Pakistan area give baya to Mullah Umar, the terms of that baya have been less
clear.202 The questioner inquires into them: You
have remarked that you gave baya to the Commander of the Faithful Mullah Umar. Is this baya
the supreme baya, or is it [merely] a temporary
baya leading toward the supreme baya?
The term supreme baya, equivalent to the unrestricted baya encountered above, relates to the
supreme imamate, a synonym for the caliphate.
The questioner was asking Bin Laden if he had a
contract of allegiance to Mullah Umar as putative
caliph. The answer was an emphatic yes.
Bin Laden responded: Our baya to the commander of the faithful is a supreme baya. It is founded
on Quranic prooftexts and prophetic hadithIt
is incumbent upon every Muslim to affirm in his
200. For more on this subject see William McCants, Zawahiris Counter-Caliphate, War on the Rocks, 5 September, 2014,
http://warontherocks.com/2014/09/zawahiris-counter-caliphate/.
201. Usma ibn Ldin, Bushrayt, Muassasat al-Sah.b, June 2001. Transcript: http://www.gulfup.com/?i5qM2s.
202. For more on the issue of Bin Ladens baya to Mullah Umar, see Vahid Brown, The Facade of Allegiance: Bin Ladins
Dubious Pledge to Mullah Omar, CTC Sentinel, vol. 3, no. 1, January 2010, 16.
203. This legal precedent is indeed well-established. Many medieval Muslim scholars, according to Wilferd Madelung, argued
that the qualifications of the imm stipulated in the classical doctrine [of the caliphate] could be ignored or expressly
waived by the doctrine of necessity (d. arra). See Madelung, Imma, in The Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. Bernard Lewis,
et al (Leiden: Brill, 1986), 2nd ed., 3:1168.
204. Ayman al-Z. awhir, al-Liq al-mafth. ma al-shaykh Ayman al-Z. awhiral-juz al-thn min al-asila, Muassasat al-Sah.b,
April 2008. Transcript: http://www.tawhed.ws/r1?i=7534&x=1502092g.
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35
older, pro-al-Qaeda jihadis affiliated with the websites of several senior jihadi scholars.
Two online outfits exemplify this state of affairs.
One is the Ghuraba Media Foundation, a proIslamic State group that publishes its material via
Twitter,210 and each week publishes essays, books,
and poems devoted to defending the Islamic State
against its detractors. It hosts a coterie of regular
contributors, including two Mauritanians, an Iraqi,
a Moroccan, a Sudanese, and several others of unidentifiable origin. The second outfit is the website
of Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi, Minbar al-Tawhid
wal-Jihad (The Pulpit of Gods Unity and Jihad),
which includes a number of regular writers hostile
to the Islamic State.211
These two groups see each other as locked in an
unending ideological war over the direction of jihadism. In mid-August 2014 a Ghuraba author
addressed Minbar: Your battle with the Islamic
State is surely a losing battle. So pick up your pens
and ready your paper, for this is a battle that will
endure, not expireThe Ghuraba Media Foundation has been and will remain the redoubtable fortress for the defense of the truthful mujahidin, as
we deem them, of the Islamic State.212
Indeed, this battle of pens is not letting up. In
late August one Minbar scholar put together a
summa of the criticisms used to repudiate the
Islamic States caliphate declaration.213 In midSeptember a Ghuraba scholar responded with
a point-by-point rebuttal.214 Most recently, the
two outfits sparred over the validity of the Islamic States immolation of Jordanian pilot Muadh
al-Kasasiba in January 2015. In general, Ghuraba is far more prolific than Minbar and other
competitors. If productivity is any measure, the
pro-Islamic State jihadis are winning.
210. Its Twitter handle as of this writing is @alghuraba_ar11. For an archive of Ghurab writings see http://justpaste.it/
archivealghuraba.
211. http://www.tawhed.ws.
212. Ab Salama al-Shinqt. , Akrim bihim man ghurab, Muassasat al-Ghurab, 7 August 2014, http://justpaste.it/gpa5.
213. Muh.ammad ibn S.lih. al-Muhjir, al-Khuls. a f munqashat iln al-khilfa, Minbar al-Tawh.d wal-Jihd, 29 August 2014,
http://tawhed.ws/r?i=29081402.
214. Ab Bara al-Sayf, al-Ras. s. a li-ibt. l maql al-Khuls. a, 19 September 2014, https://justpaste.it/h533.
36
Conclusion
The rise of the Islamic State in 20132014 has
energized the jihadi movement, attracting tens of
thousands of young Muslims around the globe.
While the Islamic State had hoped for this level of
zeal from its 2006 founding, its initial efforts failed.
Sectarian turmoil in Iraq and Syria has given the
group a new lease on life, and allowed it to pursue
its original caliphal vision.
The Islamic States harsh strain of Jihadi-Salafi ideology is now more popular today than ever. As long
as the Islamic State maintains the trappings of an
actual state in Iraq and Syriaor beyondgoverning territory and dispensing justice, support for the
group and its ideology will continue to grow. While
the U.S.-led air campaign beginning in August
2014 has so far arrested the Islamic States momentum, it remains unclear whether the campaign will
reverse its advance. At all events, political turmoil
elsewhere in the Middle East, particularly in Libya
and Yemen, is creating conditions conducive to the
Islamic States intended expansion.
Regardless of the coalitions long-term success, the
military campaign can actually strengthen the Islamic States ideology by lending credence to its
conspiratorial worldview: namely, the view that the
regions Shia are conspiring with the United States
and secular Arab rulers to limit Sunni power in the
Middle East. The U.S. pursuit of a nuclear deal
with Iran contributes to this perception.
The military campaign also bodes poorly for
U.S. homeland security. The Islamic State has
long prioritized the Middle East over the West,
focusing on seizing and holding territory in its
215. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, Inna Rabbaka la-bil-mirs.d, Muassasat al-Furqn, 21 September 2014. Transcript:
http://www.jihadica.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Inna-Rabbaka-la-bil-mirsad.pdf.
216. David Kirkpatrick, Attacks in West Raise New Fears Over ISIS Influence, The New York Times, 24 October 2014;
Michelle Innis, Sydney Hostage Siege Ends With Gunman and 2 Captives Dead as Police Storm Cafe, The New York Times,
15 December 2004; and Rukmini Callimachi and Andrew Higgins, Video Shows a Paris Gunman Declaring His Loyalty to
the Islamic State, The New York Times, 11 January 2015.
217. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, Qul mt bi-ghayz.ikum, Muassasat al-Furqn, 26 January 2015. Transcript: http://ia902601.
us.archive.org/13/items/Perish.In.Your.Rage/Tafreegh.Perish.In.Your.Rage.pdf.
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Appendix
The Islamic States Creed and Path
Translators note: The following four extracts,
drawn from audio statements issued by the Islamic
State between 2007 and 2014, elaborate the main
lines of its creed and path (aqida wa-manhaj).
The first is a prcis of the creed and path, drawing
on an earlier and longer composition by al-Qaeda
in Iraq from 2005.218 The second, third, and fourth
extracts provide something of an update, introducing several points of ideology that apply only since
the declaration of the caliphate in June 2014.
218. The earlier composition, Hdhihi aqdatun wa-manhajun, is found at http://www.tawhed.ws/r?i=ygz0yz64, and is
different from that translated by Bernard Haykel in Global Salafism, 5156.
219. Ab Umar al-Baghdd, Qul inn al bayyina min Rabb, Muassasat al-Furqn, 13 March 2007. Transcript in al-Majm
li-qdat Dawlat al-Irq al-Islmiyya, 2010, 1216.
220. On the significance of these terms in this context see Joas Wagemakers, Seceders and Postponers? An Analysis of the
Khawarij and Murjia Labels in Polemical Debates Between Quietist and Jihadi-Salafis, in Contextualizing Jihadi Thought,
ed. Jeevan Deol and Zaheer Kazmi (New York: Columbia University Press, 2011).
221. The nullifiers of Islam (nawqid al-Islm) are ten in the Wahhabi tradition. See al-Durar al-saniyya f l-ajwiba al-Najdiyya,
ed. Abd al-Rah.mn ibn Qsim (n.p: Warathat al-Shaykh Abd al-Rah.mn ibn Qsim, 2012), 8th ed., 10:9193.
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222. Quotations from the Qurn are based on the translation by A.J. Arberry.
223. Al-taqaddum bayn yadayhi, a reference to Q. 49:1.
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224. In Islamic tradition, a pact reached between the second Sunni Muslim caliph, Umar ibn al-Khat. t. b (d. 644), and certain
Christians of Syria, stipulating the rights and duties of the latter.
41
We inform the Muslims that, with the announcement of the caliphate, it has become obligatory for
all Muslims to give baya and support to Caliph
Ibrahimmay God protect him. Void is the legitimacy of all emirates, groups, administrations, and
organizations to which his authority extends and
his army comes
A message to all groups and organizations waging jihad, working to support Gods religion, and
raising the slogans of Islam, and [a message] to the
leaders and commanders: We say, Fear you God
We see no legal excuse for you to delay supporting
this stateIt is the caliphate! The time has come
for you to end this lethal division and separation
and disunity
This is the Promise of God, Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, June 29, 2014225 O soldiers of the groups and organizations. Know
After the Islamic State came, by Gods bounty, to
possess all the constituent elements of the caliphatewhich Muslims are sinning for failing to establishand it became clear that no impediment
or legal excuse exists to absolve the Islamic State
of the sin of its delaying or not establishing the
caliphate, the Islamic State, represented by the
ahl al-hall wal-aqd (lit., those who loose and
bind), including senior figures, leaders, commanders, and the Shura Council, has decided to
announce the establishment of the Islamic Caliphate, the appointment of a caliph for the Muslims, and the giving of baya [i.e., fealty] to the
mujahid shaykh, the learned, the active, and the
devout, the warrior and the renewer, the descendant of the Prophets house, Ibrahim ibn Awwad
ibn Ibrahim ibn Ali ibn Muhammad, the Badri,
the Qurashi, the Hashimi, and the Husayni by
descent, the Samarrai by birth and upbringing,
and the Baghdadi by learning and residence.226
He has accepted the baya, becoming thereby the
leader and caliph for the Muslims in all places
that after this political capability and the establishment of the caliphate, the legitimacy of your groups
and organizations is void. It is not permissible for
any of you who believe in God not to profess loyalty (wala) to the caliphAnd know that nothing
has delayed victory, and continues to delay it, more
so than the existence of these groups; they are the
cause of division and difference
225. Ab Muh.ammad al-Adnn, Hdha wad Allh, Muassasat al-Furqn, 29 June 2014. Transcript: http://www.gulfup.
com/?3D7MKR.
226. Badr refers to an Iraqi tribe; Qurash to the Prophet Muhammads tribe of Quraysh; Hshim to a clan within Quraysh
named for the Prophets great-grandfather; H.usayn to the Prophets grandson; Smarr to the Iraqi city of Samarra;
and Baghdd to Baghdad.
227. Ab Bakr al-Baghdd, Risla il l-mujhidn wal-umma al-Islamiyya f shahr Ramad.n, Muassasat al-Furqn, 1 July 2014.
Transcript: https://archive.org/download/K_R_abubkr/et34.pdf.
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228. Baghdd, Wa-law kariha l-kfirn, Muassasat al-Furqn, November 13, 2014. Transcript: http://www.gulfup.
com/?wTJX2C.
229. The five new provinces of the Islamic State had given baya to Ab Bakr al-Baghdd simultaneously on November 10,
2014. Each issued an identical baya pledge that reads as follows: In obedience to the command of GodWho is all-powerful and all-gloriousand in obedience to His Messengermay God bless and save himto be not divided and to cling to
community, we announce our giving of baya to the Caliph Ibrhm ibn Awwd ibn Ibrhm al-H.usayn al-Qurash: hearing
and obeying, in what is agreeable and what is disagreeable, and in what is difficult and what is easy, observing [his] prerogative [to appoint commanders], and not disputing the command of those in authority, except in the event that we see
an act of flagrant unbelief and we have proof thereof from God. We call on the Muslims in all places to give baya to the
caliph and to support him, in obedience to God and in order to carry out the forsaken duty of the age. For the Arabic text
see the transcript of one of the five statements, Bayn min mujhid l-Yaman bi-bayat khalfat al-muslimn, Muassasat
al-Bunyn, November 10, 2014, at http://www.jihadica.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Yemen-baya.pdf.
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Charting the path to a Middle East at peace with itself and the world