The Islamic State One Year Later: Who's Winning the War?

Labaas1

Councller (250+ posts)
The Islamic State One Year Later: Who's Winning the War?


Islamic State's Projection of Territory Under Its Control by 2020


June 29 marks the first anniversary of the proclamation of Islamic State (IS). It has been a busy year. After conquering an area covering over 80,000 square miles and including a population of approximately 10 million people, IS has gone on to create two dozen franchises around the world including a fledging organization in the United States that already boasts over 200 members. Its record of brutality and barbarism has reached even newer lows and has become the template adopted by its other namesake jihadist organizations around the globe. It has been responsible for the wanton destruction of priceless archeological sites while inflicting unprecedented misery on the inhabitants of its conquered territories; especially its non-Sunni inhabitants. Its singular preoccupation with inciting anti-Shia violence is inflaming a broader Sunni-Shia conflict around the world and is a theme being adopted by other militant jihadist organizations including its arch rival, al-Qaeda. It has been a very busy year indeed!

Although military operations against Islamic State militants did not begin until September 2014, it would be correct to say that we have been at war with Islamic State, as of June 29, 2015, for a year. The first anniversary of the Islamic State offers us an excellent opportunity to ask the question: how is America doing in fighting Islamic State? The record is mixed. Notwithstanding a never-ending stream of upbeat pronouncements from the White House, the fact is, a few notable victories notwithstanding, we are losing the war against the Islamic State. What was dismissed, only a year ago, as a short, simple military operation against the "JV team," is rapidly becoming the tip of a multi-year, multi-pronged global conflict that Washington seems incapable of understanding much less articulating a coherent, cohesive strategy with which to prosecute it.

The first step to successfully fighting a war is to clearly define what constitutes victory. In World War II, Churchill and Roosevelt were clear on what constituted victory: "complete and unconditional surrender." We were equally clear during the first Gulf War: the expulsion of Iraqi troops from Kuwait and the restoration of Kuwaiti sovereignty. We were never quite clear on what constituted "victory" in the Vietnam War. We were quick to announce "mission accomplished" in the second Gulf War, operation Iraqi Freedom, only to realize later we had never sorted out what exactly the "mission" was, much less determine what the criteria was for "accomplishing" it. Much the same can be said for the Afghanistan intervention, operation Enduring Freedom.Time will tell just how enduring Afghanistan's freedom will be.

To define what constitutes victory against the Islamic State we must first identify what exactly we are fighting. In the case of Islamic State there are four distinct aspects to the challenge posed by IS. There is Islamic State the country, IS the insurgency, IS the international Jihadist movement and finally Islamic State as an idea. Today we are at war with all four aspects of Islamic State. It is correct to say that in past conflicts we are at war as much with an enemy state as its ideology. We were at war with Nazism as much as we were with Nazi Germany. The same can be said of international communism and the Soviet Union.

But Nazism could not survive the destruction of Nazi Germany. Likewise, with a handful of exceptions around the globe, international communism did not survive the collapse of the Soviet Union. Communism, in one hybrid form or another, still survives in the world, but even China has little interest in aggressively expanding its cause internationally. Islamic State is different, because the destruction of the country of Islamic State will not lead to the elimination of the other aspects of IS. In that sense, the United States is fighting four different aspects of Islamic State; clearly related but also capable of surviving independently of one another.


Islamic State's Brutality Continues Unabated


Against Islamic State the country, the United States and its coalition partners have had mixed success. In Iraq, between 10% and 20% of the territory seized by IS at its peak has been won back by the Baghdad government. Precise measurement is tricky when 90% of the area in question is desert. The immediate threat on Baghdad, which in the autumn of 2014 seemed poised to be overrun, has been significantly reduced. The Kurds have made notable progress in expelling Islamic State militants from Kurdish areas and have cut Mosul off on three sides. On the other hand, the success of the Iraqi government in retaking Tikrit and retaining control of most of Baiji notwithstanding, they have lost control of Ramadi and 90% of Anbar province and most of the "Sunni Triangle" remains firmly in Islamic State's hands. The performance of the Iraqi armed forces continues to raise serious doubts about their long-term effectiveness. Moreover, those military forces that have proven to be effective, the Kurdish Peshmerga and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard led Shiite Militias, will likely be sources of conflict with the Baghdad government if and after the war with Islamic State is successfully brought to a close.

The situation in Syria is even more problematic. The Assad government continues to give way to the various rebel forces with which it is engaged. Islamic State militants have expanded their territory in Syria, recently capturing the city of Palmyra and its surrounding archeological sites. Their most significant reversals have been in the Kurdish areas adjoining the Turkish border. Having lost control of Kobani and having failed this week in its most recent attempt to retake it as well as having lost Tal Abyad, has deprived IS of access to the Turkish border. This access is crucial for allowing the transit of new Islamic State recruits into IS controlled territory as well as for smuggling operations. Elsewhere, particularly around Aleppo in the north and Damascus in the south, various Syrian rebel groups continue to push back Assad's forces. The Syrian government is in serious danger of seeing Damascus cut off from the Alawite heartland along the Mediterranean coast.

The dilemma for the United States in fighting Islamic State is that notwithstanding overwhelming air power, without an effective ground force progress in rolling back IS will be slow. In Syria, the U.S. lacks a consistently reliable force with "boots on the ground" with which to twin its air campaign. In Iraq, the most reliable forces are the Iranian led Shiite militias. Understandably, the U.S. has been hesitant to rely on ground forces that are ideologically opposed to American involvement and which include militant groups that were involved in hundreds of attacks against American military forces while they were stationed in Iraq. The only group with which the U.S. air campaign has been able to work with fully has been the Kurdish Peshmerga forces. Not surprisingly the Kurds have been by far the most effective force in rolling back Islamic State. Kurdish forces, however, are focused on expelling IS militants from the Kurdish areas in Iraq and Syria and have little interest in engaging Islamic State outside of the Kurdish populated areas.

The upshot of the battle field situation is an anemic air campaign that is averaging only around 15 missions a day over Iraq and Syria combined. This is a fraction of the intensity of previous air campaigns. Moreover, the rules of engagement mandated by the White House means that only 1 in 4 missions are cleared to actually attack potential Islamic State targets. It is unclear whether this abbreviated campaign is a reflection on the White House's ambivalence about waging war on Islamic State or reflects the fact that the forces that may emerge following the defeat of Islamic State are likely to be just as problematic for the United States as IS. In this situation a "go slow campaign" until better options are identified may have some merit. Nonetheless, the fact remains that Washington has assembled a 50 plus member international coalition to wage an air campaign that, at its present scale of operation, could be handled by a single U.S. Navy carrier air wing.


Free Syrian Army


Even if the U.S. is successful in rolling back the Islamic State it is likely that IS will simply revert back to being an insurgency. It has played this role before and has demonstrated its ability to withdraw into an insurgency when faced with overwhelming force only to reemerge when conditions are more hospitable. To, in turn, defeat Islamic State as an insurgency, two other conditions must be met. First, its base of support within the Sunni areas needs to be eliminated and secondly, the Syrian borderlands with Iraq must be brought under Baghdad's control.

Eliminating Islamic State's base of support within the Sunni triangle is dependent on the Baghdad government's willingness to offer Iraq's Sunni population meaningful participation in post-Hussein Iraq. To date, public pronouncements to the contrary, the Iraqi government has been unwilling to do so. Sunni politicians have been harassed and in a number of cases driven out of the national government on questionable charges of being al-Qaeda supporters. Baghdad has used "de-Ba'athification laws" to deny pensions to former Sunni government and military personnel and to seize property and other assets from Sunni citizens. Even now, despite its call for the participation of Sunni Militias in liberating the Sunni Triangle from Islamic State, it refuses to arm those militias with modern weapons. Without a comprehensive reconciliation with Iraq's Sunnis, and especially with those portions of the Sunni leadership that were part of the former Ba'athist elite, it will be impossible to ever eradicate an Islamic State insurgency, or for that matter any subsequent Sunni jihadist insurgency, in Iraq.

Moreover, given the porosity of the borderlands between Syria and Iraq, until order can be restored to this area the region will continue to be a safe haven for the smuggling of militants and supplies. In this sense, the conflicts in Syria and Iraq are inexorably tied together. Without a political solution to the Syrian Civil War, it is highly unlikely that any insurgency in Iraq can be effectively brought under control. The likelihood of a political solution to the Syrian Civil War remains as fleeting as ever. From Washington's standpoint, as reprehensible as the Assad regime is, what might well follow, especially if it is an Islamic State or al-Qaeda inspired government, would be worse. The three key players, the United States, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have been unable to come to an agreement on what a post-Assad Syria would look like. Indeed, it is not clear that they even agree on whether defeating Islamic State should take priority over replacing the Assad government. The Turkish government, or at least elements in the government, has even been accused of assisting Islamic State militants in their fight against Assad's military forces.


Islamic State Militants in Anbar Province


Moreover, any resolution of the civil war in Syria will require Tehran's agreement as well. Given the importance of Syria in allowing Iran to project its influence into Lebanon and the Palestinian territories, it is virtually impossible that Tehran would agree to any solution that would see a Sunni led government, regardless of its ideological orientation, come to power in Damascus. Indeed, given its importance to Tehran it is more likely that should the Assad government find itself on the brink of annihilation, Iran would intervene militarily to support Assad. To date, Iranian military support, in addition to several billion dollars in military equipment and financial assistance, has been limited to various "proxy' militia groups. Faced with an existential crisis, however, Tehran may have no choice but to intervene with both Revolutionary Guard and Quds Force units. Such an intervention would have far reaching consequences, not only for the civil war in Syria but for Tehran's relations with the United States and with the status of the current nuclear weapon negotiations.

The third aspect of the war against Islamic State is the role of IS as an international jihadist movement. To date, Islamic State claims that it has two dozen affiliates around the world. It's important to note that these affiliates do not represent "new jihadists" being created by IS but rather existing jihadists that have simply switched their affiliations from some previous group, often times al-Qaeda, to Islamic State. In that sense they represent the continued fragmentation of the international Jihadist movement rather than its net expansion. On the other hand, the U.S. is not currently engaged directly with any of the "Islamic State franchises" around the world. It is likely that we are supplying aid and intelligence to those foreign governments that are actively fighting these IS affiliated groups. It is also possible, that U.S. Special Forces may be undertaking missions designed to degrade these groups and kill or capture their leaders.

What is significant, however, is that these organizations are functioning independently of Islamic State and its leadership. Regardless of what happens to the country of Islamic State, these international Jihadist organizations will continue. The evolution of al-Qaeda since 2001 is instructive here. Notwithstanding the fact that it has lost three-quarters or its senior leadership and much of its operational ability has been eliminated, al-Qaeda continues to function. It has expanded from its operational base in Afghanistan to having affiliates in 15 countries and possibly more. Over the last decade a second generation and now a third generations of leaders have emerged. Many of those leaders, men like Zarqawi, Baghdadi, and Awlaki, have been killed only to be replaced by another generation of jihadist leaders. There is no reason not to believe that the current "third Generation" of al-Qaeda leaders won't be replaced by a fourth and fifth generation of leaders regardless of how successful the United States is in killing or capturing the current al-Qaeda leadership.


Islamic State Social Media Campaign


F
inally there is the role of Islamic State as an idea. In this context Islamic State is at its most pervasive and most resilient. IS has become an extremely powerful idea, an idea that is able to exert a significant appeal to a sizable portion of the world's Islamic community. On a recent trip to North London for example, I observed, for the first time, a considerable amount of Islamic State inspired graffiti. London is not unique in this regard. Similar graffiti can be found in European cities from Amsterdam to Berlin to Paris. Recently that graffiti has featured the acronym YODO. I confess that when I first saw it I thought it was a reference to the character in the movie Star Wars and I was stumped to see the connection between that character and jihadism. A colleague, one who follows these developments closely, pointed out that it was an abbreviation for the expression "You Only Die Once: Why Not Make It Martyrdom." That such sentiments are now so prevalent in the capitals of the West that they are routinely featured in pro-Islamic State graffiti underscores just how prevalent and how acceptable these Jihadist ideas have become. The problem with fighting an idea is that you cannot defeat it with military force. You cannot bomb an idea. You can only defeat an idea with a better, more powerful idea. At the moment neither the secular West nor the Muslim community has been able to articulate a better idea.

What is clear is that the conflict with Islamic State in particular, including its various aspects, and with international Jihadism in general, is not one that is going to be resolved easily or anytime soon. All indications are that this is going to be a prolonged conflict that will be multi-generational in scope. Although for the moment this conflict does not pose an existential threat to either Europe or the United States, it will create ever expanding ripples of violence and chaos that the rest of the world will be forced to deal with. From the Mediterranean refugee crisis, to random acts of terror around the globe, to the spread of civil war in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen, the battle with the "idea" of Islamic State and international jihadism may well prove to be the next "100 year war." This anniversary is only the first of what will likely be a long string of such anniversaries.


Source
 
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Ahud khan

Senator (1k+ posts)
dogs-of-hell-1982-ultra-rare-oop-c62c3.JPG
 

Amiable_Flame

MPA (400+ posts)
Islamic State ---- My FOOT ...

Allah says : Kissi ko Aag ki saza na do, kiyon ke ye saza sirf main don ga .. (These dogs of hell are putting behind All ALLAH's Orders) LOL at Islamic State

till 2020 - Their projection - not even a single Kafir country is in Black, If you look at the map .. haha. .. (LOL at their Jihad which is only againts Muslims)

The only purpose to create this ISIS by Mosad and America is to fulfill their dream of Greater israel and that's it.
West and Jews have come to know that, with the use of brutal military force, they will never be able to succeed, so they have created these DOGS of HELL to do this, this way Jews are getting two things
1: Defaming Islam by portraying Islam as a cruel religion
2: ISIS dogs are killing all muslims of gulf states to clear the way of greater israel

or kuch muslims in ko join ker rahay hain kiyon k ALLAH ne shayad un ki kismat ka faisla as a Jahanum ker dia hay ..
Allah un ko Hidayat de .. Amin
 

Freedomlover

Minister (2k+ posts)
ISIS Has Up To 42 Million Supporters in the Arab World

An analysis of four polls surveying Arab public opinion towards the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) reveals that the group has a bare minimum of 8.5 million strong supporters and that's a conservative estimate. If you include those who feel somewhat positively towards the Islamic State, the number rises to at least 42 million.

The estimate is based on a March 2015 poll by the Iraq-based Independent Institute for Administration and Civil Society Studies; a November 2014 poll by Zogby Research Services; another November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies and an October 2014 poll by the Fikra Forum commissioned by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

The following is a breakdown of the support for the Islamic State in 11 Arab countries:

Iraq

The November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies found that 2% of Iraqis view the Islamic State positively and another 4% view it positively to some extent. The March 2015 poll found that 5% do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

With a population of 32,586,000 according to the CIA World Factbook, that means the Islamic State has between 651,720 and 1,955,160 supporters in Iraq.

Syria

Seventeen percent of Syrians said that they completely support the Islamic State's goals and activities in the March 2015 poll. That statistic grows to 27% when you account for Syrians who do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

The November 2014 poll interviewed 900 Syrian refugees in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey and found that 4% are positive towards the Islamic State and another 9% are somewhat positive. This should raise serious concerns for countries that are accepting refugees from the civil war.

With a population of 17,952,000, that means the Islamic State has between 3,051,840 and 4,847,040 supporters in Syria.

Palestinian Territories

About 4% of Palestinians view the Islamic State positively but a shocking 20% feel the Islamic State is positive to some extent. This is the highest level of positivity towards the Islamic State in the November 2014 poll (which does not include Syria).

The CIA World Factbook says there are 1,816,000 Palestinians in Gaza and 2,731,000 in the West Bank, for a total of 4,547,000. This equates to a range of between 181,800 and 1,091,280 Palestinian supporters of the Islamic State.

Tunisia

The November 2014 poll found that Tunisia has the highest percentage of people who are view the Islamic State positively (7%). Another 6% view it somewhat positively. The finding is substantiated by assessments determining that Tunisia is the biggest source of foreign fighters for the Islamic State.

The country's population of 10,937,000 would include 765,590 people who are unequivocally supportive of the Islamic State; a number that grows to 1,421,810 if you include those who are somewhat positive.

Egypt

The Fikra Forum poll from October 2014 found that 3% of Egyptians view the Islamic State very positively (1%) or fairly positively (2%). The March 2015 poll has 4% of Egyptians viewing the Islamic State positively and another 6% viewing it somewhat positively.

Egypt has an estimated population of 86,895,000. The number of those who view the Islamic State positively ranges from 86,895 to 347,580 depending on which poll has the more accurate number. If you include all of those with some positivity towards ISIS, the range is 260,685 to 8,689,500.

Saudi Arabia

The Fikra Forum concluded that 2% of Saudis are very positive towards the Islamic State and 3% are fairly positive. The March 2015 poll has it at 5% positive and 5% somewhat positive.

Saudi Arabia has an estimated population of 27,346,000. The lowest statistic would mean that there are between 546,920 and 1,367,300 Saudis who are fully positive towards ISIS. If you include those who are somewhat positive, it is between 820,380 and 2,734,600 Saudis who are inclined towards the Islamic State.

United Arab Emirates

The Zogby poll from November 2014 found that 13% of the UAE's population most favors the Islamic State in the Syrian civil war. The country has a population of 5,629,000, translating to 731,770 Islamic State supporters.

Yemen

Approximately 7% of Yemenis say they do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group. The CIA World Factbook estimates Yemen's population to be 26,053,000. This equates to 1,823,710 people.

Jordan

Only 3% of Jordanians view the Islamic State positively and another 6% view it somewhat positively. About 5% say they do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

With a population of 7,930,000, this translates to 237,900 supporters on the low end and 713,700 on the high end.

Libya

An estimated 7% of Libyans do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group. The estimated population is 6,244,000, placing the number of Islamic State supporters at 437,080.

Lebanon

The Fikra Forum poll found that support for the Islamic State is nearly non-existent in Lebanon with only 1% of the country's Sunnis seeing the Islamic State as fairly positive. The Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies had a similar conclusion.

The CIA World Factbook says that only 54% of the Lebanese population is Muslim. Of that Muslim population, only 27% is Sunni. The result indicates the presence of 8,578 Sunnis in Lebanon who view the Islamic State fairly positively.

In Sum

If we use the most optimistic of the polls for each of the 11 Arab states, we come to an estimate of 8,523,803 supporters of the Islamic State and an average of 5.8% support in the Arab world. If we extend that average to the other 11 Arab countries with a total population of 370 million, you get a result of 21,460,000 strong supporters of the Islamic State in the Arab world overall.

This is in line with the November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies. It concluded that 85% of Arabs view the Islamic State negatively and 4% view it positively. The difference of 1.8% can be attributable to the margin of error in the polls and/or slight changes in opinion.

If we include the most pessimistic polls and include those who view the Islamic State somewhat positively, the result is 24,454,228 Arabs who view the Islamic State at least somewhat positively. If the average of 11.5% is consistent across the entire Arab world, then up to 42,550,000 Arabs view the Islamic State at least somewhat positively.

This second number is also in line with the November 2014 survey's conclusion that an additional 7% are somewhat supportive of the Islamic State for a total statistic of 11%.

With a minimum of 8.5 million strong supporters and 24.5 million who view the group at least somewhat positively, the Islamic State has plenty of room for growth in the Arab world.

http://www.clarionproject.org/analysis/isis-has-least-42-million-supporters-arab-world#
 
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Harris35

MPA (400+ posts)
Re: ISIS Has Up To 42 Million Supporters in the Arab World

This is bullshit KHARJIS have no support anywhere in the world, this article is just full of lies. to hell with them and there supporters:angry_smile:
 

patriot

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: ISIS Has Up To 42 Million Supporters in the Arab World

They are a disgrace to Allah , His messenger , His book ,His message peace or Islam and muslims .
No follower of the prophet of peace and mercy can support them or should support them .
 

Amiable_Flame

MPA (400+ posts)
Re: ISIS Has Up To 42 Million Supporters in the Arab World

An analysis of four polls surveying Arab public opinion towards the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) reveals that the group has a bare minimum of 8.5 million strong supporters and that's a conservative estimate. If you include those who feel somewhat positively towards the Islamic State, the number rises to at least 42 million.

The estimate is based on a March 2015 poll by the Iraq-based Independent Institute for Administration and Civil Society Studies; a November 2014 poll by Zogby Research Services; another November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies and an October 2014 poll by the Fikra Forum commissioned by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

The following is a breakdown of the support for the Islamic State in 11 Arab countries:

Iraq

The November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies found that 2% of Iraqis view the Islamic State positively and another 4% view it positively to some extent. The March 2015 poll found that 5% do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

With a population of 32,586,000 according to the CIA World Factbook, that means the Islamic State has between 651,720 and 1,955,160 supporters in Iraq.

Syria

Seventeen percent of Syrians said that they completely support the Islamic State's goals and activities in the March 2015 poll. That statistic grows to 27% when you account for Syrians who do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

The November 2014 poll interviewed 900 Syrian refugees in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey and found that 4% are positive towards the Islamic State and another 9% are somewhat positive. This should raise serious concerns for countries that are accepting refugees from the civil war.

With a population of 17,952,000, that means the Islamic State has between 3,051,840 and 4,847,040 supporters in Syria.

Palestinian Territories

About 4% of Palestinians view the Islamic State positively but a shocking 20% feel the Islamic State is positive to some extent. This is the highest level of positivity towards the Islamic State in the November 2014 poll (which does not include Syria).

The CIA World Factbook says there are 1,816,000 Palestinians in Gaza and 2,731,000 in the West Bank, for a total of 4,547,000. This equates to a range of between 181,800 and 1,091,280 Palestinian supporters of the Islamic State.

Tunisia

The November 2014 poll found that Tunisia has the highest percentage of people who are view the Islamic State positively (7%). Another 6% view it somewhat positively. The finding is substantiated by assessments determining that Tunisia is the biggest source of foreign fighters for the Islamic State.

The country's population of 10,937,000 would include 765,590 people who are unequivocally supportive of the Islamic State; a number that grows to 1,421,810 if you include those who are somewhat positive.

Egypt

The Fikra Forum poll from October 2014 found that 3% of Egyptians view the Islamic State very positively (1%) or fairly positively (2%). The March 2015 poll has 4% of Egyptians viewing the Islamic State positively and another 6% viewing it somewhat positively.

Egypt has an estimated population of 86,895,000. The number of those who view the Islamic State positively ranges from 86,895 to 347,580 depending on which poll has the more accurate number. If you include all of those with some positivity towards ISIS, the range is 260,685 to 8,689,500.

Saudi Arabia

The Fikra Forum concluded that 2% of Saudis are very positive towards the Islamic State and 3% are fairly positive. The March 2015 poll has it at 5% positive and 5% somewhat positive.

Saudi Arabia has an estimated population of 27,346,000. The lowest statistic would mean that there are between 546,920 and 1,367,300 Saudis who are fully positive towards ISIS. If you include those who are somewhat positive, it is between 820,380 and 2,734,600 Saudis who are inclined towards the Islamic State.

United Arab Emirates

The Zogby poll from November 2014 found that 13% of the UAE's population most favors the Islamic State in the Syrian civil war. The country has a population of 5,629,000, translating to 731,770 Islamic State supporters.

Yemen

Approximately 7% of Yemenis say they do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group. The CIA World Factbook estimates Yemen's population to be 26,053,000. This equates to 1,823,710 people.

Jordan

Only 3% of Jordanians view the Islamic State positively and another 6% view it somewhat positively. About 5% say they do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

With a population of 7,930,000, this translates to 237,900 supporters on the low end and 713,700 on the high end.

Libya

An estimated 7% of Libyans do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group. The estimated population is 6,244,000, placing the number of Islamic State supporters at 437,080.

Lebanon

The Fikra Forum poll found that support for the Islamic State is nearly non-existent in Lebanon with only 1% of the country's Sunnis seeing the Islamic State as fairly positive. The Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies had a similar conclusion.

The CIA World Factbook says that only 54% of the Lebanese population is Muslim. Of that Muslim population, only 27% is Sunni. The result indicates the presence of 8,578 Sunnis in Lebanon who view the Islamic State fairly positively.

In Sum

If we use the most optimistic of the polls for each of the 11 Arab states, we come to an estimate of 8,523,803 supporters of the Islamic State and an average of 5.8% support in the Arab world. If we extend that average to the other 11 Arab countries with a total population of 370 million, you get a result of 21,460,000 strong supporters of the Islamic State in the Arab world overall.

This is in line with the November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies. It concluded that 85% of Arabs view the Islamic State negatively and 4% view it positively. The difference of 1.8% can be attributable to the margin of error in the polls and/or slight changes in opinion.

If we include the most pessimistic polls and include those who view the Islamic State somewhat positively, the result is 24,454,228 Arabs who view the Islamic State at least somewhat positively. If the average of 11.5% is consistent across the entire Arab world, then up to 42,550,000 Arabs view the Islamic State at least somewhat positively.

This second number is also in line with the November 2014 survey's conclusion that an additional 7% are somewhat supportive of the Islamic State for a total statistic of 11%.

With a minimum of 8.5 million strong supporters and 24.5 million who view the group at least somewhat positively, the Islamic State has plenty of room for growth in the Arab world.

http://www.clarionproject.org/analysis/isis-has-least-42-million-supporters-arab-world#


Jo in ko support ker rahay hain, wohi in k hathon qatal hon gay .. unhi k galay ye katain gay apni videos bananay k lie ..
or suno ..

Aik hadees ka mafhoom hay ke "Qurb-e-qayamat aik zamana aisa ae ga jabh bohat saray musalman qatal hon gay .. or ye qatal kernay or qatal honay walay dono hi jahanum main jain gay"

Aabh yahan Qatal kernay walay (ISIS) are we know dogs of hell and Qatal honay walay (excluding innocents) who support them and being killed will also go to jahanum..

So Good Luck ......
Have a safe journey to Jahanum ....
 

Piyasa

Minister (2k+ posts)
Islamic State ---- My FOOT ...

Allah says : Kissi ko Aag ki saza na do, kiyon ke ye saza sirf main don ga .. (These dogs of hell are putting behind All ALLAH's Orders) LOL at Islamic State

till 2020 - Their projection - not even a single Kafir country is in Black, If you look at the map .. haha. .. (LOL at their Jihad which is only againts Muslims)

The only purpose to create this ISIS by Mosad and America is to fulfill their dream of Greater israel and that's it.
West and Jews have come to know that, with the use of brutal military force, they will never be able to succeed, so they have created these DOGS of HELL to do this, this way Jews are getting two things
1: Defaming Islam by portraying Islam as a cruel religion
2: ISIS dogs are killing all muslims of gulf states to clear the way of greater israel

or kuch muslims in ko join ker rahay hain kiyon k ALLAH ne shayad un ki kismat ka faisla as a Jahanum ker dia hay ..
Allah un ko Hidayat de .. Amin

مجھے نہيں لگتا ان کو کبھی ہدايت ملے گی۔ ديش کا سينہ رحم سے خالی ہۓ۔
 

allahkebande

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: ISIS Has Up To 42 Million Supporters in the Arab World

An analysis of four polls surveying Arab public opinion towards the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) reveals that the group has a bare minimum of 8.5 million strong supporters and that's a conservative estimate. If you include those who feel somewhat positively towards the Islamic State, the number rises to at least 42 million.

The estimate is based on a March 2015 poll by the Iraq-based Independent Institute for Administration and Civil Society Studies; a November 2014 poll by Zogby Research Services; another November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies and an October 2014 poll by the Fikra Forum commissioned by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

The following is a breakdown of the support for the Islamic State in 11 Arab countries:

Iraq

The November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies found that 2% of Iraqis view the Islamic State positively and another 4% view it positively to some extent. The March 2015 poll found that 5% do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

With a population of 32,586,000 according to the CIA World Factbook, that means the Islamic State has between 651,720 and 1,955,160 supporters in Iraq.

Syria

Seventeen percent of Syrians said that they completely support the Islamic State's goals and activities in the March 2015 poll. That statistic grows to 27% when you account for Syrians who do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

The November 2014 poll interviewed 900 Syrian refugees in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey and found that 4% are positive towards the Islamic State and another 9% are somewhat positive. This should raise serious concerns for countries that are accepting refugees from the civil war.

With a population of 17,952,000, that means the Islamic State has between 3,051,840 and 4,847,040 supporters in Syria.

Palestinian Territories

About 4% of Palestinians view the Islamic State positively but a shocking 20% feel the Islamic State is positive to some extent. This is the highest level of positivity towards the Islamic State in the November 2014 poll (which does not include Syria).

The CIA World Factbook says there are 1,816,000 Palestinians in Gaza and 2,731,000 in the West Bank, for a total of 4,547,000. This equates to a range of between 181,800 and 1,091,280 Palestinian supporters of the Islamic State.

Tunisia

The November 2014 poll found that Tunisia has the highest percentage of people who are view the Islamic State positively (7%). Another 6% view it somewhat positively. The finding is substantiated by assessments determining that Tunisia is the biggest source of foreign fighters for the Islamic State.

The country's population of 10,937,000 would include 765,590 people who are unequivocally supportive of the Islamic State; a number that grows to 1,421,810 if you include those who are somewhat positive.

Egypt

The Fikra Forum poll from October 2014 found that 3% of Egyptians view the Islamic State very positively (1%) or fairly positively (2%). The March 2015 poll has 4% of Egyptians viewing the Islamic State positively and another 6% viewing it somewhat positively.

Egypt has an estimated population of 86,895,000. The number of those who view the Islamic State positively ranges from 86,895 to 347,580 depending on which poll has the more accurate number. If you include all of those with some positivity towards ISIS, the range is 260,685 to 8,689,500.

Saudi Arabia

The Fikra Forum concluded that 2% of Saudis are very positive towards the Islamic State and 3% are fairly positive. The March 2015 poll has it at 5% positive and 5% somewhat positive.

Saudi Arabia has an estimated population of 27,346,000. The lowest statistic would mean that there are between 546,920 and 1,367,300 Saudis who are fully positive towards ISIS. If you include those who are somewhat positive, it is between 820,380 and 2,734,600 Saudis who are inclined towards the Islamic State.

United Arab Emirates

The Zogby poll from November 2014 found that 13% of the UAE's population most favors the Islamic State in the Syrian civil war. The country has a population of 5,629,000, translating to 731,770 Islamic State supporters.

Yemen

Approximately 7% of Yemenis say they do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group. The CIA World Factbook estimates Yemen's population to be 26,053,000. This equates to 1,823,710 people.

Jordan

Only 3% of Jordanians view the Islamic State positively and another 6% view it somewhat positively. About 5% say they do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group.

With a population of 7,930,000, this translates to 237,900 supporters on the low end and 713,700 on the high end.

Libya

An estimated 7% of Libyans do not consider the Islamic State to be a terrorist group. The estimated population is 6,244,000, placing the number of Islamic State supporters at 437,080.

Lebanon

The Fikra Forum poll found that support for the Islamic State is nearly non-existent in Lebanon with only 1% of the country's Sunnis seeing the Islamic State as fairly positive. The Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies had a similar conclusion.

The CIA World Factbook says that only 54% of the Lebanese population is Muslim. Of that Muslim population, only 27% is Sunni. The result indicates the presence of 8,578 Sunnis in Lebanon who view the Islamic State fairly positively.

In Sum

If we use the most optimistic of the polls for each of the 11 Arab states, we come to an estimate of 8,523,803 supporters of the Islamic State and an average of 5.8% support in the Arab world. If we extend that average to the other 11 Arab countries with a total population of 370 million, you get a result of 21,460,000 strong supporters of the Islamic State in the Arab world overall.

This is in line with the November 2014 poll by the Doha-based Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies. It concluded that 85% of Arabs view the Islamic State negatively and 4% view it positively. The difference of 1.8% can be attributable to the margin of error in the polls and/or slight changes in opinion.

If we include the most pessimistic polls and include those who view the Islamic State somewhat positively, the result is 24,454,228 Arabs who view the Islamic State at least somewhat positively. If the average of 11.5% is consistent across the entire Arab world, then up to 42,550,000 Arabs view the Islamic State at least somewhat positively.

This second number is also in line with the November 2014 survey's conclusion that an additional 7% are somewhat supportive of the Islamic State for a total statistic of 11%.

With a minimum of 8.5 million strong supporters and 24.5 million who view the group at least somewhat positively, the Islamic State has plenty of room for growth in the Arab world.

http://www.clarionproject.org/analysis/isis-has-least-42-million-supporters-arab-world#

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