ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror (BOOK REVIEW)
ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror
by Michael Weiss and Hassan Hassan
Regan Arts
Paperback, $14.00
288 pages
ISBN: 978-1-941393-57-4
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“This
book… set out to answer a simple question asked repeatedly on cable news shows:
Where did ISIS come from, and how did it
manage to do so much damage in so short a period of time?
The
question was understandable, given the images and videos circulating… most
notoriously, the horrifying propaganda beheadings of several Western hostages.
But the question was also a strange one, because the U.S.
has been at war with ISIS for the better part
of a decade.
ISIS
is a terrorist organization, but it isn’t only a terrorist organization… At
once sensationalized and underestimated, brutal and savvy, ISIS
has destroyed the boundaries of contemporary nation-states and proclaimed
itself the restorer of a lost Islamic empire. An old enemy has become a new
one, determined to prolong what has already been an overlong war.”
Excerpted
from the Introduction (pages xiii-xvi)
What is ISIS? Where did it come from? What’s its agenda? And how
is it different from ISIL and Al-Qaida? These are the sort of questions
addressed in ISIS: Inside the Army
of Terror, a thorough study of the rapidly-rising terrorist organization which
President Obama once condescendingly dismissed as just “the Junior Varsity
team” to allay concerns when it captured Fallujah a year ago.
But ISIS, the Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria,
not only still holds the city, but has expanded its sphere of influence
exponentially. Fortunately, Michael Weiss and Hassan Hassan have collaborated
on an eye-opening opus explaining everything you ever wanted to know about ISIS but were way too afraid to ask.
The co-authors are
not pointy-headed, chin-pulling professors pontificating from an ivory tower,
but rather boots on the ground reporting on knowledge accumulated from
considerable personal experience. Hassan is a native Syrian from a town that has
long served as a portal for jihadists moving back and forth from Iraq. And Weiss
is a veteran journalist whose beat was the war-torn city of Aleppo
before it became an ISIS fiefdom ruled by
Sharia law.
The book explains how
ISIS was created in the wake of a split
between two al-Qaida leaders, Osama bin Laden and the even more fanatical Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi. Over the ensuing years, the terrorist organization has
evolved into a trans-national arms and oil trafficking cartel capable of
deploying foot soldiers anywhere in the Middle East.
It also employs sophisticated marketing methods to recruit new members, and has
managed to infiltrate many rival organizations before sabotaging them from
within.
Perhaps most
critically, ISIS has succeeded in positioning itself in the minds of many Sunni
Muslims as the sect’s last line of defense against the United States, Israel and a host of supposedly-apostate
Arab states. And it relies on a religious rationale to advocate the slaughter
of such infidels by any means necessary.
A chilling wake-up
call shedding light on a frightening force hell bent on resurrecting a medieval
Islamic empire with malevolent global aspirations.
To order a copy of ISIS, visit:
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