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Figure 3: Foreign Fighters by Region ............................................................................................. 9
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
It is my proud privilege to thank my supervisor Dr Tsering Shakya for encouraging me and
giving me a focused direction of research. As a person returning to academic life after a gap of
two decades I could not differentiate academic work from journalistic writing. My professors, Dr
Brian Job, Dr Paul Evans, Dr Julian Dierkes and, Dr Tsering Shakya taught me the academic
method of learning, appreciation and, creation. I would like to thank them for handholding me
into my academic pursuit.
A lot of credit goes to my wife Jyotsna who supported me not just in the academic adventure but
also the logistics that went into it. I thank my parents for encouraging me to resume studies and
the University of British Columbia’s unique culture that motivates me to become a lifelong
learner.
Gratitude is due to the Government of India, my employer, for granting me study leave and
funding the program.
INTRODUCTION:
India has seen terrorism in a number of forms, chasing different objectives and at several places.
A large scale insurgency has been running in its north- easterner part for decades and left-wing
extremism affects seven of its states. It also saw Punjab face very degree of terrorist violence for
a decade before it could be completely cured through strong political resolve and citizens’
support. It also faces regular attacks from terrorist organizations fighting in the name of Islam.
The most prominent such attack took place on November 26, 2008 when India’s financial hub,
Mumbai faced a string of bold attacks at 12 places including iconic locations like the Taj Hotel
and CSM Terminus Railway station. Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan based terror group managed to
send 10 fighters by boat to Mumbai where they attacked pre-identified targets in a well- planned
and coordinated manner. It left 164 dead.
26/11, as it has come to be known, exposed India’s vulnerabilities to terrorist attacks. Foreign
fighters unfamiliar with the city held it to ransom for four days and the National Security Guards
had to be flown in from Delhi to neutralize them. Inadequacies of intelligence gathering and
sharing, low or non-existent interdiction capability at the district level and, ineffectual
contingency planning and execution are systemic weaknesses that have not been properly
addressed even today. India remains as vulnerable to new emerging threat, ISIS.
The ISIS is a unique terrorist organization. It is the first organization to enlist as many as 34
thousand fighters, about two thirds of whom are from neither Iraq nor Syria, its main area of
operations. It is the envy of other Islamic terror groups, political organizations and Islamic
countries for its self-declaration of a Caliphate.1 While ISIS imports fighters from the around the
world, it also exports terror.
India faces the threat of ISIS gaining positive understanding among its 172 million Muslims. The
threat of people ‘migrating’ (hijrat) to Iraq and Syria for jihad is also a real one. The online
recruitment campaign also seeks to radicalize Indian Muslim youth and organize them into
1 Sekulow, Jordan Sekulow, Robert W. Ash, David A. French, Jay et al. Rise of ISIS: A Threat We Can't Ignore. 1st ed., Chapter 2: Rise of ISIS and the New Caliphate
2
violent groups. This thesis examines the extent of these threats in time and space by looking at
the visible activity of ISIS in India and identifying general trends across the world.
The thesis, then tries to offer a policy prescription for India. It looks at the strategies employed in
other countries, the prevailing trends and, possible activities India can undertake to handle the
ISIS threat.
3
CHAPTER 1: UNDERSTANDING ISIS
Rise of the ISIS
After the US invaded Iraq in 2003, a number of Sunni extremists groups and leftover elements of
Saddam Husain’s military initiated a resistance movement hoping to effectively resist the US by
fomenting a sectarian civil war. The individuals now leading ISIS had earlier constituted Al
Qaida in Iraq (AQI) and its leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, had pledged allegiance to Osama bin
Laden. Zarqawi was killed in a US air strike in 2006 and soon after the AQI was almost entirely
wiped out as Sunni tribes had decided to partner with the Americans to confront the jihadists.2
But AQI recovered from this defeat, it renewed itself in US run prisons inside Iraq, like Abu
Ghraib, where a number of insurgents and terror operatives networked and chalked out their
future.3 Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was one such leader who, first, distinguished himself as a leader
and then proclaimed himself the Caliph of the Islamic State and the group renamed itself ad-
Dawlah al-Islāmiyah or Islamic State.4
ISIS is no longer conducting terrorist activities alone but has evolved into a military organization
that is conducting conventional military operations in company and battalion formations, which
was not the case with the way al-Qaida fought. ISIS specializes in using militarily untrained
foreign volunteers as suicide bombers either moving on foot wearing suicide vests, or driving
vehicles packed with explosives. Often more than one suicide bomber is used.5
Audrey Cronin contests that ISIS is no longer merely a terrorist organization, instead, it has
grown into a pseudo state. One that controls sizeable territory, collects taxes, runs schools and
hospitals and, has a well-organized media unit which manages media exposure using film as well
as print media.6 Of late, September to November 2016, ISIS has lost a third of the territory it
once controlled to US-Russian- Iraqi forces.7
2 Hashim, Ahmed S. "The Islamic State: From al‐Qaeda Affiliate to Caliphate." Middle East Policy 21.4 (2014): 69-83. 3 Warrick, Joby. Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS. Random House, 2015. 4 Cronin, Audrey Kurth. "ISIS Is Not a Terrorist Group." Foreign Affairs. Web. 4 June 2016 5 McCants, William. The ISIS apocalypse: The history, strategy, and doomsday vision of the Islamic State.
Macmillan, 2015. 6 Zelin, Aaron. "The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria has a consumer protection office." The Atlantic 13 (2014): 2014. 7 Mortimer, Caroline. “Isis Loses a Third of Its Territory in Syria and Iraq.” The Independent, 9 Oct. 2016,
(Islamic congregation). It talks about the name of the magazine, “It is taken from the area named
Dabiq in the northern countryside of Halab (Aleppo) in Sham. This place was mentioned in a
hadith (the oral traditions attributed to the Prophet Muhammad) describing some of the events of
the Malahim (what is sometimes referred to as Armageddon in English). One of the greatest
battles between the Muslims and the crusaders will take place near Dabiq.”8
ISIS’ ideological propaganda is based on a myth that Allah’s Messenger had said, “The Hour
will not be established until the Romans land at al-A’maq or Dabiq (two places near each other
in the northern countryside of Halab). Then an army from al-Madinah of the best people on the
earth at that time will leave for them. When they line up in ranks, the Romans will say, ‘Leave us
and those who were taken as prisoners from amongst us so we can fight them.’ The Muslims will
say, ‘Nay, by Allah, we will not abandon our brothers to you.’ So they will fight them. Then one
third of them will flee; Allah will never forgive them. One third will be killed; they will be the
best martyrs with Allah. And one third will conquer them; they will never be afflicted with fitnah
(a broad term signifying temptation, strife, distress). Then they will conquer Constantinople.
ISIS world view is that, “O Ummah of Islam, indeed the world today has been divided into two
camps and two trenches, with no third camp present: The camp of Islam and faith, and the camp
of kufr (disbelief) and hypocrisy – the camp of the Muslims and the mujahidin everywhere, and
the camp of the Jews, the crusaders, their allies, and with them the rest of the nations and
religions of kufr, all being led by America and Russia, and being mobilized by the Jews.”9
8 Dabiq, Vol 1, Introduction Pg 4 9 Dabiq, Vol 1, A Call to Hijrah, Pg 11
5
In
Figure 1: ‘Why we hate you’ (Dabiq, 2016)
this ideological backdrop, the ISIS exhorts Muslims to migrate to Sham (a broad area including
Syria).10 11 They use the term hijrah (migration) which is a reminder of Prophet Mohammed’s
own hijrah from Medina to Mecca. ISIS literature reads, “Therefore, rush O Muslims to your
state. Yes, it is your state. Rush, because Syria is not for the Syrians, and Iraq is not for the
Iraqis. The Earth is Allah’s. {Indeed, the earth belongs to Allah. He causes to inherit it whom He
10 McCants, William. The ISIS apocalypse: The history, strategy, and doomsday vision of the Islamic State.
Macmillan, 2015. 11 Al-Tamimi, Aymenn Jawad. "The dawn of the Islamic State of Iraq and ash-Sham." Current Trends in Islamist
Ideology 16 (2014): 5.
6
wills of His servants. And the (best) outcome is for the righteous} [Al-A’raf: 128, Quran]. The
State is a state for all Muslims. The land is for the Muslims, all the Muslims. O Muslims
everywhere, whoever is capable of performing hijrah to the Islamic State, then let him do so,
because hijrah to the land of Islam is obligatory.”
“We make a special call to the scholars, fuqaha (experts in Islamic jurisprudence), and callers,
especially the judges, as well as people with military, administrative, and service expertise, and
medical doctors and engineers of all different specializations and fields. We call them and
remind them to fear Allah, for their emigration is wajib ayni (an individual obligation), so that
they can answer the dire need of the Muslims for them. People are ignorant of their religion and
they thirst for those who can teach them and help them understand it.”
One of the prime goals of ISIS is the creation of a Sunni Islamic State. It has claimed itself as a
Caliphate under its Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who claims his ancestry up to Prophet
Mohammed. As the Caliph, he demands allegiance of all Muslims across the world, something
existing Islamic governments fear. ISIS also believes that all religions who agree with
democracy have to die.12 The logic being that humans cannot frame laws because Allah has
already done that through his messenger in the form of Sharia.13 And this has scared many
Islamic countries as the ISIS in its manifesto titled ‘This is the Promise of Allah’ claims, "The
legality of all emirates, groups, states and organizations becomes null by the expansion of the
Khilafah's authority and arrival of its troops to their areas."14
The entire propaganda of Jehad and apocalypse seems to be working positively for ISIS as the
number of fighters landing in Iraq and Syria grows. The Soufan Group conducts a periodical
assessment of foreign fighters coming into Syria and Iraq and has estimated that, in December
2015, between 27,000 and 31,000 people had traveled to join the Islamic State and other violent
extremist groups from at least 86 countries. Their first survey in June 2014 had identified
approximately 12,000 foreign fighters and nearly eighteen months later, despite sustained
12 Withnall, Adam. "Iraq crisis: Isis declares its territories a new Islamic state with 'restoration of caliphate' in
Middle East." The Independent Independent Digital News and Media, n.d. Web. 29 Nov. 2016. 13 Withnall, Adam. "ISIS: The First Western Journalist Ever to Be given Access to the 'Islamic State' Has Just
Returned – and This Is What He Discovered." The Independent. Independent Digital News and Media, n.d. Web. 29 Nov. 2016.
18 Surendran, Vivek. “ISIS Recruits from Kerala: 11 out of 22 Missing Keralites Suspected to Be in Syria.” India Today, 11 July 2016, indiatoday.intoday.in/story/isis-kerala-recruitment-syria-kasargod-pinarayi-vijayan/1/712168.html.
19 Surendran, Vivek. “ISIS Recruits from Kerala: 11 out of 22 Missing Keralites Suspected to Be in Syria.” India Today, 11 July 2016, indiatoday.intoday.in/story/isis-kerala-recruitment-syria-kasargod-pinarayi-vijayan/1/712168.html.
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losing territory, many of its foreign fighters are returning home to continue Jihad on home
territory.20 Return of these Indian fighters, however small their numbers, can prove to be a
substantial problem for India.
Figure 3: Foreign Fighters by Region
Source: Soufan Group Report December 2015: An Updated Assessment of the Flow of Foreign
Fighters into Syria and Iraq
20 “Warning THOUSANDS of ISIS Jihadis Will Return to Europe.” Express.co.uk, 13 Nov. 2016,
an important region for the Khilafah and the global jihad due to its strategic geographic position.
Bengal is located on the eastern side of India, whereas Wilayat Khurasan (a historical region
incorporating parts of modern-day Afghanistan and Pakistan) is located on its western side.
Thus, having a strong jihad base in Bengal will facilitate performing guerilla attacks inside India
simultaneously from both sides and facilitate creating a condition of tawahhush (a situation of
management of savagery of non-believers23) in India along with the help of the existing local
mujahidin there, until the soldiers of the Khilafah are able to enter with a conventional army and
completely liberate the region from the mushrikin (polytheists), after first getting rid of the
‘Pakistani’ and ‘Afghani’ regimes, insha’allah”. Also, jihad in Bengal is a stepping-stone for
jihad in Burma.24 Are these words from a holed-up terrorist or the strategic vision of a far-
sighted political organization? India’s location between two increasingly unstable Muslim
neighbors, Pakistan and Bangladesh, makes it the next probable ISIS target. Can ISIS’ repeat its
success in the Indian sub-continent? There is a need to understand and analyze before taking this
threat at its face value.
ISIS achieved unparalleled success, which eventually led to its control over large areas in Iraq
and Syria because it had substantial support from the Sunni minority in Iraq, which felt
dispossessed of power, prestige and influence within the governing structure of the country. This
also led to support from major Sunni leaders and the leftover elements of Saddam Husain’s
army. With local support it could raise funds and find the professional military leadership and
develop the potential for controlling vast territories (at its highest, ISIS controlled more area than
that of UK!) particularly, the oil rich region making it the richest terrorist group in the world. As
it rose swiftly, other fundamentalist and radical elements joined it as they saw it as the true
inheritor of the Islamic Caliphate. Its deft use of social media and the internet drew fighters and
support from across the world, including Europe and US.25 26 The areas where ISIS rolled out
were strife torn, unstable and, falling. ISIS could fill the power vacuum and establish control in
Iraq, Syria and some parts of Afghanistan.
23 Weiss, Michael, and Hassan Hassan. ISIS: Inside the army of terror. Simon and Schuster, 2015, Chapter 3:
Management of Savagery 24 Dabiq, 14 Edition 25 Klausen, Jytte. "Tweeting the Jihad: Social media networks of Western foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq." Studies
in Conflict & Terrorism 38.1 (2015): 1-22. 26 Shane, Scott, and Ben Hubbard. "ISIS displaying a deft command of varied media." New York Times 30 (2014).
12
Let us relate these factors with ISIS’ envisioned expansion into India and analyze its chances of
success. Since India does not suffer any of the vulnerabilities ISIS exploited in the areas which
are now under its control, its chances of ‘establishing a Caliphate’ are non-existent. However,
this is not to suggest that it cannot create and sustain a terror campaign. It could employ a
strategy that does not focus on seizing and controlling territory. Their modus operandi could be
based on a different set of principles. It could amalgamate the existing Islamic terror outfits and
focus their combined energies against the Indian state. It could receive support from Pakistan’s
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) speeding up the process of the coming together of mujahidins of
various hues creating a symbiotic relationship between the two.
India’s concern is that terror groups like ‘Indian Mujahidin’ have merged themselves with ISIS
and some of its operatives were seen in a recent video espousing its cause. The Indian
Mujahideen, in turn, was a mutated version of the Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI)
which is the largest Islamic radical mobilization India has seen.
However, more effective terror groups in India like Lashkar-e-Toiba and Hizb-ul Mujahidin have
chosen to go alone ignoring ISIS’ call for Caliphate. The prime reason behind this is that these
anti-India terror outfits are guided and funded by Pakistan, through its Inter- Services
Intelligence (ISI) and ISIS has been running a campaign against the Pakistan government
conducting several large scale attacks in Pakistan in 2016.27
ISIS’ use of propaganda and social media could exploit the alienated members of the Muslim
minority. This has already happened, though to a minuscule degree, as 23 Indian Muslims got
attracted to the idea of migrating to a strife torn region and actually did.28 But more could get
mobilized if they were told that they were to look at targets nearer home, especially in the
aftermath of incidents of communal violence when passions are bound to be high. It should be
borne in mind that India’s biggest strength is its strong roots of liberalism, democracy and
secularism and this makes ISIS’ identified task a hard one.29
27 Masood, Salman. “Pakistan Reels After Attack on Police Training College Leaves 61 Dead.” The New York Times,
25 Oct. 2016, www.nytimes.com/2016/10/26/world/asia/quetta-attack-isis-pakistan.html?_r=0. (29 Nov. 2016) 28 Soufan Report 29 Chaddha, Vivek. “ISIS Attack Threat: Why India Should Be Afraid.” DailyO - Opinion News &Amp; Analysis on
Latest Breaking News India, 2 Aug. 2015, www.dailyo.in/politics/isis-islamic-state-jihad-terrorism-gurdaspur-attack-cia-saddam-hussein-isi-shia-sunni/story/1/5403.html. (29 Nov. 2016)
(Communications in-Charge) and Emir-e-Shariyo Dawati (Recruitment) to the youngsters.
Interestingly, none of them were victims of a communal riot or had studied in a Madarssa
(Islamic seminary) but were from fairly liberal Muslim families. 31
Why has ISIS grown at a slow pace in India as compared to say, neighboring Bangladesh? Have
India’s inherent strengths and government policies worked or is it that the intelligence is weak
and hijrat (migration) of operatives is going on undetected? Indian security agencies do not have
easy and seamless access to databases of immigration, visas, airlines records, etc and hence, it is
quite possible that some people might have joined ISIS in Syria but haven’t appeared on the
radar of Indian agencies. Similarly, some people from the large Indian diaspora in the Middle
Eastern countries could have joined ISIS for some time and returned to their work, totally un-
noticed by law enforcement agencies of both countries. On the other hand, the Indian version of
Islam is more Sufi than Salafi. Its liberal and syncretic form is more tolerant than the hardline
30 Sandhu, Kamaljit Kaur. “Reached Sudan, Joining ISIS: Indian Recruits Text to Dad Key Evidence for NIA.” India
Today, 25 May 2016, indiatoday.intoday.in/story/exclusive-nia-to-file-first-chargesheet-against-isis-recruit-mohammed-naseer/1/676950.html. (29 Nov. 2016)
31 Malik, Jamal, ed. Madrasas in South Asia: teaching terror? Routledge, 2007
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version prescribed by the ISIS and hence is, in all likelihood, found less attractive by ‘saint
worshipping’ Indian Muslims32.
CHAPTER 3: POLICY PRESCRIPTION:
Social Integration
India’s biggest strength is that it has a sizeable Muslim population (14.2 %)33 that has lived with
other religious communities side by side for centuries. People from different religions can’t
usually be distinguished from each other by their physical attributes, language or, attire. A highly
syncretic culture has evolved and a liberal version of Islam in the form of Sufism appeared in
medieval times and found followers among all religions and communities.34 This continues to
this day in the form of common customs and even common names.
Asish Nandy expresses his view that ‘many of the ethnic identities in India have bi-cultural
identities and he uses the report ‘People of India’ published by the Anthropological Survey of
India to prove that many in India even today continue to see themselves as having a plural self.
Many communities consider themselves simultaneously as Hindu and Buddhist, Hindu and
Muslim, and Hindu and Christian. He says, “It seems to be the case of a society where identities
are cross-cutting and the ‘others’ are telescoped into one’s own self, where none of the identities
can be adequately depicted or defined without taking into account some other.” Nandy further
states that the religious identities were blurred due to the effect of cosmopolitan living together
of many communities. 35 On similar lines, JJ Roy Burman argues in his book Hindu-Muslim
Syncretic Shrines and Communities that, “In India, many communities have dual identities in
terms of religion”.36
Charles Stewart and Rosalind Shaw write about the politics of religious synthesis and say, “The
center of Hindu-Muslim syncretism in India is ‘the shrine of the Sufi saint'. There are thousands
of them all over India, and both Hindus and Muslims worship the saints who are buried in the
32 Titus, Murray T. "Mysticism and Saint worship in India." The Muslim World 12.2 (1922): 129-141. 33 Source: Census India 2011 34 Aḥmad, Azīz. Islamic modernism in India and Pakistan, 1857-1964. issued under the auspices of the Royal Institute of International Affairs by Oxford UP, 1967. 35 Nandy, Ashis.The Multiverse of Democracy: Essays in Honour of Rajni Kothari, Sage Publications, 1996 36 Burman, JJ Roy. Hindu-Muslim Syncretic Shrines and Communities, Mittal Publications
15
tombs.”37 They add that defenders of saint worship deny that it is syncretic. Their defence is
based on the claim that it is an orthodox practice, in continuity with the Islamic past38 and
‘tolerance and harmony’ among Hindus and Muslims is a happy but perhaps, unintended
consequence. Influenced by the Arab reformist movements of the Wahhabis, a number of
movements opposing saint worship developed in nineteenth century India but the number of
devotees paying obeisance to Sufi shrines only kept growing3940.
Vast majority of India’s Muslims remain unaffected by Wahhabism, and this is one of the prime
factors for the ISIS not being able to find much fertile soil in this country.
The high level of social integration is valuable and the Indian government and all communities
need to work together to strengthen this. In India, a Muslim citizen can aspire and succeed at
virtually anything. India has had Muslim Presidents, captains of its hockey and cricket teams
and, CEOs of largest companies. The cultural integration and acceptability is most visible in the
form of its biggest stars of the Hindi film industry, who happen to be a bunch of ‘Khans’. Urdu
and Hindi are virtually the same language using different scripts and classical music of the
subcontinent cannot be separated into Hindu or Muslim traditions.
In some areas ghettoization is becoming visible. Localities, usually in the old central parts of
historical cities are becoming polarized into Muslim and Hindu areas. This needs to be checked
by creating awareness among the citizens to become more inclusive and discourage the tendency
of some high rise housing blocks from becoming home to people from only one religious belief.
In some states, for example Gujarat, a law41 have been framed to prevent a Hindu from selling
his house to a Muslim, and vice versa, to prevent polarization in identified areas. This has been
able, to an extent, prevent the slow ‘ethnic cleansing’ that had been happening in some areas.
This law could be extended to more areas so that ghettoization is stemmed.
37 Charles Stewart & Rosalind Shaw: Syncretism/ Anti-Syncretism: The Politics of Religious Synthesis 38 Fusfeld, Warren Edward. "The shaping of Sufi leadership in Delhi: the Naqshbandiyya Mujaddidiyya, 1750 to 1920." (1981). 39 Gaborieau, Marc. "A Nineteenth-Century Indian ‘Wahhabi’Tract Against the Cult of Muslim Saints: Al-Balâgh al-Mubin." Muslim Shrines in India: Their Character, History and Significance (1989): 198-239. 40 Gaborieau, Marc. "Criticizing the Sufis: the Debate in Early Nineteenth Century India.”." Islamic Mysticism Contested: Thirteen Centuries of Controversies and Polemics (1999): 452-67. 41 Gujarat Prohibition of Transfer of Immovable Property and Provision for Protection of Tenants from Eviction from Premises in Disturbed Areas Act, 1991
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The media has a central role in encouraging social integration and it can do so by not just
reporting terrorism, but also regularly reporting stories of the contribution Muslims have made to
the economy, polity and, culture of the country, it can. The social media is more instrumental in
framing public opinion and there is an urgent need to counter the jihadi propaganda which is
available plentifully on the net.
Counter Radicalization
Increasing the level of social integration and mutual respect among religious communities is
necessary to end the real and perceived alienation among Muslims. The leaders, by showing a
genuine political will to win hearts and minds of the Muslims, could halt their drift towards the
radical extreme. As reported by The Economic Times, the small number of persons who were
identified as ones drifting towards ISIS revealed during police interviews that their radicalization
was initiated by inflammatory videos of jihadi leaders based in Pakistan. Baited by them, they
got attracted to facebook pages on the jihadi leaders and organizations. Gradually, they were
spotted by recruiters who brought them together into micro-groups who met periodically and
were planning a strike. These candidates were not social misfits, wayward teens or riot victims,
yet they felt attracted to the jihadi propaganda.42
204 million smart phones in Indian hands have expanded the reach of electronic propaganda.43 In
the series of arrests across India of ISIS operatives in January 2016 it turned out that the first
exposure to radicalization content were vitriolic videos of terrorist leaders shared through
messaging platforms and over Bluetooth. Earlier, screening of such content secretly would have
been challenging but now it flows easily.
The jihadi narrative selectively quotes from the Islamic scriptures producing expansive and slick
material in print and audio-visual. The counter argument is, sadly, feeble. By strengthening the
counter narrative, the Islamic scholars, clerics and, liberal citizens could play a central role in the
counter-radicalization effort. Ideas about religion have to be debated. This way the deluge of
jihadi ideas can be stemmed with an even bigger, and more appealing, arguments and narrative
from liberal and mainstream Islam. The youngsters on the verge of radicalization could be
42 Tripathi, Rahul, and Krishna Thevar. “Indian Mujahideen Now Returns as ISIS; NIA Arrests 6 Radicals.” The
brought back best by the use of Sufi religious content, something Indian Muslims have grown up
with.
Another way of countering radicalization could be through finding ways of blocking the rabid
material on the net. The Indian Information Technology Act 2000, empowers the government to
order for websites and social media pages to be blocked or taken off but they still remain
available on the dark net and keep re-appearing on new sites and blogs. While the most vitriolic
material could be blocked, attempts at trying to block off all such material will be futile. Access
to such internet resources also opens up a window of opportunity to the security agencies of
identifying the two parties involved in the process of radicalization.
By preserving and strengthening India’s democratic and inclusive character it is possible to
insulate the Muslim minorities from any kind of radicalization. Indian Muslim heritage needs to
be promoted more as opposed to Arabised identities being promoted by many Gulf financed
organizations. Women’s spaces and opportunities have to enlarge, not just among Muslims but
all.
There is a need to reach out to the Madrassas to include professional education so that their
alumni acquire skills necessary for the job market. Once the Madrassas education becomes
relevant to the times and promotes inclusiveness, young Muslims will find themselves better
equipped while entering the job market.
As these youngsters enter the booming economy, plummeting unemployment rates should
percolate liberalism and keep the citizens focussed on issues of bread and butter and keep them
away from divisive tendencies of looking for means of putting the other community down.
De-Radicalization
If the counter-radicalization effort fails and some people begin to take steps towards joining the
ISIS, India’s law enforcement and national security agencies would need the capability of
identifying such candidates. But not each of them would deserve to be jailed. The law
enforcement agencies could examine the extent of radicalization and if the person hasn’t moved
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many steps ahead, he could be considered for a deradicalization program. By remembering and
following up those in jail, a serious attempt could be made to de-radicalize them.44
There is many a lesson for India to learn from Indonesia’s highly successful Deradicalization
program which was based on the assumption that through “kindness” even the most radicalized
minds could be brought back to normal family life.4546 Gunaratna (2015) points out that the
second assumption was that only a radical will listen only to another radical. Using moderates to
engage them would be fruitless as they already believe that the ulema (clergy) have failed them
by not doing enough to establish an Islamic state. Therefore, they used reformed radicals to talk
to them.47
India could have a deradicalization program that handles the candidates with empathy treating
them more like victims than hardened green eyed monsters. By preparing, like Indonesia, an
individualized content for each individual and by involving the family, friends and religious as
well as community leaders the program could succeed in bringing them back to ‘normal’ life.
Focussing on the values of equality that the Indian democratic political system aims to achieve
and that even with its flaws, it still offers a wide degree of freedom to its citizens, including
religious minorities would help bring the radicalized youth back to the mainstream and open-
minded style of living.
Parents have a crucial role to play. It has been observed that when the ISIS moves a candidate
towards radicalization, it first sees to it that he or she becomes a puritan Muslim. While this is
perfectly honourable, the exposure to gruesome propaganda and selective use of Islamic
scriptures come next. This is the stage when parents can notice behavioural and attitudinal
changes and can take steps to curb it. Instilling faith in the democratic system and creating a
belief that instances of injustices against the Muslim community would be addressed by the legal
44 Nance, Malcolm W., and Richard Engel. Defeating ISIS: Who They Are, How They Fight, What They Believe. “The
ISIS Radicalization Methodology” 45 Ekici, Sıddık. Building Terrorism Resistant Communities: Together against Terrorism. Amsterdam: IOS, 2009. Pg
259 46 Gunaratna, Rohan, and Mohamed Bin. Ali. "Chapter 4: Current State of Indonesia's Deradicalization and
Rehabilitation Program." Terrorist Rehabilitation A New Frontier in Counter-terrorism. Singapore: Imperial College, 2015. 71-76
47 Schulze. “Indonesia's Approach to Jihadist Deradicalization.” Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, www.ctc.usma.edu/posts/indonesia%E2%80%99s-approach-to-jihadist-deradicalization.
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system and their children need not think about taking the law into their own hands. Similar but
stronger role could be played by their friends and peers.
If the clerics and the community leaders come on board and liberal Muslim leaders reinterpret
Quran and Hadith to expose dark forces like ISIS who selectively quote to promote and justify
violence even against Muslims, the counter argument against radical propaganda could make a
positive impact on radicalized minds.
Develop Interdiction Capability at State and District level
India needs its state law enforcement and national security agencies to develop the capacity and
expertise to interdict terror whenever and where ever it erupts. Evolving networks need to be
identified early. Judicious use of communication interception and raising human intelligence
potential could together help identify the developing modules before they could launch a strike.
The Indian security agencies have been successful in 2016, as they have arrested more than two
dozen persons who were in the formative stages of creating an active module with the ultimate
objective of launching terrorizing crimes. But there could be many more in the offing. At least 11
persons from the South Indian state of Kerala have migrated to the Sham area of Iraq and Syria
in the summer of 2016.48
Police and security agencies need to work unbiasedly, take action based purely on evidence.
Giving up its old methodology of fake encounters (illegal executions) it has taken a positive step
forward by strictly going by the evidence and in many cases choosing not to book a person and
treating him like a victim and enlisting for an organized deradicalization effort.
While the federal government has created a counter terror unit called National Security Guards,
not many states and their districts have setup SWAT or similar teams to handle the first impact
of a terror strike. It has become imperative to invest the time, energy and, money and create such
special units capable of handling such terrorist challenges.
It is also necessary that the court trials of all incidents of terror and communal crimes move
swiftly and justice is delivered. This also applies to incidents of communal violence which
48 Surendran, Vivek. “ISIS Recruits from Kerala: 11 out of 22 Missing Keralites Suspected to Be in Syria.” India
Today, 11 July 2016, indiatoday.intoday.in/story/isis-kerala-recruitment-syria-kasargod-pinarayi-vijayan/1/712168.html. (29 Nov. 2016)
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constitute an irritant to the minority and are often mentioned in the radical propaganda. A well-
functioning justice sector and a firm ‘rule of law’ are necessary tools for countering
radicalization and preventing people from contemplating delivering justice themselves.
International Cooperation
India has suffered export of terror from its neighbour Pakistan for decades but the ISIS
phenomenon is uniquely different as it involves trans- continental movement of people, funds
and, ideas. An international alliance is necessary to prevent the spread of international terrorism
which has swiftly learnt to leverage information technology to recruit, motivate and, organize
new members. Earlier terror organizations could not interact often and they seldom organized
large meetings of their leaders. But ISIS uses slick media productions and messaging apps to
organize itself. The outcome has been visible in both lone wolf attacks and organized large scale
violent outbreaks across the world. India is under grave threat.
It is not possible for any state to defend itself in the prevailing environment. ISIS moves its
operatives, funds and, weapons across the world using the chinks in aviation security and
customs processes. The police can find itself suddenly facing an enormous threat. It is possible to
minimize this only through extensive cooperation on financial flows, intelligence, electronic
evidence collection and, police action. In a fast globalizing world terror has also started
globalizing and the common strategy of partner countries should factor this in. ISIS uses religion
as well as false propaganda to attract the disaffected. Participating nations need to develop a
strong rule based order, a robust justice sector and, smart intelligence gathering capacity to
protect their citizens and interests.
A US (and NATO) led approach is not likely to succeed in the present day geopolitics of the
Middle-east. Mearsheimer and Walt argue in ‘A Superior US Grand Strategy’ that, “The United
States should let the regional powers deal with that group (ISIS) and limit its own efforts to
providing arms, intelligence, and military training. ISIS represents a serious threat to them (local
powers) but a minor problem for the United States, and the only long-term solution to it is better
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local institutions, something Washington cannot provide.” 49 Local solutions with US ‘off-shore
balancing’ is likely to be more effective and resilient.
The United Nations developed a Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy to develop international
cooperation. The strategy is in the form of a resolution and a proposes a Plan of Action which is
composed of 4 pillars-
1. Addressing the conditions conducive to the spread of terrorism
2. Measures to prevent and combat terrorism
3. Measures to build states’ capacity to prevent and combat terrorism and to strengthen the
role of the United Nations system in that regard;
4. Measures to ensure respect for human rights for all and the rule of law as the fundamental
basis for the fight against terrorism.50
If the coalition against terror, which now virtually includes all countries, come together and
establish mechanisms of intelligence sharing, the provisions of the Mutual Legal Assistance
Treaty (MLAT) are strengthened and made swift so that evidence (mostly electronic) is shared
between agencies and, border controls are continuously upgraded and access to passport and visa
databases and their biometric information is put in place ISIS led terror can be curbed. But most
importantly, it must be borne in mind that winning hearts and minds is a better and stronger
strategy when compared to the one based on police making arrests and the military bombing
those it can’t.
49 Mearsheimer, John J. “The Case for Offshore Balancing.” Foreign Affairs, 19 June 2016,