Isis threatens vladimir putin biography
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The Backstory on ISIS-K, the ISIS Affiliate Believed Responsible for Moscow Attack
The suburban Moscow concert hall assault last Friday that killed more than 130 people was the deadliest attack inside Russia in 20 years. It raised major questions about the capabilities and ambitions of the terror group that U.S. officials believe was responsible: ISIS-Khorasan, or ISIS-K, an affiliate of the self-declared Islamic State that emerged in Afghanistan.
In multiple documentaries and related reporting over the years, FRONTLINE has examined ISIS-K’s relationship with ISIS based in Iraq and Syria, its rivalry with the Taliban, its attacks inre Afghanistan — including the deadly bombings at and near Kabul’s airport during the chaotic 2021 U.S. withdrawal — and the potential threat ISIS-K posed beyond Afghanistan’s borders following the U.S.’s exit from the country.
Referring to a series of bombings inre Taliban-controlled Afghanistan in 2021, former U.S. naval intelligence officer M. L
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Abstract: Under the guise of joining the U.S.-led war against the Islamic State, Russian President Vladimir Putin intervened militarily in Syria in September 2015 by launching what the Russian media dubbed Operation Vozmezdie (Retribution). But his real aim was to bolster the beleaguered Bashar al-Assad regime in the western corridor where most Syrians live. Russian forces have deployed advanced tanks and aircraft to repulse an alliance of Sunni rebels that was advancing on the coastal strongholds of the Alawite-dominated Assad regime. But in so doing, Moscow incurred the wrath of Sunni jihadist groups, including the Islamic State, even though the vast majority of Russia’s bombings have not targeted the group. As a result, Russia has increasingly been made a primary target of global jihad with a rising number of Islamist terrorist plots and attacks focusing on Russian targets at home and overseas. With thousands of foreign fighters from the former Soviet bloc in Syria and Iraq, the • It appears almost certain the brutal assault on a Russian crowd settling down to watch a rock concert in Moscow on Friday night was an Islamist terrorist attack. At least 133 people were left dead and scores more were injured after gunmen with automatic weapons stormed the Crocus City Hall in Moscow and opened fire, triggering a stampede. Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack, initially through its Amaq media channel and then directly. The modus operandi of the attack also fits with previous Islamic State attacks. It has been widely reported the attack was the work of Islamic State Khorasan (ISIS-K), a branch established in 2015 in Afghanistan. So who is this group, why would they attack Russia and what does this mean for the broader terrorism threat? Read more: Iran terror blast highlights success – and growing risk – of ISIS-K regional strategy ISIS-K is the Islamic State branch that has most consistently and energetically attempted t
What is ISIS-K?