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- The Islamic State (Terrorist Organization) | RAND
ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria), also known as ISIL (Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), is a Sunni jihadist group with a particularly violent ideology that calls itself a caliphate and claims religious authority over all Muslims It was inspired by al Qaida but later publicly expelled from it RAND terrorism experts have analyzed the group's financing, management, and organization
- Foundations of the Islamic State - RAND Corporation
A thorough examination of the Islamic State's history and practices is useful for designing a coordinated and effective campaign against it — and for understanding why the group might be able to survive such an effort and sustain itself in the future
- The Role of U. S. Airpower in Defeating ISIS | RAND
The United States used airpower in Syria and Iraq to halt ISIS's momentum and help defeat the organization, without committing a large number of ground forces
- أبحاثنا عن داعش (الدولة الإسلامية في العراق وسوريا) | RAND
يقدّم هذا المنظور التحليليّ خياراتٍ من أجل التفعيل العملياتيّ للنتائج التي وصلنا إليها مؤخراً في مؤسسة RAND بشأن خصوم الدولة الإسلامية في العراق وسوريا (ISIS) ومناصريها عبر تويتر (Twitter)
- What Life Under ISIS Looked Like from Space | RAND
Satellite images show how ISIS attempted to govern in Iraq and Syria, the economic damage the group left behind, and what it will take to rebuild
- How ISIS Is Transforming | RAND
The campaign to counter ISIS has made significant progress, but predictions of the group's demise are premature It is transitioning from an insurgent organization with a fixed headquarters to a clandestine terrorist network dispersed throughout the globe
- ISIS: Weakened but Still Potent | RAND
ISIS is being defeated as an insurgency while preparing to transform into a clandestine terrorist group But ISIS will continue to pose a serious threat to the countries where it operates and to the Western nations that it targets as it evolves
- Experts React to ISISs Gruesome Execution of Jordanian Pilot
A grisly video released yesterday by ISIS appears to show Jordanian pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh burned alive in a cage Why the shift away from beheadings? What does the execution mean for Jordan? What implications will it have for ISIS?
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