ISIS is back and its thirsty for Russian blood

>Russia is a familiar enemy for Sunni jihadists and has found itself in the crosshairs of IS-K for several reasons. According to IS-K, Moscow’s hands are covered in Muslim blood, especially in Afghanistan, where the legacy of the decade-long Soviet-Afghan War still looms large.
>Further, the Russian military’s brutal tactics in multiple Chechen wars and its scorched-earth counterinsurgency campaign in the Caucasus mean that there is no love lost for Russia. The Kremlin’s continued assistance to notorious dictator Bashar al-Assad in Syria, where Russian air support targeted Sunni strongholds during the long-running civil war, cements Russia’s image as a worthwhile enemy to focus on. Taken together, these factors make Russia an attractive target for IS-K
>The most recent piece of propaganda issued by IS-K on the subject was published in issue 24 of Voice of Khurasan on April 2. The article, “A Message from the Heart to our Muslim Brothers in Ukraine,” is allegedly written by an anonymous IS-K supporter living in Europe.

So what do you think /k/? Would Russia be able to withstand an insurgency along with their war in Ukraine? Or will Russia become the glorious caliphate which ISIS wishes to create?

https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/05/09/islamic-state-afghanistan-khorasan-propaganda-russia-ukraine-war/

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  1. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Russia is being very careful to keep the Muslims happy for multiple reasons

    >Not alienating their Muslim cannon fodder and causing Chechnya 3.0
    >Keeping support from the Arab, Persian, Indian, and African Muslims
    >Painting the Ukrainians as white supremacists who hate Muslims
    >Keeping Israel from openly backing Ukraine with threats of closing airspace in favor of Syria

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      As a Muslim who lived in Iraq most of his life, I’m sorry to admit that a frickton, perhaps the majority, of Muslims unironically love Russia. Bush really buck broke a lot of Muslims into hating everything western.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Nice try vatnik. I have family in Iraq and word on the street is that steps are needed to contain Iran and Russia. People are fed up with the lack of democratic progress. Everyone fricking hates Russia for plunging the region into instability.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          lmao yeah people are "fed up with the lack of democratic progress", not poverty. have a nice day redditor

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            He at least claimed he had family there, what do you have?

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              I speak Arabic and Farsi fluently and have a job directly related to the Middle East, moron

              کس امک ابن کلب

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                >have a job directly related to the Middle East
                But if you tell me what it is you'll have to kill me right?

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                What’s it like being a tea boy? How many anoplasties have you had to have?

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          Lol whut???

          >"Upset with the lack of democratic process"

          Dude third world people do not talk like that not care anything about that.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >their Muslim cannon fodder
      I thought Kadyrovites are just TikTok warriors who flee at the first sight of combat?

  2. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Reminder that Russia is the one who created ISIS

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Russia were the ones who created ISIS!

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Russia didnt do jack shit against ISIS, because they created them. ISIS was ment to bring trouble to Iraq and with that to the US, binding their resources and focus. Think about it, how could ISIS take over so Iraq so quick and so effective, when not with support and intel from Russia? It is unclear if they actually had Syria in mind or not, but sure as hell used them well there. Without ISIS it would have been rebels vs Assad, kurds and whole east Syria would have gone against Assad too, but with ISIS added to the play, everything changed. ISIS had taken over a lot of areas that were anti Assad and had oil refineries and they made no secret about that they would take over everyone giving the chance. They divided the anti Assad coaltions and gave Russia an exuse to expand in Syria militarily, while actually bombing rebels instead, so the last moderates leave the groups and radicals take over. Also it stopped the pipeline from Quartar and halted the one from Iran for many years, so Russia can stay the big gas seller in Europe.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          >t. moron
          ISIS happened because the dumb fricking Iran-puppet Iraqi PM shut down the Sunni Awakening councils that defeated the insurgency, so they said “lmao ok I guess we’re going back to being insurgents”

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            >>t. moron
            Yeah you are
            ISIS happened because assad let a shit ton of jihadies out of prisons and armed them with the help of little green men to give his government legitimacy in fighting them and create chaos among the rebel groups, many of which were islamist

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          Russia did more against ISIS than America did. They carried out more air strikes than the entirety of the coalition.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            How many of those were actually against rebel groups though? And idr any russian strikes in Iraq

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              >hasn’t watched flames of war and the footage of ISIS BTFOing Russians

              NGMI

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                Wtf does that have to do with what I said moron, did you respond to the wrong post?

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              They mostly did air campaigns in Syria because of their friendship with the Syrian Government

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                I know, hence the second part of my post
                Who was the target of a majority of those strikes though? Was it actually ISIS or was it "ISIS"

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                Well judging by how much ISIS screamed about it during their propaganda movies (the flames of war series) I assume it was on ISIS.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            Not even remotely true. Russia hardly bombed ISIS at all.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            Not even remotely true. Russia hardly bombed ISIS at all.

            Russia did do a lot to fight ISIS, however to claim they carried out as many air strikes as the coalition is meme material lmao. Although they were responsible for one of the greatest /k/ moments of all time when they found out the location of that ISIS training camp. Then some Anon reported it to the Russian military which bombed it.

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              >Although they were responsible for one of the greatest /k/ moments of all time
              Yes, the Battle of Khasham

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              That was /misc/ or /sg/ on /misc/, idiot.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            Cope. Russia and Assad created ISIS as a pretext to establish a military presence in Syria at a time when the whole world was supporting democratic reforms in Syria. There is little disagreement that the responsibility for ISIS’s war crimes lays squarely on Russia.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            Well techincally true, by destorying and buying back all thier old weapons stockpiles for ukraine they will no longer be able to flood them with soviet surplus arms at only transport costs.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          Here is a (You) for the effort

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      Kek, the glowies are still trying this line....
      Russia put an end to ISIS in Syria. Deal with it.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        https://i.imgur.com/wKGoUks.jpg

        >Russia were the ones who created ISIS!

        You are embarrassing yourself

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      This claim is a bit too much chutzpah even for a board as thoroughly pozzed as /k/

  3. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    What took israelites so long to mobilize their auxiliaries?

  4. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    > ISIS is back
    two more weeks

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      They’ve been back for a while. They’ve carried out multiple attacks through the Middle East and Turkey, and have made huge gains inside of Africa.

      Just because mainstream media doesn’t make stories about them because they have a new bogeyman doesn’t mean they’re gone.

      https://religionunplugged.com/news/2023/1/23/analysis-a-surging-isis-threat-endangers-africas-christians?format=amp

  5. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    oh god not isis/k/

  6. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    >using google translate makes me an expert
    Do they really?

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      what does google translate say I wrote, exactly?

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Something about being a 'son of a dog'

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      yes

      As a Muslim who lived in Iraq most of his life, I’m sorry to admit that a frickton, perhaps the majority, of Muslims unironically love Russia. Bush really buck broke a lot of Muslims into hating everything western.

      I speak Arabic and Farsi fluently and have a job directly related to the Middle East, moron

      کس امک ابن کلب

  7. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    They smell blood Russia's geopolitical disaster in Ukraine has made it ripe for Islamic insurgency.

  8. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    >The most recent piece of propaganda issued by IS-K on the subject was published in issue 24 of Voice of Khurasan on April 2. The article, “A Message from the Heart to our Muslim Brothers in Ukraine,” is allegedly written by an anonymous IS-K supporter living in Europe.
    ISIS being flip-flopping contradictory schizo as usual, but at least somebody in the ISK branch at least has done SOME historical reading. They've also published critiques against China but ironically only focused on China *after* the IEA came to power in Afghanistan, and ISIS didn't seem to care nearly as much in the 2010s.

    In March 2022, not long after the Ukraine War started ISIS central in their newsletter stated that the Ukraine War has nothing to do with Muslims and they and their supporters rebuked anyone who partook in it on either side. Of course, this is was completely moronic and willingly ignored the native Muslim population living in Ukraine including the Crimean Tatars, who were genocided by Russia in the 1770s and 1780s and by the USSR in the 1940s. Southern and Eastern Ukraine and adjacent Western Russia was the Crimean Khanate.
    Ever since the Russian Federation annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014, the Crimean Tatars have been oppressed and most of the political prisoners have been from them. There have also been many North Caucasians operating in Ukraine as a means to weaken Russia which helps their own causes at home.

    [1/2]

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      https://i.imgur.com/kjm6gZy.png

      >Russia is a familiar enemy for Sunni jihadists and has found itself in the crosshairs of IS-K for several reasons. According to IS-K, Moscow’s hands are covered in Muslim blood, especially in Afghanistan, where the legacy of the decade-long Soviet-Afghan War still looms large.
      >Further, the Russian military’s brutal tactics in multiple Chechen wars and its scorched-earth counterinsurgency campaign in the Caucasus mean that there is no love lost for Russia. The Kremlin’s continued assistance to notorious dictator Bashar al-Assad in Syria, where Russian air support targeted Sunni strongholds during the long-running civil war, cements Russia’s image as a worthwhile enemy to focus on. Taken together, these factors make Russia an attractive target for IS-K
      >The most recent piece of propaganda issued by IS-K on the subject was published in issue 24 of Voice of Khurasan on April 2. The article, “A Message from the Heart to our Muslim Brothers in Ukraine,” is allegedly written by an anonymous IS-K supporter living in Europe.

      So what do you think /k/? Would Russia be able to withstand an insurgency along with their war in Ukraine? Or will Russia become the glorious caliphate which ISIS wishes to create?

      https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/05/09/islamic-state-afghanistan-khorasan-propaganda-russia-ukraine-war/

      >According to IS-K, Moscow’s hands are covered in Muslim blood, especially in Afghanistan, where the legacy of the decade-long Soviet-Afghan War still looms large.
      Russia's biggest bloodshed against Muslims isn't even Afghanistan. It's their genocide of the Circassian and Abazin (and the smaller Ubykh and Arshtin) peoples in the Northwest Caucasus in the mid 1800s where they killed half the population and exiled most of the rest—most of whom fled to Turkey, many to the Levant and some to Iran. The Ubykh and Arshtin were rended extinct.
      Russia also wiped out the Muslims of the Qasim Khanate, Nogay Khanate and Sibir Khanate and most of the Astrakhan Khanate during the Early Modern Age. This is what led to the rise of the Russian Empire.

      The USSR wiped out half the Volga Tatar (Tatarstan and Astrakhan) and Kazakh populations in the 1920s and 1930s through starvation and forced labor in multiple famines. Crimean Tatars were also affected in the Ukrainian famine.
      Under Stalin they also ethnically cleansed the North Caucasus in the 1940s forcefully deporting most of the population (excluding Dagestan) to Central Asia and Siberia, most of whom were only allowed to return after Stalin's death. However, the Laz people of the South Caucasus and the Crimean Tatars, who were also targeted, were never allowed back by the USSR. Many of the remaining Crimean Tatars of Ukraine today had to slowly come back through a lot of navigation because they weren't directly allowed back en masse. Russia brought in ethnic Germans and East Slavs in the 1700s and 1800s to demographically replace the locals and natives along the Black Sea coast and Volga Delta regions. Some of the Germans ended up migrating abroad later on, others left after WW1, WW2 and the Cold War.

      [2/2]

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        >The USSR wiped out half the Volga Tatar (Tatarstan and Astrakhan)
        * and surrounding oblasts in-between like Orenburg, Chelyabinsk, Samara, Saratov and Volgograd.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Russia brought in ethnic Germans and East Slavs in the 1700s and 1800s to demographically replace the locals and natives along the Black Sea coast and Volga Delta regions. Some of the Germans ended up migrating abroad later on, others left after WW1, WW2 and the Cold War.

        The vast majority of Volga Germans were expelled to Siberia when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941.

  9. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    >russia is the bad guy again
    >nuclear proliferation is on the table again
    >china is out manufacturing the US again
    >the US is working with mujas again(?)
    Are we doing the 80s again?

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >china is out manufacturing the US again
      dubiously true at best, made moot by Mexico regardless

      luckily if we repeat the 80s, we still have Kissinger kicking around so we can ask him what to do and then do exactly the opposite

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        what is the political implication of china moving up the value chain and directly compete with US, Europe and Japan?

  10. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Reminder that Russia killed more civilians in Syria than ISIS did and twice as many children.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      More is good, less of them trying to get into Europe

  11. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    >ISIS is back
    It's Daesh.

  12. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    On a related note, Wagner simply cannot handle ISIS units in the Syrian desert. The absolute state of truffle hunters.

    https://www.mei.edu/publications/isis-beats-back-wagner-offensive-central-syria

  13. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    The reason why the US and UK had succeeded at creating ISIS in the first place was a Sunni coalition against Assad. Now that Assad had won the war and the Gulf states are re-aligning themselves with China and Russia, there's just no widespread support for another wahhabi pet project like that anymore. Sorry to burst your bubble, butt you'll have to make due with hohols.

  14. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    [...]

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