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    Home » Blog » Is Isis still a threat? New Orleans attack inspired by the terrorist organization raises alarms

    Is Isis still a threat? New Orleans attack inspired by the terrorist organization raises alarms

    January 3, 2025Updated:January 3, 2025 World No Comments
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    Is Isis still a threat? New Orleans attack inspired by the terrorist organization raises alarms
    Shamsud-Din Jabbar, Isis group, and New Orleans incident site ( Picture credit: Agencies / NYP )

    Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old Army veteran from Texas, rammed his delivery truck into New Year’s parties on Bourbon Street in New Orleans on January 1, killing 15 and injuring lots. According to the FBI, Jabbar was” 100 % inspired by Isis” and displayed an Isis flag on his rented vehicle. He also claimed to remain “inspired by Isis” and posted five video prior to the attack. Many people were shocked by his declaration of devotion to Isis, given that it was believed that the band was mostly defeated. But, experts point out that despite the criminal organization Isis ‘ evolution, its influence and authority over its members remain strong.
    Isis is employing the same techniques, according to the statement.
    KerryO’Brien Smith, a radicalization specialist, told The New York Post,” Isis may have changed over the years, but the way they work and influence people is related”. Smith noted that Isis continues to galvanize people, frequently targeting those with personal and financial problems, like Jabbar. ” We’re now seeing older people getting radicalized”, Smith added, stressing that Isis relies on regular methods to recruit people drawn to crime.
    Isis is” trying to capture heads.”
    Jabbar’s younger brother, Abdur Jabbar, described him as” caring” and” smart” but stressed that his actions stemmed from radicalization, not religion. Jabbar, who converted to Islam at a younger age, faced specific issues, including two wives and financial problems.
    Smith claimed that Isis then focuses on capturing minds through online advertising and pursuing vulnerable people through the pretext of society and independence fighting. Despite being banned from big social systems, Isis operates through video, chatrooms, and messaging applications.
    ” Once they were interested in acquiring more country, then it’s more looking to get thoughts. They make an appeal to those who believe they are a key member of the liberation soldiers. They’re still out there, on clips, in chatrooms – you name it”, Smith said.
    Their misinformation is still very potent, they claim.
    Isis’s control endures through its advertising sources, the War and Media Agency and Voice of Khorasan, which communicate advertising on websites like Telegram. A review from 2023 revealed that the team created fake news outlets that acted as a means of distributing propaganda for ISIS on CNN and Al Jazeera.
    The Center for the Analysis of Terrorism‘s leader, Jean-Charles Brisard, emphasized that while Isis has lost its geographical hold, its advertising continues to be very effective in radicalizing people like Jabbar, who had no immediate contact with the Isis leadership but instead chose to act based on its advertising.
    ” Isis has lost country and they’ve lost strength, but their advertising is still very powerful and effective online”, said Brisard. ” From what we can see, ( Jabbar ) had no contact directly with Isis leadership. The majority of Isis-inspired terrorists in the West are the same. We have even seen instances of European military commanders being radicalized”, he added. ” They often join based on watching or reading the propaganda”.
    Isis’s reduction
    Isis, also known as ISIL or Daesh, stands for the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. Following the upheaval of the conflict in Iraq and Syria in 2011, the party seized vast tracts of land and established a self-proclaimed caliphate in 2014. Isis imposed tough Fundamentalist rule and launched advanced propaganda campaigns to draw in foreign recruits when it was at its height, occupying a vast region stretching from western Syria to Baghdad. By 2019, foreign alliances dismantled the empire, killed its rulers, and ended its regional states, according to The New York Post.
    Isis has “gone under”
    Isis has then shifted its functions underground, authorities told The New York Post. The group’s current focus is on Afghanistan and other regions of Africa, especially the Sahel region, a great and unstable region in northern Africa that is rife with terrorism.

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