Tziarras, Zenonas ORCID: 0000-0002-8468-642X (2017) Islamic Caliphate: A Quasi-State, a Global Security Threat. Journal of Applied Security Research, 12 (1). pp. 96-116. ISSN 1936-1629
Full text not available from this repository.
Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19361610.2017.1228038
Abstract
This article examines the “Islamic State” (IS) phenomenon that has shaken the Middle East since the summer of 2014 as well as its large-scale security implications. To this end the article provides a brief historical background on IS, explores and defines its organizational character, as well as identifies and evaluates the different kinds of security threats posed by IS at the regional and global levels. The argument is that IS is not a typical case of a terrorist organization. It is rather a fusion of a state, an insurgency, and a terrorist organization that could be best described as a “quasi-state.” Further, the security threats posed by IS are categorized into conventional and asymmetrical (or nonconventional) ones. The former regard the regional level, while the latter can even have global repercussions. The article concludes with an assessment of IS's most important security threats and highlights the importance of dealing with its extremist ideology and the conditions that fuel it.
Repository Staff Only: item control page