July 3, 2015
Islamist attacks in Egypt are occurring against the backdrop of operations against the banned Muslim Brotherhood — on Wednesday, nine Brotherhood members, including a former MP, were killed in a police raid — and the upholding of death sentences against former president Mohammed Morsi and others. While Egypt’s new authoritarianism under President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi is a cause for concern in itself, given especially the dangers of a collapsed economy in a divided society, the mushrooming of IS franchises across the map — Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Tunisia, Nigeria, the Caucasus and in the West — proves two things. First, the IS is morphing rapidly from a territorially defined entity. Second, current strategy, fragmented and ill-defined as it is, is not adequate, especially with a full-fledged conflict between the IS and al-Qaeda, whose turf the former is usurping, in the offing.
Operations against the IS must keep in mind the fluidity of the situation. All Middle Eastern governments need to engage with the menace, not least in persuading the rich to stop financing radicalism. That Egypt is likely to request the Israel Defence Forces to engage Sinai Province if it reaches the Gaza border indicates the scale of collaboration needed.
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