There was, of course, a sense of far-off inevitability. The physical presence of the IS has been reported from a number of locations where militant groups were not known to have existed before. This is separate from the dissemination of the IS ideology across the length and breadth of the planet. And is also distinct from the many militants who are ‘converting’ to it across different geographies. Many from Pakistan, Nigeria and Libya have claimed affiliations with the IS in the recent past. Pro-IS graffiti, pamphlets, a staggering following on social media and its sophisticated modes of recruitment have been constant sources of fear across the world. Above all else, the indelible turf of the terror network in the UK and its recruitment from the British population did much to cause ripples among those who considered faith-based terrorism to be a phenomenon that is characteristically that of the poor, the under-privileged, and from the ‘Orient’ world. Global terrorism is thriving today under the umbrella of the IS. It is organised, ambitious and vengeful. So scathing have some of its assaults been that even the all-hated and much-feared al Qaeda shudders in the face of its brutalities. The Texas shooting makes for a testing moment for the already-marginalised Muslim diaspora in the US, as well as for Pakistani-Americans as one of the gunmen had reportedly attended school in Islamabad.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 6th, 2015.
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