From Counter Extremism Project <[email protected]>
Subject Extremist Content Online: ISIS Supporters Spread Conspiracy Theories Online About Al-Quraishi’s Death
Date February 7, 2022 11:05 PM
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The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the methods used by
extremists to exploit the Internet and social media platforms to recruit....


<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>
Extremist Content Online: ISIS Supporters Spread Conspiracy Theories Online
About Al-Quraishi’s Death

 

(New York, N.Y.) — The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the
methods used by extremists to exploit the Internet and social media platforms
to recruit followers and incite violence. Last week, following the U.S.
announcement that ISIS leader Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Quraishi had died in a
U.S raid, official ISIS media outlets did not make any immediate comments on
the death. However, the group’s online supporters presented different
conspiracy theories trying to dispute the U.S. narrative of al-Quraishi’s
death. A new Afghanistan centric pro-ISIS web magazine titled “Voice of
Khurasan” was released online from the al-Azaim Foundation. A couple of days
later the 24th issue of “Voice of Hind” was released and uploaded on multiple
websites.

 

In addition, CEP researchers found a website belonging to the Rise Above
Movement (RAM) affiliated “active club” movement. Neo-Nazi group The Base
posted a propaganda video on Telegram that was produced with the recently
formed splinter Atomwaffen Division (AWD). White supremacists on the dark web
celebrated the murder of two German police officers, and on BayFiles white
supremacist terrorist manifestos and bomb making guides were located. Finally,
at least seven white supremacist Telegram channels celebrated bomb threats that
were called in to historically black colleges and universities.

 

No Official ISIS Response to Killing of Leader Al-Quraishi

 

By February 5, ISIS official media outlets did not address the Thursday raid
by U.S. Special Operations forces that resulted in the death of the terrorist
group’s leader, Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Quraishi.

 

ISIS online supporters presented various conspiracy theories regarding the
identity of the individual whose house was raided on February 3, including that
the occupant was a high ranking member of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
<[link removed]>
 (HTS), that HTS was secretly working with the U.S., or that ISIS’s leader was
not killed. Other ISIS online supporters warned web forum members that they
should not share information not confirmed by ISIS official media offices and
that gossip was detrimental to the group’s online support infrastructure.
Additional posts affirmed that the death of al-Quraishi would not impact the
group as a whole, that martyrdom was desirable, and that steadfastness and
faith were essential.

 

New Pro-ISIS Magazine “Voice of Khurasan” Released

 

On January 31, a new pro-ISIS web magazine, titled “Voice of Khurasan,” was
released online from al-Azaim Foundation. The magazine is analogous to the
pro-ISIS publication “Voice of Hind” in that both are written in English and
have similar layouts and imagery.

 

The inaugural “Voice of Khurasan” issue contained seven articles, four dealing
with broader ISIS matters, and three directly concerning Afghanistan. The four
global articles called for a new generation to join ISIS, celebrated the
Ghweran prison attack in Hasakah, Syria, encouraged the practice of ISIS’s
specific brand of fundamentalism, and encouraged their readers to give the
group money, especially women who are described as not being able to
participate in armed combat.

 

The web magazine included an article condemning the Taliban, who were
described as hypocrites for claiming to be an Islamic emirate but having
diplomatic relations with Pakistan, the U.S., China, and other states. The
article also accused the Taliban of protecting opium fields and traffickers,
defending the majority Shiite Hazara community, and entering a secret pact with
the U.S. to destroy ISIS-K. The second article regarding Afghanistan contained
a propaganda biography of the ISIS terrorist who killed almost 200 people,
including 13 U.S. service members, in the suicide attack outside the Kabul
airport on August 26.

 

The bomber was described as the well-educated son of a wealthy family who gave
up a life of comfort to join ISIS-K. The final article concerning Afghanistan
stated that ISIS’s self-proclaimed Khurasan province is the third most
important geographic unit, following Iraq and Syria, and that ISIS’s pure
enforcement of religious law is a threat to the Taliban and all other regional
powers and the U.S. The article described ISIS as not discriminating based on
tribe, nationality, or ethnicity, contrary to the Taliban, and encouraged the
reader to join the group before it was too late.

 

The magazine was spread on RocketChat and a pro-ISIS propaganda website and
was additionally located on JustPaste.It, Archive.ph, and the Internet
Archive’s Wayback Machine. JustPaste.It and the Wayback Machine removed the
magazine after CEP reported it, but Archive.ph did not.

 

One member of a pro-ISIS chat stated that the release of the web magazine in
English was “extra special” because pro-ISIS propagandists remembered their
broad global audience.

The cover of “Voice of Khurasan”

 

“Voice of Hind” Web Magazine Released

 

CEP located multiple uploads of the 24th issue of the pro-ISIS web magazine
“Voice of Hind,” released on February 4. The issue contained an article
celebrating the attack on the Ghweran prison in Hasakah, Syria, expressing the
desire that soon other prisons holding ISIS prisoners would similarly be
assaulted. A different article stated that the Ghweran attack showed that ISIS
fights to free prisoners and refuses to surrender. The magazine also contained
an article that stated that Indian Hindus planned to kill Muslims and that
sectarian behavior, whether through political parties or mob violence, would
only strengthen ISIS. The article encouraged acts of terrorism in India. A
separate essay condemned nationalism, atheism, democracy, secularism, and
ethnocentrism.

 

The web magazine was spread on Hoop, Element, and a pro-ISIS propaganda
website. The publication was additionally uploaded to at least seven websites.
Within approximately 24 hours, the web magazine was only available on two
websites, the Internet Archive, and the Tlgur Telegram bot. Tlgur removed the
magazine after CEP reported it, and the Internet Archive made it only available
to logged in users.

 

White Supremacist Network Linked to Rise Above Movement Launches Website

 

CEP researchers located a website belonging to the Rise Above Movement
<[link removed]> (RAM) linked
“active club” movement. The website contains essays on the group’s
decentralized structure, white supremacist organizing, propaganda videos and
photos, and contact information. According to ICANN, the website was created in
September 2021, however, site activity increased in late January 2022. The
website uses Cloudflare as its name server and Registrar.Eu as its registrar.

 

On February 1, an active club affiliated Telegram channel requested that the
group’s supporters send photos to be featured in their promotional material.
RAM’s cofounder and leader Robert Rundo, who authored several essays on the
website, is allegedly
<[link removed]>
 hiding out in Serbia.

 

Neo-Nazi Groups The Base and Splinter Atomwaffen Division Release Propaganda
Video

 

On January 29, a Telegram channel affiliated with the neo-Nazi group The Base
<[link removed]> released a propaganda video
jointly with the splinter
<[link removed]>
 Atomwaffen Division
<[link removed]>
 (AWD). The video shows five individuals firing rifles in a snowy wooded area
in what the video describes as a joint training event between the two groups in
2022. The video concludes with recruiting contact information for both groups.

 

On November 8, 2021, a breakaway AWD was announced, claiming no affiliated
with the National Socialist Order, AWD’s successor organization. James Mason
<[link removed]> condemned the
splinter AWD group on November 12, stating that it was the work of a single
individual. While the size of the splinter AWD group is unknown, available
evidence suggests that it is extremely small, and the group has been quiet
since announcing their formation in November.

 

White Supremacist Dark Web Imageboard Celebrates Murder of Two German Police
Officers

 

On January 31, a user of a white supremacist imageboard on the dark web
celebrated the murder of two German police officers in Rhineland-Palatinate.
The forum member used an image frequently associated with accelerationist
neo-Nazi Telegram channels and used antisemitic language to describe the slain
police officers. German authorities arrested two men in connection with the
killing.

 

Explosives Guides, White Supremacist Terrorist Manifestos Removed From BayFiles

 

On February 1, CEP reported content to BayFiles, including white supremacist
terrorist manifestos and information for the homemade construction of
explosives, explosive devices, firearms suppressors, and firearms components.
BayFiles removed the content after it was reported. The files were uploaded by
a user of a dark web white supremacist forum.

 

White Supremacist Telegram Channels Celebrate Bomb Threats at Historically
Black Colleges and Universities

 

On Tuesday, February 1, at least seven white supremacist Telegram channels
celebrated bomb threats called into historically black colleges and
universities on Monday and Tuesday. On February 2, U.S. federal law enforcement 
identified
<[link removed]>
 six juveniles as persons of interest related to the threats, which were
motivated by racism. All seven Telegram channels endorse white supremacist
accelerationist violence. There is no known connection between the six persons
of interest and white supremacist Telegram channels.

 

###

 

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