The Islamic State organization and its violent progeny, ISKP, have viewed Moscow as their enemy since the group’s inception.
By Peter Smith, Lucas Webber, and Colin P. Clarke April 02, 2024
A Russian Rosguardia (National Guard) servicemen secures an area as a massive blaze is seen over the Crocus City Hall on the western edge of Moscow, Russia, Friday, March 22, 2024.
Credit: AP Photo/Dmitry Serebryakov
After four extremists stormed the Crocus City Hall, a music venue in Krasnogorsk on the outskirts of Moscow, with assault rifles and incendiary devices, the world was shocked as footage emerged of crowds fleeing the scene amid a hail of bullets and bodies. Confirming the carnage as its handiwork, Islamic State media outlets claimed the attack, and shortly after began to release gruesome body camera footage from the event. The video showed the perpetrators slaughtering civilians and, in some cases, mutilating the bodies as they made their way through the building.
For many, the March 22 attack against the concert hall was their first introduction to the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP). The most deadly terrorist attack against Russia in decades, the Islamic State organization and its violent progeny, ISKP, have viewed Moscow as their enemy since the group’s inception. Russia has been an official enemy, and was mentioned during Abubakr al-Baghdadi’s declaration of the Caliphate in 2014 among the “camp of the Jews, the crusaders, their allies” that are “all being led by
Islamic State Declarations Against Russia Before and During the Caliphate
The Islamic State’s grievances with Moscow are built into the foundational doctrine of the organization. The group’s ideological godfather, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, traveled to Afghanistan in 1989 to join the mujahideen in their fight against the Soviet Union. Al-Zarqawi arrived too late to fight but established his first connections with jihadist militants. His legacy of bellicosity lives on to haunt Russia, particularly through the Khorasan branch which has wedded it with former Islamic State spokesman
In 2006, the Islamic State precursor,
After the formation of the caliphate in 2014, and the consummation of a “rash decision of arrogance” with Russian military activities in Syria in 2015, the Islamic State deemed the Kremlin the leader of the “
The same year also saw the official creation of ISKP, which accused the Taliban in Afghanistan of being a puppet of Iran, China, the United States, and, of course, Russia, in an attempt to delegitimize its standing as the true mujahidin force. Russian nationals once made up a comparatively
In 2015, authorities reported detaining an unspecified number of men trained by the Islamic State in Syria and
Subsequently, an
ISKP Turns Sights on Russia
The Islamic State’s Afghanistan-Pakistan branch has framed Taliban and Russian interests as intertwined, which has markedly accelerated significantly after the fall of Kabul in 2021. Despite the resilience of ISKP and frequent local operations, Taliban forces have had a
Both ISKP and the Taliban had already been exchanging blows before the latter’s return to governance, and the Islamic State did not hesitate to quickly condemn the “apostates” in an
In 2022, an ISKP suicide bomber rocked the
Both ISKP and Islamic State media aimed to dash the Taliban’s ambitions of securing international relations with major global powers, especially Russia, which continued to remain a fixture in the organizations’ propaganda due to its interventions within the Middle East. ISKP had progressively ramped up its criticisms and calls for supporters to conduct attacks against Russia. In a 2022 Eid message, the
Within Russia’s borders, threats and reported disruptions of Islamic State plots by law enforcement have been more commonplace in the year leading up to the recent attack outside Moscow. In April 2023, a Tajik citizen with ties to the Islamic State and alleged plans to attack the Russian railway company and large gatherings of people with an improvised explosive device in the Moscow region and Novosibirsk was arrested and found guilty of
Six alleged Islamic State militants were killed after a 15-hour standoff in the Republic of Ingushetia, located within the Northern Caucasus on March 3, 2023. Three members of the security forces were injured and one passerby was killed during the fighting,
The same day, the
Future ISKP Threat to Russia
Many were shocked by the ISKP attack in Russia, asking “why would the Islamic State want to target Russia?” Yet, for
ISKP was quick to capitalize on the momentum from the attack to promise follow-up action, asserting that “broadcasting videos of prisoners being tortured by you has increased the thirst of thousands of brothers for your blood,” adding how “this time we will give such blows that your future generations will remember … you will be massacred together with your children and women.” ISKP’s Al-Azaim Foundation for Media Production published another image tying “the Battle for Moscow” to the Islamic State’s global campaign, stating that it is “one battle, one enemy, from the far south in Mozambique to the far north in Russia.” ISKP also jointly republished a threat to the West with pro-Islamic State outlet Al-Battar teasing “after Moscow … who is next?” listing Paris, Rome, London, and Madrid as possible targets. The Islamic State spokesman’s new speech praised ISKP for attacking the “Crusader Americans, the Russians, and the Communist Chinese.”
ISKP has intensified its rhetorical focus on Russia while also perceiving opportunity in Moscow’s intelligence and security resources being spread thin as a consequence of its ongoing invasion of Ukraine, its intervention in Syria, and its PMC operations across Africa. The group has overtly said so, celebrating Russia as bogged down in a bloody war of attrition in what it calls “
All indications point to a continued and perhaps heightened ISKP threat to Russian interests in South and Central Asia as well as domestically. The branch will continue its efforts to incite supporters to violence and likely direct further external operations. Moscow’s response to the attack and stigmatization of Central Asians will only fuel the sentiments that the Islamic State and ISKP seek to exploit, exacerbating the threat.