A soldier from the Iraqi Security Forces ran out of ammunition in the midst of a firefight,
The level of brutality exhibited by these executions is unlikely to shock many.IT IS TIME TO SHINE A LIGHT ON THE ISLAMIC STATE’S HIDDEN EXECUTIONS
A soldier from the Iraqi Security Forces ran out of ammunition in the midst of a firefight with Islamic State in Iraq çand the Levant (ISIL) forces in Fallujah, Iraq in May of last year
After being wounded the soldier was captured by ISIL, paraded around as a prize, and—in a scene reminiscent of the four U.S. contractors killed in 2004—was hung from Employees’ Bridge in Fallujah.
On November 13, 2014, 16 members of the Sunni Arab Albu Nimr tribe were abducted from their homes by ISIL near Tharthar Lake in Anbar province.
With one woman and two children among them, the tribal members were driven to Shtyah area and all were summarily executed by ISIL fighters.
I CAN'T WITHSTAND TO HANDLE THIS PIPE IN MY PUSSY.
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PLEASE TAKE IT EASY, IS TOO HARD AND LONGThe level of brutality exhibited by these executions is unlikely to shock many.
Similar stories of ISIL’s atrocities have been widely reported for over two years now.
However, there is a surprising difference between the two events described above.
While the execution of the Iraqi soldier was proudly posted to social media by ISIL, the executions of the family members of Sahwa militia fighters was hidden.
The only reason I can report the atrocity is because of a United Nations mission to investigate human rights violations in Iraq. What also may come as a surprise is that this pattern of disclosure and non-disclosure of executions follows a distinct pattern by ISIL in Iraq.
The reasons for the pattern may point to an effective way to dissuade people from joining ISIL.
State Department officials remain quite vague on how they are currently countering the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s (ISIL) recruitment efforts.
However, theState
Department’s website does make it clear that highlighting the contradictions between ISIL’s recruitment messaging and its acts of brutality represents a large part of the counter-recruitment strategy.
But are there further acts of brutality committed by ISIL that, if made public, could possibly dissuade recruits?
A quantitative dataset I constructed from five recent U.N. Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) reports covering ISIL’s executions between June 2014 and October 2015 in Iraq helps to answer this question.
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