Islamic State says it’s “the first of the storm." And a storm it is, the chaotic scenes in the streets of Paris last weekend, and the fearful reaction those attacks provoked are precisely what Isis planned and prayed for. The greater the response against Muslims in Europe and the deeper the west becomes involved in military action in the Middle East, the happier Isis leaders will be. Because this is about the organization's key strategy: finding, creating and managing chaos.
You may ask, “Does ISIS know what it was doing” well, they are clearly not an irrational death cult. They are driven by strategic objectives. They knew that every bullet they fired and suicide belt, they triggered amplifies the far right, stokes the fires of anti-Muslimism and anti-immigrant hatred.
They have done this for intimidation. They want to scare people everywhere and force group anxiety to a fever pitch. For example, if a tourist resort that the westerners patronize is hit, all the tourist resorts in all the states throughout the world will have to be secured by the work of additional forces, which are double the ordinary amount, and a huge increase in spending.
Then there is the military escalation, ISIS is not stupid, yes more anti ISIS pressure will harm the group, practically speaking but this will build their credibility and legitimacy among other Jihadi groups.
Paris was murder; we in the west know this and cannot and will not condone it; however, for supporters of the group, it is an act of brazen defiance as such it becomes a rallying call an unambiguous expression of Jihadi triumphalism. This acts as a sense of inspiration to them and their followers and gathers more external support.
There is also the question of image, the war has not been going well for ISIS in Syria, Iraq and Libya; they cannot be seen to be on the back foot, what better than to lash out in distant lands with high profile attacks, again it adds to their credibility among their supporters.
The response must not be with hatred or badly thought-out military reactions, but with defiance into the face of their attempts to tear our societies apart.
SunTzu summed it up in the following way;
“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need
not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not
the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If
you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every
battle.”