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The ISIS Apocalypse: The History, Strategy, and Doomsday Vision of the Islamic State Hardcover – September 22, 2015

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 467 ratings

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Based almost entirely on primary sources in Arabic--including ancient religious texts and secret al-Qaeda and Islamic State letters that few have seen--William McCants's The ISIS Apocalypse explores how religious fervor, strategic calculation, and doomsday prophecy shaped the Islamic State's past and foreshadow its dark future.

The Islamic State is one of the most lethal and successful jihadist groups in modern history, surpassing even al-Qaeda. Thousands of its followers have marched across Syria and Iraq, subjugating millions, enslaving women, beheading captives, and daring anyone to stop them. Thousands more have spread terror beyond the Middle East under the Islamic State's black flag.

How did the Islamic State attract so many followers and conquer so much land? By being more ruthless, more apocalyptic, and more devoted to state-building than its competitors. The shrewd leaders of the Islamic State combined two of the most powerful yet contradictory ideas in Islam-the return of the Islamic Empire and the end of the world-into a mission and a message that shapes its strategy and inspires its army of zealous fighters. They have defied conventional thinking about how to wage wars and win recruits. Even if the Islamic State is defeated, jihadist terrorism will never be the same.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

**One of The Wall Street Journal's 10 Must-Read Books on the Evolution of Terrorism in the Middle East**'

**One of ABC News's Books of the Year in 2015**

“Excellent” ―Aatish Taseer,
The New York Times

"The story [of Zarqawi's rise] is well told by William McCants in his excellent new book,
The Isis Apocalypse" ―David Ignatius, The Atlantic

“Every policymaker and any concerned citizen who wants to understand the rise of ISIS should read this insightful and essential book by one of our greatest scholars of Islamist movements.” ―Lawrence Wright, author, THIRTEEN DAYS IN SEPTEMBER: Carter, Begin, and Sadat at Camp David and LOOMING TOWER: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11

“It's hard to imagine anything more alien or revolting than the brutality of the Islamic State. Yet Will McCants's
ISIS Apocalypse is lucid, thoughtful and illuminating on the group, its history, ideology and personalities. McCants understands every nuance of the religious concepts that drive the ISIS leadership, and he does a masterful job of explicating them and laying out the group's strategy. This is much the best work yet on the Islamic State.” ―Ambassador Daniel Benjamin, State Department Coordinator for Counterterrorism (2009-2012)

“No one knows more about ISIS's doomsday theology than Will McCants. McCants listens to the group with uncommon care and subtlety, and policymakers need to read this book to understand ISIS's origins and plans.” ―Graeme Wood, Edward R. Murrow Fellow, The Council on Foreign Relations Contributing editor, The Atlantic Lecturer in political science, Yale University

"An excellent account of how ISIS came into being...As to the future, McCants wonders if IS’s grotesque brutality will prove its undoing. Not necessarily. Up to a point, he argues, brutality works" --
The Economist

About the Author

William McCants directs the project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World at the Brookings Institution. He is adjunct faculty at Johns Hopkins University and a former U.S. State Department senior adviser for countering violent extremism. McCants has a Ph.D. in Near Eastern Studies from Princeton University and lives in the Washington, D.C. area.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 1250080908
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ St. Martin's Press; First Edition (September 22, 2015)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9781250080905
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250080905
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.32 x 0.91 x 9.49 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 467 ratings

About the author

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William Faizi McCants
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I direct the Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World at the Brookings Institution. I also teach at Johns Hopkins University and was a senior adviser for countering violent extremism at the U.S. Department of State. By training I'm a historian and by kismet I'm a think tanker.

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4.2 out of 5 stars
467 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book informative and detailed, providing a clear analysis of ISIS. They describe it as well-written and suitable for students. Readers appreciate the insightful and thoughtful approach to complex issues.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

100 customers mention "Information quality"85 positive15 negative

Customers find the book informative and well-written. They describe it as a balanced introduction that provides a history and context of the Islamic State. The book offers a straightforward, objective analysis of ISIS from its infancy as al-Qaeda. It provides an interesting comparison and is highly relevant given the escalating situation.

"...McCants remains singularly fair-minded, dispassionate and analytical throughout—a refreshing respite from the avalanche of drivel that passes for a..." Read more

"...covering somewhat esoteric subject matter, McCants explains things in ways easily understood...." Read more

"...The translations add value to the manuscript and provide and interesting comparison for anyone interested in comparing Dr. McCants’s translations to..." Read more

"...The ISIS Apocalypse details the history of the organization, aspects of its theology and political nature as well as the key individuals involved...." Read more

86 customers mention "Readability"77 positive9 negative

Customers find the book well-written and engaging. They describe it as a perfect textbook for students. The translations add value to the manuscript and keep readers interested.

"...McCants does a very good job of laying out the differences between Al Qaeda and the Islamic State and the people and vision behind it...." Read more

"...This book is a worthy companion to a good narrative account (such as Warrick's "Black Flags")...." Read more

"...14% index and acknowledgements The translations add value to the manuscript and provide and interesting comparison for anyone interested..." Read more

"...names as there are a lot of important characters but definitely a worthwhile read for those wanting to understand the who and how of ISIS." Read more

10 customers mention "Insight"10 positive0 negative

Customers find the book insightful and thoughtful. It provides an interesting look at the circumstances that led to the doomsday scenario. The book helps explain complex issues and sheds new light on a frequently misunderstood subject. The general theme is interesting, with many fighters thinking this is the end.

"...McCants remains singularly fair-minded, dispassionate and analytical throughout—a refreshing respite from the avalanche of drivel that passes for a..." Read more

"...Fascinating and timely topic, this is a book that is worth reading and it won’t require a big investment of your time...." Read more

"...The general theme is interesting...that many of the fighters think this is the end of days and Jesus will come back to fight w them...." Read more

"Thoughtful and thorough handling of a complex, opaque and frequently misunderstood subject...." Read more

The left has NO Idea how to deal with this
5 out of 5 stars
The left has NO Idea how to deal with this
Most people of scared. Simply scared of ISIS as soes not evn really know why. This book not only foves you the history but answers some of the 'why' questions as well. The Islamic state seems to be even in the minds of the most moderate Muslims. Wven if they ate not aware of it. Teading this book was an eye opener. It fully let me know that the current liberal path of dealing with the Islamic State will not work. I would thoroughly enjoy interviewing this author on my show www.earlhallshow.com
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2015
    ISIS Apocalypse by Will McCants could not be more topical. Just last week ISIS talking heads intoned their intentions to attack various capitals, including Rome. “Ah hah!” I said to myself. “That’s right out of the main prophesy. It’s in the McCants book!” While dumb-founded Italian security personnel went scrambling after terrorist cells that may well not exist, they would have been better served to search in ancient parchments for the deeper meaning of the threat. For it turns out that the intellectual/ideological basis for the ISIS vision is driven by a sincerely-held belief in a myth structure developed in medieval times. The central myth is that of a final battle between the forces of good (purist Islamists) and the forces of evil (everyone else), the outcome of which will usher in the End of Days.

    This End of Days thinking—the apocalyptic world view—renders trivial the means of bringing it about: The exquisitely filmed and widely broadcast torture-murder of large numbers of opponents and innocent civilians. Far from fearing the opprobrium of the West, they welcome it. Indeed, it is precisely what they want: An army of infidels rolling into Syria (al-Sham in the prophesies) for the Final Battle that leads to the Final Hour. President Obama’s refusal to take the bait has led to some very scorching criticism of late, but I can’t help wondering how many of the critics have even a faint idea of what drives ISIS and why they have attracted such a large following.

    McCants, a Brookings think-tanker conversant with medieval Arabic, is about as expert as one could find in the West on the subject of Islamic end-times thinking. Yet his cogent analysis traces the rise of ISIS from around 2005 to mid-2015, and clearly explicates their troubled relationship with our more familiar nemesis, Al Qaeda. Although nominally having allegiance to Al Qaeda (at least initially), and through Al Qaeda to Mulla Omar, “commander of the faithful” among the Taliban of Afghanistan/Waziristan, the leaders of ISIS set a course of their own around 2006 and brought the wrath of God down on their heads.

    Something that is easy to forget is that the early incarnations of ISIS (in Iraq, Somalia, Yemen and Mali) were shattered by US and allied military opposition in 2007-2010, with many if not most of its key leaders killed and its forces scattered. In intercepted messages between ISIS leaders and Bin Laden (and his partner/successor Zawahiri), this was precisely what Al Qaeder predicted would happen, and it drove them absolutely bananas.

    The key issue was the proclamation of a Caliphate—an Islamic state that combines all temporal and spiritual authority. Bin Laden was clear, based on his own experience and observations, that a Caliphate cannot sustain until the groundwork has been done. Thus, you must start by winning the hearts and minds of the people you would rule, not try to terrify them into submission. You need to leave tribes alone to avoid blood feuds from ruining your plans for stability. You need to apply Shari’a law and its strict (and bloody) punishments leniently (at least at first) until the people have come to a point of religious purity where they will accept it. Finally, if you plan to form a state, you must accept that in the Arab world, the people expect the state to guaranty the basics of life: Food, water, medicine and (hopefully) electricity.

    As McCants points out, if you didn’t know that Bin Laden was a world-renowned terrorist, you’d think he was a director of AID.

    And here are three more things about ISIS I didn’t know: The current leader of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, has a PhD in Islamic studies. Islamic scholarship is very important to these guys (and Al Qaeda too), so if you think disputing them in theological argument will be easy, you are mistaken. They may be murderous in the extreme, but stupid they are not.

    Second, there is virtually no difference between the ISIS understanding of Islam and that of the Wahabists who dominate legal thought in Saudi Arabia. Good to keep in mind if you think our Saudi allies have anything against the ISIS ideology.

    Third, the current ISIS leadership no longer play up the emergence of the Mahdi—“the rightly guided one” who will play a Savior role. Instead, the focus is on the Caliphate as an institution, not a Mahdi as a personal savior. To the degree that some ISIS scholars point to a coming a savior, the one they name is none other than Jesus. Shocked? Well, I was.

    Anyway, to Al Qaeda’s immense consternation, a reborn ISIS did it all backwards and succeeded anyway (at least so far). ISIS in many ways has marginalized Al Qaeda—the child eating the father—and there is an excellent chance that the forces and militias formerly loyal to Al Qaeda will throw in with ISIS. Many have already.

    So why is it working for ISIS this time, starting around 2010-2011, when they failed so miserably before? The short answer, according to McCants, is that this time they were left alone. The Shi’a-dominated government of Iraq under Prime Minister Maliki had effectively lost control of Iraq’s Sunni provinces, and there was no US military presence to haul his chestnuts out of the fire this time. (Recall that Maliki was so anxious for the Americans to leave—and leave him a free hand—that he had refused to negotiate a status of forces agreement that would have allowed us to stay (even if we had wanted to).)

    The breakdown of central authority left a power vacuum filled by a variety of self-appointed Sunni militia groups, but these proved to be little more than armed thugs imposing protection taxes but providing no protection. (Nor trash collection, water and power supply, medical care or food, when it and came to that.) Next to them, ISIS was seen as a relief. The one lesson ISIS took from Al Qaeda’s playbook was to try to provide at least rudimentary public services. Chopping the hands off thieves struck the local merchants as all to the good--and the apostles of ISIS most assuredly did not come across as corrupt banditos in their own right. They definitely showed some good government chops, so to say.

    The second big break ISIS got was the civil war in Syria, a war that left the (largely Sunni) Syrian hinterland ungoverned. The disparate, disorganized and fractious rebel groups in that region were unable or unwilling to fight sustained battles against the central government forces under Bashar Al-Assad, which made it excruciatingly difficult for the West in general and the US in particular to find reliable recipients of US military aid. The only group that really pushed the battle forward was the Nusra Front, and they were allies of Al Qaeda. For his part, Al-Assad was (and is) only too happy to let ISIS do his Sunni-on-Sunni dirty work. Truly a foreign policy problem from Hell from the US standpoint.

    The third big break ISIS got was the Arab Spring, a movement of popular revolutions that unhinged government after government but which led not to a birth of a new Arab freedom but chaos and further economic dislocation. Disaffected youth (and not just youth) hears a resonance in these End Time prophesies as their world has turned upside down. Utopianism has a strong appeal to the marginalized and disaffected, whether it’s the weird Bible thumping of a Jim Jones or a restoration of a more pure and primitive society as preached by Pol Pot. When the Utopians are heavily armed, the myth plays out exactly one way—the dubious peace of mass slaughter and unburied death.

    So what is to be done? None of the choices are especially attractive, but McCants shows (in a few paragraphs) why most of the obvious ones won’t work. The best hope probably lies in helping proxies prosecute the fight, but it will be long and arduous. Moreover, the Caliphate may be defeated (and I believe it will be), but the jihadists drawn to it will still be around to give it another try when the opportunity presents itself.

    To his great credit, McCants avoids pointing the finger of blame at the many political actors on whose watch many terrible things have happened. McCants remains singularly fair-minded, dispassionate and analytical throughout—a refreshing respite from the avalanche of drivel that passes for a national discourse in this day and age.

    Finally, I will add for my own part, that the neocon shibboleth, We don’t do nation-building, must be seen as among the most disastrous brain failures in the history of American foreign policy. Nation-building is precisely what the ISIS Caliphate is about, and we ignore that inconvenient obligation to our peril.
    24 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2015
    The ISIS Apocalypse: The History, Strategy, and Doomsday Vision of the Islamic State by William McCants

    “The ISIS Apocalypse” is a very good account of how ISIS came to be and the beliefs behind their vision. William McCants Ph.D. masterfully educates the reader on the evolution of one the most radical organizations on our planet. This enlightening 256-page book includes the following six chapters: 1. Raising the Black Flag, 2. Mahdi and Mismanagement, 3. Bannermen, 4. Resurrection and Tribulation, 5. Sectarian Apocalypse, and 6. Caliphate Reborn.

    Positives:
    1. Well written and well researched book conveyed in an accessible manner.
    2. The fascinating hot button topic of ISIS. Dr. McCants background (Ph.D. in Near Eastern Studies) and current role as director on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World at the Brookings Institution provides him with the tools to have mastery of such a topic.
    3. McCants basically takes the reader on a tour of the Islamic State. He explores the origins, the people behind the movement, their strategies, goals and sources of propaganda. “The Islamic State’s leaders proclaimed the establishment of God’s kingdom on earth, called the caliphate. Prophecy was fulfilled, they said, and Judgment Day approached.”
    4. The history behind the Black Flag. “The Islamic State was signaling that its flag was not only the symbol of its government in Iraq and the herald of a future caliphate; it was the harbinger of the final battle at the End of Days.”
    5. A very interesting look at End-Time prophecies. “Apocalyptic messages resonate among many Muslims today because of the political turmoil in the Middle East. In 2012, half of all Muslims in North Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia expected the imminent appearance of the Mahdi.”
    6. War strategies. “It is well known that one of the requirements for plunging into wars is to have a reserve army and to continue exhausting the enemy in the open fronts until the enemy becomes weak, which would enable us to establish the state of Islam.”
    7. A look at past failures to institute a caliphate. “In the end, the reasons for the collapse of the AQAP state were similar to the reasons for the Islamic State’s failure in Iraq: fickle tribal allies, resentful subjects, and powerful foreign enemies—all reasons Bin Laden had cited for delaying the establishment of an Islamic state in Yemen.”
    8. One of the greatest strengths of this book is making perfectly clear the philosophical differences between Al Qaeda and the Islamic State. “In both cases, they drew a distinction between themselves and the Islamic State, which we can put at the other end of the hearts-and-minds spectrum. Think of AQAP as attempting to win hearts and minds and the early Islamic State as trying to cut them out.”
    9. The people behind Al Qaeda and the Islamic State.
    10. The blueprint strategy and the books that inspired its approach. “The “Strategic Plan” has a lot in common with The Management of Savagery, a book released online by an al-Qaeda franchise in 2004, two years before the Islamic State’s founding. The book explains how to take control of territory, establish a nascent state, and develop into the caliphate.”
    11. Interesting look at the circumstances that fed into the doomsday scenario. “The mounting violence in Syria, or al-Sham, the land of the eastern Mediterranean mentioned in Islamic prophecies as the site of the final battles of the apocalypse, made the doomsday interpretation of events hard to resist.”
    12. Fascinating views of Jesus. “But the prophecies attributed to Muhammad outside the Qur’an foresee Jesus returning to fight alongside the Muslims against the infidels. As in the Bible, the appearance of Jesus heralds the Last Days. But instead of gathering the faithful up to heaven, he will lead the Muslims in a war against the Jews, who will fight on behalf of the Antichrist, called the Deceiving Messiah.”
    13. Sectarian battles and the implications. “The sectarian wrangling over the identity of the Sufyani suggests an important difference between Islamic and Christian End-Time prophecies. Although both envision a fight between good and evil, the Islamic prophecies foretell a period of intracommunal fighting before the Day of Judgment.”
    14. A look at the sixth caliphate. “With that, the caliphate was supposedly reborn and prophesy was fulfilled. All Muslims had to now bend the knee to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, renamed Caliph Ibrahim al-Baghdadi.”
    15. The challenges facing the caliphate. “It didn’t help that the Islamic State was more focused on fighting than on governing. The local economies in the State suffered as a consequence.”
    16. The implementation of justice and how they differ. “Unsurprisingly then, most of the Islamic State’s hudud penalties are identical to penalties for the same crimes in Saudi Arabia: death for blasphemy, homosexual acts, treason, and murder; death by stoning for adultery; one hundred lashes for sex out of wedlock; amputation of a hand for stealing; amputation of a hand and foot for bandits who steal; and death for bandits who steal and murder.” “The State carries out its penalties in public whereas Saudi Arabia hides them because of international censure.”
    17. The impact of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. “The U.S. invasion of Iraq and the stupendous violence that followed dramatically increased the Sunni public’s appetite for apocalyptic explanations of a world turned upside down. A spate of bestsellers put the United States at the center of the End-Times drama, a new “Rome” careering throughout the region in a murderous stampede to prevent violence on its own shores. The main antagonists of the End of Days, the Jews, were now merely supporting actors.”
    18. The author provides some ideas on how to contend with ISIS. “The coalition should provide air cover and intelligence to Sunni tribal militias and rebel groups that fight against the Islamic State, whether Arab or Kurd.”
    19. The author provides Appendices that helps explain prophecies.
    20. Notes provided.

    Negatives:
    1. Unless you are very familiar with the region and or the language it can be challenging to keep the names behind these groups straight.
    2. Lack of charts, diagrams and maps that would have benefitted the reader.
    3. Lacking technical details.
    4. Some missed opportunities. Some topics involving ISIS was not covered; financing, and military power to name a few.
    5. No formal bibliography.

    In summary, this book lucidly covers the rise and evolution of ISIS. McCants does a very good job of laying out the differences between Al Qaeda and the Islamic State and the people and vision behind it. Fascinating and timely topic, this is a book that is worth reading and it won’t require a big investment of your time. Some missed opportunities keeps this book from being a five-star effort but it’s highly recommended nonetheless.

    Further recommendations: “Islam and the Future of Tolerance: A Dialogue by Sam Harris”, “Radical: My Journey out of Islamist Extremism” by Maajid Nawaz, “The End of Faith” by Sam Harris, “Faith vs. Fact” by Jerry A. Coyne, “Why I’m not a Muslim” by Ibn Warraq, “Heretic” and “Infidel” by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, and “ISIS: The State of Terror” by Jessica Stern”
    4 people found this helpful
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  • alkbt
    5.0 out of 5 stars Livre arrivé rapidement et conforme à la description !
    Reviewed in France on June 10, 2021
    Livre arrivé rapidement et conforme à la description !
  • A K Bhattacharyya(India)
    5.0 out of 5 stars In-depth analysis.
    Reviewed in India on August 25, 2020
    It is really in-depth analysis of a very problematic issue.
  • John Barrett
    5.0 out of 5 stars So much to know and learn about this frightening group ...
    Reviewed in Canada on January 15, 2016
    So much to know and learn about this frightening group. This book helps to connect the dots and maybe even take some lessons in how we can move forward in ending this violence and recognizing the emerging patterns in the future.
  • Felicity
    5.0 out of 5 stars it isnt as up to date as I would like as events have since changed the current media and ...
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 21, 2016
    interesting book on the rise of ISIS, it isnt as up to date as I would like as events have since changed the current media and international reaction to ISIS, but in relation to a snapshot in time of the period covered and also an intricate detailing of the rise of ISIS (including how and why the flag came about, ironically via photoshop) it is well worth a read.
  • Sergio Vesentini
    5.0 out of 5 stars ISIS
    Reviewed in Italy on December 1, 2015
    Fondamentale nel chiarire le radici del radicalismo e del messianesimo islamici, soprattutto per chi non ha mai potuto accostarsi ad un argomento così complesso