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It Might Be Foolish For ISIS To Attempt To Take Baghdad, But Here's Why They'll Try Anyway

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Abassid Statue Baghdad Destroyed

The Islamic State claims to have reestablished a caliphate in accordance with the prophetic method, misleading at least one historian, Edward Luttwak, to conclude that the Islamic State only seeks “its inspiration from the first four caliphates” that followed Muhammad.

According to Luttwak, not even the mightiest of the caliphates that followed, the Abbasid caliphate, is a model for the Islamic State.

But take a look at the Islamic State’s propaganda, and you will see that from its founding the group has sought to restore the glory days of the Abbasid caliphate based in Baghdad, especially the era of Harun al-Rashid of 1,001 Nights fame.

"Know that the Baghdad of al-Rashid is the home of the caliphate that our ancestors built,” proclaimed an Islamic State spokesman in 2007. “It will not appear by our hands but by our carcasses and skulls. We will once again plant the flag of monotheism, the flag of the Islamic State, in it."

That same year, the Islamic State’s first ruler, the aptly-named Abu Umar al-Baghdadi, announced IS’s claim to the city: “Today, we are in the very home of the caliphate, the Baghdad of al-Rashid." Even after the Islamic State established its primary base of operations in Syria’s Raqqa province, once home to Harun al-Rashid for several years, and captured Mosul in Iraq, its spokesman still referred to “the Baghdad of the Caliphate” and “the Baghdad of al-Rashid."

The Islamic State’s plan to revive the Abbasid caliphate in Baghdad has two problems.

The first is ideological: Harun al-Rashid was not terribly pious. He enjoyed poetry about wine and young boys, and his court valued unfettered intellectual debate and pagan Greek learning, boht of which are anathema to ultraconservative Salafis like those running the Islamic State.

But it is al-Rashid’s power the jihadists remember, not his impieties.

The second problem is demographic, which cannot be resolved by selective memory: most of Baghdad’s inhabitants are Shi’a. They will not give it up without a fight. Neither will Baghdad’s patrons in Iran.

In light of this, outsiders might reasonably conclude the Islamic State is foolish to aim for Baghdad rather than consolidate its gains in the Sunni-majority areas it now holds. But sometimes historical imperatives override strategic ones.

SEE ALSO: Baghdadi realeses another audio message amid death rumors

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