Throughout the 21th century, terrorism has become an enormous national and international problem for humanity. Many countries have been opposed to them, for example, the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom and France. Despite several strategies established by those countries to eliminate terrorism. Those effort are not sufficient because every day terrorists attack, and terrorist groups are still increasing around the world. For now, there are two major terrorist groups: the Islamic state of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) and al-Qaida. They are spreading like pandemic disease and will need a strength dose of medication for permanent removal. People may think those two groups are similar because they were born on the same …show more content…
Isis want to kill infidel people who does not believe in muslin while al-Qaida theologies is Salafism. According to the senior editor Peter weber Al Qaeda believes that terrorism is a way to redeem Muslim nations and communities, while ISIS and its Wahhabist forebears embraced killing infidels and aberrant Muslims as a way to purify the faith. For Al Qaeda, violence is a means to an ends, but for ISIS, it is an end in itself. Al Qaida believes playing nice to others however the Islamic state does not. Although the ultimate purpose of al Qaida is to conquer the middle east and make them believe to the muslin by establish a new government, the primary enemy of Al Qaida is the United states, however a research report that “The Islamic State does not follow Al Qaeda’s “far enemy” strategy, preferring instead the “near enemy” strategy, albeit on a regional level. As such, the primary target of the Islamic State has not been the United States, but rather apostate regimes in the Arab …show more content…
In addition they take control over the oil field in Irak and Syria that’s help them survive (Helle Dale). In a couple month ISIS transform terror group into army, it holds more territory than al-Qaeda, Al Qaida has never shown much interest in taking or holding territory in order to set up an Islamic state and govern, despite the fact that doing so is one of its stated goals; on the contrary, the only reason it has ever shown interest in territory is as a safe haven and as a place to set up training camps. ISIS drawing more recruits than al-Qaeda, and it’s more brutal than al-Qaeda (Peter