Home » Beyond ISIS and Al-Qaeda: The West’s Shift from Combating Terrorist Organizations to Targeting the Environments that Produce Extremism

Beyond ISIS and Al-Qaeda: The West’s Shift from Combating Terrorist Organizations to Targeting the Environments that Produce Extremism

The Global Institute for Strategic Studies (GISS)

More than two decades after the launch of the “Global War on Terror,” Western governments are facing a new strategic question: Why does violent extremism continue to emerge despite major military and security successes against terrorist organizations?

The United States and its allies succeeded in dismantling a significant portion of Al-Qaeda’s operational capabilities, while the Global Coalition played a decisive role in defeating the so-called “caliphate” established by ISIS in Iraq and Syria between 2014 and 2019. Yet the decline of these organizations has not led to the disappearance of the phenomenon itself. Instead, it has exposed a more complex reality involving the ideological, social, and organizational pathways that often precede the emergence of armed extremist groups.

In recent years, Western security and intelligence institutions, along with leading policy and research centers, have begun reassessing the assumptions that shaped counterterrorism strategies following the September 11, 2001 attacks. Rather than focusing exclusively on designated terrorist organizations as the primary source of the threat, increasing attention has shifted toward examining what has become known as “environments conducive to extremism”—the ideological, organizational, and social ecosystems that may facilitate the spread of extremist ideas, create conditions favorable to radicalization, or provide pathways for recruitment and mobilization.

This shift reflects a growing recognition among policymakers that terrorism does not begin with the use of violence. Rather, it often develops through earlier stages involving ideological influence, identity formation, socialization, and the construction of organizational and community networks. Consequently, the focus has expanded beyond proscribed terrorist groups to encompass broader ideological spaces that are believed to foster or enable the conditions from which certain forms of violent extremism may emerge.

This evolving approach has coincided with political, security, and judicial developments across Europe and the Middle East, reigniting debate over the relationship between political Islam and jihadist movements, as well as the role of transnational ideological networks in shaping the intellectual environments from which more radical organizations have subsequently emerged.

From Targeting Terrorist Organizations to Understanding Pathways to Radicalization

For much of the past two decades, Western counterterrorism strategies have focused primarily on directly targeting armed extremist organizations through military operations, airstrikes, intelligence gathering, and law enforcement measures. These efforts produced significant results, including the killing or capture of numerous jihadist leaders and a substantial reduction in the ability of terrorist groups to control territory or conduct large-scale attacks.

However, the accumulated experience in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria has exposed the limitations of this approach. While terrorist organizations can be militarily defeated, the ideas, networks, and social dynamics that contributed to their emergence often continue to operate in different forms, regenerating themselves through new organizational structures or through individuals acting independently of centralized command.

Recent European data indicate that the terrorist threat persists despite the decline of major jihadist organizations. According to Europol’s European Union Terrorism Situation and Trend Report (TE-SAT) 2025, the European Union recorded 58 terrorist attacks in 2024—including completed, failed, and foiled attacks—while 449 individuals were arrested on terrorism-related charges across 20 EU Member States. European security agencies continue to assess jihadist terrorism as one of the principal threats to internal security in several Member States.

Against this backdrop, Western security institutions have increasingly embraced the concept of “radicalization pathways,” which views engagement in violent extremism not as a sudden event, but as the outcome of a gradual process of ideological, social, and political influence that may unfold over many years.

Within this framework, the objective is no longer limited to dismantling terrorist organizations after they emerge. Instead, increasing emphasis is placed on understanding the pre-violent stages of radicalization, including:

  • Ideological mobilization networks.
  • Social environments that facilitate or nurture radicalization.
  • Non-violent organizations that may contribute to the dissemination of extremist ideologies.
  • Digital platforms and contemporary recruitment mechanisms.
  • Transnational networks that facilitate the movement of ideas, expertise, and resources across borders.

Over recent years, numerous European and American institutions have incorporated this perspective into their counterterrorism strategies, accompanied by growing discussion of “non-violent extremism” as an area warranting closer study and monitoring within broader prevention frameworks.

This evolution represents a significant shift in the philosophy of counterterrorism. Rather than asking, “How do we defeat the organization?”, an increasing number of security institutions are now asking a different strategic question:“How do we prevent the next organization from emerging?”

The Muslim Brotherhood at the Center of the West’s New Debate

As major jihadist organizations such as Al-Qaeda and ISIS have lost much of their ability to control territory and administer governance, an increasing share of Western security and academic debate has shifted toward examining organized Islamist movements that operate outside the framework of direct violence, most notably the Muslim Brotherhood.

The current debate is not primarily concerned with classifying the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization or portraying it as an armed movement. Legal and political approaches to the organization continue to vary considerably from one country to another. Rather, the discussion revolves around a more complex question: To what extent can certain strands of political Islam be regarded as part of the ideological and organizational environment that has historically contributed to the emergence of more radical movements?

This question has become a central focus within European and American security institutions and policy research centers, particularly following the rise of ISIS and the broader reassessment of counterterrorism and counter-extremism strategies. Instead of viewing armed organizations as the starting point of radicalization, some newer approaches have turned their attention to the stages that precede violence, including ideological narratives, organizational networks, and recruitment and mobilization mechanisms that may contribute to an individual’s susceptibility to later involvement in more extremist projects.

From Jihadism to Political Islam

For many years after the September 11, 2001 attacks, Western governments concentrated almost exclusively on Al-Qaeda, and later ISIS, as the most pressing security threats. As these organizations gradually declined, however, many security institutions began reassessing the nature of the threat itself.

With the growing body of research on radicalization pathways, a new line of inquiry has emerged. Rather than focusing on direct organizational links between political Islam and jihadist movements, it examines what some scholars describe as “ideological continuity”—the possibility that certain activist Islamist ideas may, in some contexts, provide elements later incorporated into jihadist narratives.

Within this debate, Lorenzo Vidino, an Italian-American scholar specializing in Muslim Brotherhood networks in Europe, argues that understanding political Islam has become an important component of understanding the broader ideological environment in which certain forms of contemporary extremism develop. In several of his publications, he emphasizes the need to distinguish between legitimate political participation and transnational ideological networks that seek to establish long-term influence within religious, cultural, educational, and social institutions.

According to this perspective, the importance of studying political Islam does not lie in a direct association with violence, but rather in its potential influence on shaping political and religious identities and promoting conceptions of the relationship between religion, the state, and society that differ from the liberal democratic models prevailing across much of Europe.

Why Has the European Perspective Changed?

This shift did not result from a single event but rather from the accumulation of political and security developments over many years.

In countries including France, Germany, Austria, and Belgium, security agencies have increasingly published assessments examining the activities of political Islamist networks and their potential impact on social integration and national cohesion. The emphasis has gradually expanded beyond preventing terrorist attacks to studying ideological and organizational structures believed to contribute to the development of parallel communities or transnational networks of influence.

In Germany, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz – BfV) monitors the Muslim Brotherhood as part of its mandate to observe movements considered relevant to constitutional security. According to the agency’s public reporting, this attention is not based on allegations of direct involvement in violence, but on concerns regarding long-term efforts to influence religious, educational, and social institutions. The BfV argues that the potential risk lies in the gradual reshaping of parts of the social and cultural sphere in ways that may conflict with the principles of Germany’s liberal democratic constitutional order.

In France, these discussions intensified following the series of terrorist attacks that began in 2015, culminating in the murder of teacher Samuel Paty in 2020. These events prompted the French government to broaden its counter-extremism policies by increasing scrutiny of foreign funding for religious associations and institutions and strengthening oversight of networks believed to promote separatist or isolationist ideologies.

Austria: A Case Study in the Rise of the “Political Islam” Concept

Austria has emerged as one of the European countries most explicit in adopting this approach.

In 2020, the Austrian government supported the establishment of the Documentation Centre on Political Islam, an institution dedicated to researching networks, organizations, and ideologies associated with political Islam in Austria and across Europe.

The Centre’s work is based on the premise that certain forms of violent extremism cannot be fully understood solely by studying armed organizations. Instead, it seeks to analyze the broader ideological and organizational environments that may precede them. The Centre has published several studies examining networks linked to the Muslim Brotherhood in Europe, describing transnational institutional structures operating in areas such as education, religious outreach, community engagement, and financing.

This approach has not been without criticism.

A number of scholars argue that the concept of “political Islam” remains too broad and lacks sufficiently precise analytical boundaries. They caution that overly expansive use of the term risks conflating actors with fundamentally different objectives, methods, and practices.

Tunisia and the Revival of the Debate

Political and judicial developments in Tunisia have brought these discussions back to the forefront in recent years.

Following years in which the Ennahda Movement rose to prominence and participated in government after the 2011 Tunisian Revolution, the country has witnessed a series of investigations and judicial proceedings involving several of the movement’s senior leaders.

In 2024 and 2025, Tunisian courts issued significant rulings against a number of prominent figures, including Rached Ghannouchi, in cases involving security- and politically-related charges that attracted considerable international attention.

Regardless of the differing political interpretations of these proceedings, developments in Tunisia have contributed to renewed discussion in Europe and the United States regarding the relationship between political Islam, national security, and institutional stability. They have also prompted several research institutions to reassess the experience of Islamist movements that entered or participated in government during the past decade and to examine their impact on political stability and state-building.

Ideological Continuity: The Core of the Debate

written by: GISS

Privacy & Cockies

We use cookies and similar technologies to enhance your browsing experience, personalize content, and analyze our traffic. By accepting, you consent to our use of cookies. If you reject, only essential cookies will be used