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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsISIS and the Intimate Kill
It isnt all shock and gore. Sometimes, its mock and bore. Consider the video that ISIS released a few weeks ago of the British hostage John Cantlie reporting from the besieged town of Kobani on the Syrian-Turkish border. The videos theme is the unreliability of Western media coverage of the conflict in Syria and Iraq, expressed in a tone of mocking contempt. The larger theme is the invincibility of ISIS and the duplicity and weakness of the West. The video opens with some striking aerial footage of war-ravaged Kobani, filmed from a drone. But its a big yawn thereafter.
On Sunday, however, ISIS released what is arguably its most horrifying beheading video to date, reverting to the shock-and-gore doctrine that has come to define it. The viewer doesnt see the actual beheading of American aid worker Peter Kassig, but is shown his severed head, lying at the feet of the suspected British terrorist known as Jihadi John. The scene is preceded by the mass beheadings of 18 men whom ISIS claims are members of Syrian President Bashar al-Assads armed forces. The victims are paraded about by knife-wielding jihadists and the camera lingers on the hostages faces as they kneel, stricken with terror. The pounding of heartbeats commences, just one of the videos many special effects. Then the cutting starts, all at once. Unlike in ISISs previous beheading videos, there is no merciful cutaway. The viewer sees everything.
It is worth pausing to consider the logic behind this staged mass beheading and how it differs from the notorious doctrine that defined the opening stages of the 2003 war in Iraq: shock and awe. Comparing the two tells us something important about ISIS and its reverence of the intimate killand ours, too.
Face-to-face killing isnt the same as killing at a distance. It is sensually different. And it is harder.
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http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2014/11/isis-and-the-intimate-kill-peter-kassig/382861/?google_editors_picks=true
long, interesting piece.
grahamhgreen
(15,741 posts)puzzledeagle
(47 posts)Sometimes they do show up on Youtube though. They are extremely violent and have turned violence into some sort of fetish complete with slow-mo stop sequences reminiscent of Hollywood movies like the Matrix and 300. The people making these videos are from the west.
grahamhgreen
(15,741 posts)Rhinodawg
(2,219 posts)words I remember.