Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1992 (age 33–34) |
| Education | Brasenose College,University of Oxford |
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi (Arabic:أيمن جواد التميمي,romanized: ʾAyman Jawād at-Tamīmī; born 1992) is a British-Iraqi researcher and analyst who specialises in theSyrian Civil War,War in Iraq (2013–2017) and theIslamic State of Iraq and the Levant (commonly known as ISIL or ISIS). He has been consulted as an expert by major media outlets includingThe New York Times,The Wall Street Journal,The Washington Post, and others.[1] He authored a major report published bythe New York Times in partnership withGeorge Washington University in their 2020 series, "The ISIS report". He has faced criticism over his alleged sympathies towards ISIL in his work, as well as his conduct and alleged close relationships with ISIL fighters.[2]
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi studiedClassics andOriental studies atBrasenose College,University of Oxford. He earned his degree there.[1] In March 2020 he was a doctoral candidate atSwansea University and he successfully defended his PhD thesis in January 2024.[citation needed]
In an otherwise scathing 2014Business Insider article,Armin Rosen described then 21-year-old Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi as one of "the fastest rising stars in his field — his online connections and self-presentation to jihadists he was attempting to mine for information." Rosen wrote that Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi who was then a "recent graduate of Oxford University" had already "become a widely-cited public authority on jihadist groups in Iraq and Syria while still completing his undergraduate studies" atBrasenose College,University of Oxford. TheInsider article said that by 2014, Al-Tamimi had been "generally considered a leading public authority on jihadist groups in Iraq and Syria."[2]
His work has focused on "militant groups of all affiliations in Iraq and Syria, with particular interest in those of jihadist orientation".[1] His work is regularly quoted in media including theAssociated Press.[3]
He is listed as an expert by theMiddle East Institute (MEI) and has been a guest contributor.[1] According to the MEI, he has been "cited in theNew York Times, theWall Street Journal,The Times (London), theWashington Post, and other publications."[1]
In a November 14, 2019New York Times article, Al-Tamimi, was described as an "independent Syria researcher" who was consulted by theTimes as an expert on ISIS.[4]
TheNew York Times,Washington Post, andAssociated Press have published Al-Tamimi's "insights on the Islamic State, Iraq, and Syria", according to a March 2020 report by theWashington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP or TWI).[3]
He has appeared before the UKHouse of Commons Defence Committee to advise on the Islamic State and Iraq. He has been described as "one of the fastest rising stars in his field" and "a widely-cited public authority on jihadist groups in Iraq and Syria."[2]
His report entitled "The Islamic State's Real Estate Department: Documents and Analysis" was published byThe New York Times andGeorge Washington University as part of the University's Program on Extremism.[5] TheTimes and the University had joined in an "exclusive partnership" to "digitize, translate, analyze, and publish" over 15,000 files, now known as "The ISIS Files"—which had been obtained by the investigative journalistRukmini Callimachi and her "Iraqi colleagues during embeds with the Iraqi army".[6] TheTime and the university had announced their intention to make the ISIS files public in 2018 and published them online in June 2020.[6]
The VOA news published an article saying that "prominent Islamic scholar," Tariq Ramadan, had been "charged with rape in France".[7] Al-Tamimi published a friend's firsthand account of Ramadan's predatory behavior on his website—an account which was sourced in the VOA article.[8]
An in-depth 30 December 2015 report in theWashington Post, which included an interview with Al-Tamimi, presented extensive evidence that documents that were leaked and purported to prove that the Islamic State was weakening were fake. In the article, Al-Tamimi, whose research on the Islamic State is considerable, said that suggestions that he write a book were premature. "Just as the best histories of Nazi Germany have been written well after the Second World War with archives of documents made available to researchers, so I apply the same reasoning to analyzing the Islamic State. As researchers we need to be aware of the limits of our capabilities in obtaining information."[9]
His reports on theKhalid ibn al-Walid Army in Syria in 2016 and 2017 were published by the Rubin Center.[10][11][12]
A March 2020 report entitled "Honored, Not Contained: The Future of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces", which he co-authored withMichael Knights andHamdi Malik, was published by theWashington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP or TWI).[3]
Armin Rosen, who was thenBusiness Insider's senior writer for defense and the military, wrote a scathing article that the "young terrorism analyst's" career had come "apart in public".[2] Rosen raised concerns that Al-Tamimi had provided rhetorical support to ISIS supporters and members.[2]
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi responded to the accusations in his personal blog under his own name "Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi", which is self-described asPundicity: Informed Opinion and Review. Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi admitted in a 22 July 2014 blog post entitled, Reflections on Methods" that, "[While] this indeed garnered some valuable information (eg it helped [him] first identify Moroccan ex-Gitmo detainee Muhammad Mizouz and his presence in Syria), it was also unethical, pure and simple."
He defended his actions by saying that for over the year that he was engaged in these activities, he had been "intensely tracking the jihadist group the Islamic State (formerly ISIS)" on both "Twitter and in [his] analytical articles for over a year. He said that he did so to "gain the confidence of these circles" by "feign[ing] sympathy for their views." He wrote that he had "adopted a 'jihadi persona' in communications with them".[blog 1]
On 14 July 2014,Jonathan Krohn and Al-Tamimi co-authored an article which had attempted to disprove evidence presented by the American journalistMichael Weiss in his 23 June 2014Foreign Policy article, which claimed that Iran was aiding ISIS.[13][14][2] Weiss wrote that while "American talking heads" said that Iran was the "key to defeating ISIS", "those in the know" said "the two "enemies" were "actually secret allies".[14] Weiss' 2014 claim appears to be erroneous according to a 4 January 2019New York Times article.[Notes 1][15]
This differing of opinions of the three analyst's provided the backdrop for Rosen's 14 July 2014Insider article.[2]
Weiss provided evidence of a conversation in which Al-Tamimi told an ISIS supporter that it was "best not openly tweeting" support for the Islamic State.Daveed Gartenstein-Ross called the exchange "pretty disturbing" while Jonathan Krohn, though "deny[ing], in the most categorical terms possible, that Tamimi is a terrorism supporter" said "had I known this I would not have published anything with him in the first place." According toUniversity of Maryland professor Phillip Smyth, "One crosses the line when one starts to, under their real name and in full view of the general public, kind of act like a jihadi and say that they are a jihadi."[2]
Rosen included a list of Al-Tamimi's questionable online communications with ISIS members as part of "self-presentation to jihadists he was attempting to mine for information" including theIndian Islamic State supporter Mehdi Masroor Biswas (known online as @ShamiWitness), currently imprisoned in his home country, whom Al-Tamimi called 'brother' and 'friend'.[2] Rosen listed a Shami witness Biswas article that Al-Tamimi had posted on his personal blog "Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi" described asPundicity: Informed Opinion and Review.[blog 2] He claimed to know the British Islamic State fighterRaphael Hostey ('Abu Qaqa') personally.[citation needed] Among other posts Al-Tamimi made on Twitter were ones claiming "one day even the Kaaba in Mecca will be covered with the ISIS banner" and "Dawla Islamiya (Islamic State) will take over the whole world".[2]
Rosen reported that academics and researchers, including Aaron Zelin, Phillip Smyth,Daveed Gartenstein-Ross andEliot Higgins condemned Al-Tamimi's actions. "He's presenting two different sides of himself to different audiences," Berger toldBusiness Insider. "He's presenting himself to us as part of this analyst community, and he's presenting himself to ISIS sources as someone who is supportive of their political goals. Both of those things really can't be true. So it creates a problem."[2]
Rosen cited Aaron Zelin, who had blacklisted Al-Tamimi and removed all his work from his websiteJihadology, as saying that Tamimi's analysis had become "more and more just pushing that narrative of the groups [ISIS] themselves."[2]
In response to Rosen's article,Bellingcat immediately removed an article by Al-Tamimi in which he defended theIslamic State of Iraq and the Levant, claiming it had no relation toal-Qaeda and that the rise of IS was a legitimate reaction to the "marginalization of Sunnis" and the2013 Hawija clashes.[blog 3] While Al-Tamimi was banned from any further contribution to the site, Bellingcat continued to cite Al-Tamimi as an expert in later articles. In his 2016Bellingcat report, investigative journalist,Christiaan Triebert cited Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, a "fellow at theMiddle East Forum," to clarify any confusion about the management of water infrastructure inRaqqa. Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, pointed out that there was no evidence that theNusra fighters managedRaqqa's water affairs. He said that "civilian services were largely the responsibility of the local council while Nusra focused on their war efforts".[16]
Al-Tamimi responded to Rosen's accusations saying that, "I think there’s something to be said that I did try to ingratiate myself in these circles to get information, I agree that that was unethical.”[2]