A SYSTEM-LEVEL REPORT ON ORGANIZATIONS, CAPABILITIES, FUNDING, AND STATE RESPONSE — EXPANDED DOCTRINAL EDITION
IN A NUTSHELL
The central question facing policymakers, analysts, and observers is not simply which terrorist organizations exist in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), but which of these organizations possess the structural capacity to endure, evolve, and shape regional and global outcomes over extended time horizons.
Modern terrorism in the MENA region operates within a fragmented legal and geopolitical environment in which sovereignty limits enforcement, state interests override uniform counterterrorism standards, and non-state actors exploit these structural gaps to build durable and adaptive systems of power.¹
The most consequential insight is that the most dangerous organizations are not those that conduct the highest number of attacks or generate the most immediate violence, but those that successfully integrate military capability, financial sustainability, supply chains, political influence, and external sponsorship into a cohesive and self-reinforcing system.
This report expands that conclusion into a governing framework.
GOVERNING FRAMEWORK — THE FOUR-VARIABLE DURABILITY MODEL
Across all major organizations analyzed in this report, four variables consistently determine long-term survivability and strategic impact.
Military capability refers not only to the possession of weapons, but to the ability to organize, deploy, and sustain violence across time and geography. Financial sustainability refers to access to diversified and resilient funding streams that can survive sanctions, disruption, and territorial loss. Political integration reflects the degree to which an organization is embedded within, influences, or constrains state institutions. External sponsorship refers to direct or indirect support from state actors, including funding, weapons, intelligence, and diplomatic protection.
These variables do not operate independently. They interact dynamically to form a system in which each component reinforces the others.
Military capability enables political leverage. Political leverage reinforces legitimacy. Legitimacy sustains financial flows. Financial flows maintain military capability. External sponsorship stabilizes all four variables simultaneously.
Empirical data from the Global Terrorism Index and intelligence assessments indicates that organizations possessing three or more of these variables demonstrate survival rates exceeding 70 percent beyond a decade, while those possessing only one or two variables are significantly more likely to fragment or collapse within five to seven years.²
This model is not descriptive. It is predictive, and it explains why some organizations persist despite sustained counterterrorism pressure.
THE ISLAMIC STATE — FROM TERRITORIAL CONTROL TO NETWORK RESILIENCE
The Islamic State (ISIS) represents one of the most important case studies in modern terrorism because it demonstrates both the rise of a territorial terrorist entity and its transformation into a decentralized network following military defeat.
At its peak between 2014 and 2017, ISIS controlled large portions of Iraq and Syria, governed millions of people, and generated billions of dollars in revenue through oil sales, taxation, extortion, and black-market activities.³ This level of control temporarily allowed ISIS to satisfy all four durability variables.
Following coordinated military campaigns by Iraq, Syria, and a U.S.-led coalition, ISIS lost its territorial holdings and much of its formal revenue base. However, the organization did not disappear. Instead, it adapted into a decentralized insurgent network with an estimated 12,000 to 18,000 fighters operating across multiple regions.⁴
Its financial base contracted significantly, with current estimates placing its annual operating budget between $10 million and $50 million, supported by extortion, smuggling, and hidden reserves accumulated during its territorial phase.⁶
The critical insight is structural. ISIS lost territory, but it retained elements of military capability and network cohesion. As a result, it transitioned from a state-like entity into a persistent insurgent system.
This demonstrates a core principle: the removal of one variable weakens an organization, but does not eliminate it if other variables remain intact.
AL-QAEDA — THE LONG-DURATION NETWORK MODEL
Al-Qaeda represents a fundamentally different model of terrorist organization, one built on decentralization, ideological cohesion, and long-term strategic patience.
Rather than relying on territorial control, Al-Qaeda operates through a network of regional affiliates that maintain operational independence while adhering to a shared ideological framework. Estimates suggest that Al-Qaeda and its affiliates maintain between 15,000 and 28,000 members globally.⁴
Its funding model is diversified and resilient, including donations from sympathizers, illicit trade, kidnapping-for-ransom operations, and localized taxation in areas where affiliates exert influence.³ This diversification reduces vulnerability to targeted financial disruption.
Al-Qaeda’s weapon systems are conventional but effective, including small arms, explosives, mortars, and increasingly drones for reconnaissance and limited offensive use.⁶ These weapons are sourced through black markets, conflict spillover, and local alliances.
The key structural advantage of Al-Qaeda is its decentralization. It does not require territorial control to survive. It regenerates through network adaptation.
This demonstrates that durability is not dependent on scale.
It is dependent on structure.
HEZBOLLAH — THE FULL-SPECTRUM HYBRID SYSTEM
Hezbollah represents the most advanced and complete integration of the four durability variables in the MENA region.
The organization maintains between 20,000 and 30,000 active fighters, supported by a large reserve force, and possesses a weapons arsenal exceeding 100,000 rockets and missiles, including precision-guided systems.⁷ Its military capabilities are further enhanced by drones, anti-ship missiles, anti-tank systems, and hardened underground infrastructure.
Its annual budget is widely estimated to exceed $700 million, with the majority of funding provided directly by Iran.⁹ Additional funding is generated through commercial enterprises, charitable networks, and international financial operations.
Hezbollah’s political integration within Lebanon allows it to influence government formation, constrain policy decisions, and maintain a parallel governance structure that includes social services, communications systems, and intelligence networks.
External sponsorship from Iran provides strategic depth, advanced weapons systems, training, and diplomatic protection.
This combination creates a system that is not only durable, but self-reinforcing. Hezbollah is not simply a militant organization. It is an embedded power structure with near-state functionality.
HAMAS — HYBRID GOVERNANCE UNDER CONSTRAINT
Hamas operates as both a militant organization and a governing authority within Gaza, creating a hybrid model in which governance and militancy coexist.
Its military wing is estimated to consist of 20,000 to 40,000 fighters, and its annual budget exceeds $300 million.¹⁰ Funding sources include external state support, taxation within Gaza, and international donations.
Hamas employs a range of weapons systems, including rockets, mortars, small arms, and an extensive tunnel network used for both military operations and logistical support.
Unlike Hezbollah, Hamas operates under significant external constraints, including blockade conditions that limit access to resources. However, these constraints have led to the development of domestic production capabilities, particularly in rocket manufacturing and explosives.
Hamas demonstrates that governance does not eliminate militancy. Instead, it can reinforce it by providing legitimacy, resource access, and population control.
AQAP AND THE ROLE OF STATE FAILURE
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) operates primarily in Yemen, where prolonged instability has created an environment conducive to sustained militant activity.
The group maintains between 3,000 and 7,000 fighters and derives funding from kidnapping, smuggling, and localized taxation.³ Its weapons are sourced through local markets and conflict spillover.
AQAP’s persistence highlights the relationship between state weakness and terrorist durability. In environments where governance is weak, enforcement is limited, and conflict is ongoing, even relatively small organizations can sustain long-term operations.
This reinforces a critical principle: weak states do not eliminate threats. They sustain them.
IRAN-ALIGNED MILITIAS IN IRAQ — HYBRID STATE INTEGRATION
Iran-aligned militias in Iraq represent a hybrid model in which non-state actors are partially integrated into state structures.
These groups collectively command tens of thousands of fighters and receive significant support from Iran. They possess weapons ranging from small arms to rockets and drones, and in some cases, more advanced systems.
Their integration into Iraqi political and security structures provides both legitimacy and protection, making them particularly difficult to counter through traditional means.
This model represents a convergence between state and non-state power.
STATE RESPONSE — STRUCTURAL LIMITATIONS
States across the region have deployed military force, sanctions, intelligence operations, and diplomatic pressure to counter these organizations.
While these efforts have achieved tactical successes, they have produced limited long-term impact.
The reason is structural.
Military operations degrade capability but do not eliminate funding or ideology. Financial sanctions disrupt formal systems but are circumvented through informal and illicit networks. Political isolation can reduce external legitimacy but often increases internal cohesion.
Each strategy targets a single variable.
The system operates across four.
As a result, partial pressure produces temporary disruption followed by recovery.
EXPANDED STRATEGIC ANALYSIS — SYSTEM-LEVEL DISRUPTION REQUIREMENTS
To effectively counter terrorist power structures in MENA, strategies must operate across all four durability variables simultaneously.
Military operations must target not only fighters, but leadership, logistics, and supply chains. Financial disruption must extend beyond sanctions to include enforcement against illicit global networks. Political strategies must focus on strengthening alternative governance structures. External sponsorship must be addressed through direct pressure on state actors providing support.
Historical data indicates that organizations subjected to partial pressure typically regain between 60 and 80 percent of their operational capacity within three to five years.⁵
Only simultaneous, multi-domain pressure produces sustained degradation.
FUTURE OUTLOOK — THE COMPOUNDING SYSTEM
If current conditions persist, terrorism in the MENA region will not decline. It will stabilize and adapt.
Conflict cycles will continue to repeat, typically every three to seven years, producing recurring patterns of violence, economic disruption, and humanitarian crisis.⁵
Organizations with stable funding and external sponsorship will continue to operate with high survival rates. Their capabilities will evolve, particularly in areas such as precision weaponry, drone warfare, and decentralized operations.
The system will not collapse under current conditions.
It will compound.
FINAL CONCLUSION — SYSTEMS, NOT THREATS
The most important conclusion of this report is structural.
Terrorist organizations in the MENA region are not isolated threats.
They are embedded systems within the regional order.
If state sponsors continue to fund, arm, and protect these organizations, instability will persist and expand. If multi-domain strategies are applied consistently across all durability variables, measurable reductions in both operational capacity and long-term survivability are possible.
The final reality is direct:
Terrorism in MENA will not end through containment.
It will either be systematically dismantled—
or it will become a permanent feature of the geopolitical system.
FOOTNOTES
- United Nations, Charter of the United Nations, 1945.
- Institute for Economics and Peace, Global Terrorism Index 2026.
- Daniel Byman, Brookings Institution.
- U.S. Director of National Intelligence, Annual Threat Assessment.
- Institute for Economics and Peace Reports.
- International conflict and intelligence assessments.
- Anthony H. Cordesman, CSIS.
- International Crisis Group Reports.
- Congressional Research Service, Iran proxy networks.
- U.S. intelligence assessments on Hamas.