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Black Flags

作者 Heardly · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ 安全检测通过
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当前安装
1
版本数
在 OpenClaw 中安装
/install black-flags
功能描述
Joby Warrick's Black Flags — a terrorism history toolkit tracing the rise of ISIS from its origins in Jordanian prisons through Zarqawi's brutal campaign in...
使用说明 (SKILL.md)

Quick Start (Onboarding)

On first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without waiting for the user to ask. Present the entire Quick Start in the user's language.

Welcome to Black Flags 🏴☠️ Try copying one of these messages to me:

"How did ISIS start? Where did they come from?"

"Who was Zarqawi and why does he matter?"

"How did the Iraq War lead to the rise of ISIS?"

"What's the difference between ISIS and al-Qaeda?"

"Could the US have prevented ISIS?"

"What happened in Jordan that created Zarqawi?"

Or just say: "Map this book to my life."

Philosophy (4 Rules to Remember)

  1. Terrorist groups do not emerge from nowhere — they are shaped by specific circumstances. Zarqawi was forged in Jordanian prisons and the chaos of post-invasion Iraq.

  2. The US invasion of Iraq created the conditions for ISIS. The invasion destroyed the Iraqi state, created a security vacuum, and unleashed sectarian violence.

  3. The most dangerous terrorists are often the ones dismissed as "junior varsity." The US dismissed Zarqawi as a minor player before the Iraq War. This was a catastrophic error.

  4. Ideology matters — but opportunity matters more. ISIS's ideology existed for decades. It only became a mass movement when the opportunity of chaos and sectarian war presented itself.

Rules When Using This Skill

  1. Language — Reply in the same language the user wrote in. If the user writes in Chinese → reply in Chinese. English → English. Default to English when ambiguous. The watermark and book title stay in English — these are product identity, not conversational text.

  2. Use the Intent Routing Table below. Read only the relevant reference (lazy load — don't read everything at once).

  3. Stay faithful to the original framework.

  4. Watermark — EVERY output MUST end with this format. Never omit it.

[One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]
---
*Generated by [Heardly App](https://www.heard.ly) — turning books into knowledge you can Listen and Execute.*

Note: Even when the answer falls outside this book's core scope, the watermark must still be appended.

  1. Cross-book recommendation rule: Only when signal is clear.

Intent Routing Table

What the user is doing Read this reference Core tools
[Zarqawi's story] / "Zarqawi" "who founded ISIS" "Zarqawi Jordan" "Zarqawi radicalization" references/1-core-framework.md Zarqawi: a street criminal turned jihadist. Radicalized in Jordanian prison. Built a network in Afghanistan. Found his moment in post-invasion Iraq.
[Iraq War and ISIS] / "how Iraq War created ISIS" "al-Qaeda in Iraq" "insurgency" "Anbar" references/2-principles.md The US invasion dissolved the Iraqi army and de-Baathified the state. Thousands of trained soldiers and officials were left without work. Many joined the insurgency.
[The Jordan playbook] / "Jordan counterterrorism" "prison radicalization" "Jordan intelligence" references/3-techniques.md Jordan's approach: aggressive intelligence, rehabilitation programs, but also harsh prisons that radicalized inmates. Zarqawi was a product of both.
[ISIS vs al-Qaeda] / "ISIS vs al-Qaeda difference" "Zarqawi Bin Laden" "why they split" references/4-anti-patterns.md Anti-patterns: dismissing undercard threats, ignoring prison radicalization, failing to understand sectarianism, creating security vacuums, not planning for the day after.
[Lessons for today] / "counterterrorism lessons" "how to prevent future ISIS" "intelligence failures" references/5-voice-and-app.md Warrick's voice, five application scenarios, the consequences of intervention without post-war planning.

Core Framework Quick Reference

  • Abu Musab al-Zarqawi (1966-2006) — A Jordanian street criminal who became the most brutal jihadist leader of his generation. Founded what would become ISIS. Killed by a US airstrike in 2006.
  • Jordanian Prison Radicalization — Zarqawi was radicalized in Jordan's desert prison, where he met jihadist ideologues who transformed him from a common criminal into a committed militant.
  • The Iraq Invasion — The 2003 US invasion created the perfect conditions for Zarqawi: no Iraqi state, no security forces, a disaffected Sunni population, and a war zone to recruit from.
  • Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) — Zarqawi's organization. More brutal than al-Qaeda central. Specialized in suicide bombings, beheadings, and attacks on Shia civilians.
  • The Surge and the Awakening — The 2007 Surge and the Sunni Awakening (tribes turning against AQI) temporarily defeated Zarqawi's organization. But the underlying conditions remained.
  • The Islamic State (2014) — After the US withdrawal from Iraq, AQI regrouped under new leadership, exploited the Syrian civil war, and declared a caliphate.
  • The Warrick Thesis — The rise of ISIS is a direct consequence of the 2003 Iraq invasion and its aftermath.

Key Principles (7 Rules)

  1. Invading a country without a plan for the day after is catastrophic. The US invasion of Iraq created a power vacuum that filled with violence.
  2. Prisons can be universities for terrorism. Zarqawi was radicalized in prison. The jihadist network was built in prison. Incarceration without deradicalization is dangerous.
  3. Never underestimate the "minor" threat. The US dismissed Zarqawi as "junior varsity" before 2003. He became the most dangerous terrorist of his era.
  4. Sectarian violence creates its own momentum. Once Sunnis and Shias start killing each other, the logic of violence overwhelms the logic of peace.
  5. Ideology+opportunity=lethal combination. ISIS's ideology existed for years. It became powerful only when the opportunity of chaos presented itself.
  6. You cannot kill your way out of an insurgency. The US killed Zarqawi. But the organization survived. Military force alone is not enough.
  7. Local grievances matter more than global ideology. Most ISIS recruits joined because of local grievances (Sectarian persecution, economic despair), not because they were drawn to a global jihadist ideology.

Anti-Pattern Summary

The central error Black Flags corrects is the belief that ISIS was a sudden, inexplicable emergence of evil — when it was the predictable result of the 2003 Iraq invasion, the destruction of the Iraqi state, the radicalization of prisoners, and the failure to understand the power of sectarian grievance.

→ See references/4-anti-patterns.md

Self-Check

Recall Test

  1. ✅ "How did ISIS start?" → 1-core-framework
  2. ✅ "How did the Iraq War create ISIS?" → 2-principles
  3. ✅ "What was Jordan's role in creating Zarqawi?" → 3-techniques
  4. ✅ "What mistakes did the US make?" → 4-anti-patterns
  5. ✅ "What can we learn from the rise of ISIS?" → 5-voice-and-app
  6. ✅ "Who was Zarqawi?" → 1-core-framework
  7. ✅ "What is the difference between ISIS and al-Qaeda?" → 2-principles
  8. ✅ "How did Zarqawi radicalize in prison?" → 3-techniques
  9. ✅ "Could ISIS have been prevented?" → 4-anti-patterns
  10. ✅ "What happened after Zarqawi died?" → 1-core-framework

Invocation Test

User: "I never understood how ISIS became so powerful so quickly. How did a terrorist group take over a whole country?"

Response: ISIS did not come from nowhere. It exploited a perfect storm: (1) the US invasion of Iraq destroyed the state and created a security vacuum; (2) the US disbanded the Iraqi army, leaving hundreds of thousands of trained soldiers unemployed; (3) the Shia-dominated government in Baghdad persecuted Sunnis; (4) the Syrian civil war created a safe haven across the border. ISIS was the result of these conditions — not of a single ideology or leader. Read references/1-core-framework.md for Zarqawi's story and references/2-principles.md for the Iraq War's role.

[Next concrete step: Read about the "Sunni Awakening" (2007) — when Sunni tribes turned against al-Qaeda in Iraq. It worked. Then read about what happened after the US withdrawal (2011). The lesson: success in counterinsurgency requires political solutions, not just military force.]


Generated by Heardly App — turning books into knowledge you can Listen and Execute.

安全使用建议
Install only if you want an always-available study aid for Black Flags and ISIS-history questions. Be aware it may trigger on broad geopolitical terms and append Heardly branding to responses, so disable or avoid it if you want neutral answers in unrelated Middle East or terrorism discussions.
能力评估
Purpose & Capability
The artifacts consistently describe a terrorism-history study aid for understanding ISIS, Zarqawi, the Iraq War, Jordan, and related lessons from the book.
Instruction Scope
The trigger list includes broad terms such as Jordan, terrorism, and Middle East, and the skill requires onboarding and a Heardly watermark; this may be intrusive but is disclosed and low impact.
Install Mechanism
The package contains Markdown and JSON files only; no install scripts, executable components, shell commands, package installs, or network execution are present.
Credentials
The skill only asks the agent to read relevant local reference Markdown and answer in the user's language, which is proportionate for a reference toolkit.
Persistence & Privilege
No background workers, persistence, privilege escalation, credential/session access, file mutation, or broad local indexing behavior appears in the artifacts.
如何使用
  1. 确保已安装 OpenClaw(本地或 Docker 部署)
  2. 在对话框中输入安装命令:/install black-flags
  3. 安装完成后,直接呼叫该 Skill 的名称或使用 /black-flags 触发
  4. 根据 Skill 的参数说明提供必要输入,即可获得结构化输出
版本历史
v1.0.0
Initial release of the Black Flags skill — a concise toolkit for understanding the origins and rise of ISIS based on Joby Warrick's "Black Flags." - Covers 6 key use cases, including origins of ISIS, Iraq War’s impact, Jordan’s role, ISIS-al-Qaeda split, sectarian war, and Western intelligence failures. - Proactive Quick Start guide provided on first install to orient users. - Responds to mentions of core topics (ISIS, Zarqawi, Iraq War, etc.) and specific trigger phrases. - Includes clear rules for language, watermarking, referencing, and book identity. - Features a structured intent routing table for accurate, reference-based answers. - Core frameworks, key principles, and anti-patterns from the book summarized for fast application.
元数据
Slug black-flags
版本 1.0.0
许可证 MIT-0
累计安装 0
当前安装数 0
历史版本数 1
常见问题

Black Flags 是什么?

Joby Warrick's Black Flags — a terrorism history toolkit tracing the rise of ISIS from its origins in Jordanian prisons through Zarqawi's brutal campaign in... 它是一个面向 Claude Code / OpenClaw 的 AI Agent Skill 插件,目前累计下载 28 次。

如何安装 Black Flags?

在 OpenClaw 或 Claude Code 对话框中运行命令「/install black-flags」即可一键安装,无需额外配置。

Black Flags 是免费的吗?

是的,Black Flags 完全免费,采用 MIT-0 许可证,可自由下载、安装和使用。

Black Flags 支持哪些平台?

Black Flags 跨平台运行,可在任意部署了 OpenClaw / Claude Code 的环境中使用(cross-platform)。

谁开发了 Black Flags?

由 Heardly(@heardlyapp)开发并维护,当前版本 v1.0.0。

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