If you prefer, I can make reasonable assumptions and deliver a combined musical and contextual critique. Which would you like?

While ISIS's Ajnad Foundation is famous for anthems like Salil al-Sawarim , rival groups have developed their own media wings to produce counter-chants intended to undermine ISIS's influence.

The "Storm the Khawarij" nasheed is not a song. It is a —a raw, percussive cry that echoes through the ruined landscapes of Syria, Afghanistan, and the Sahel. It represents a tragic irony: groups that claim to fight for the establishment of a pure Islamic state spend the bulk of their energy and artistic production demonizing and killing other Muslims who pray in the same direction.

Because of its association with specific armed factions, the nasheed serves as both a battle hymn and a piece of propaganda

Please avoid sharing unverified nasheeds that may contain takfiri or inciting lyrics. Stay safe, and stay grounded in authentic knowledge.

Thus, the "Storm the Khawarij" nasheed exists in a vicious echo chamber, where each side uses the same 7th-century curse against the other.