The Jerusalem Post

The return of ISIS

The jihadi organizati­on is currently stirring in outlying areas of Iraq and Syria

- • By JONATHAN SPYER

Islamic State fighters operating in the lower Euphrates River valley this week killed 68 fighters of the US-supported Syrian Democratic Forces. Under cover of a sandstorm that severely reduced visibility, the Sunni jihadists of ISIS launched a wave of suicide bombings against SDF positions.

The Coalition rushed 1,000 fighters from the Kurdish YPG to the area (the SDF in the area consisted mainly of Arab fighters from the Deir al-Zor Military Council). Intense Coalition air and artillery strikes followed.

For now the situation has returned to an uneasy equilibriu­m. SDF and Coalition shelling of Hajin has resumed. The offensive against the last significan­t ISIS-controlled pocket of territory around the town of Hajin continues.

It would be mistaken to see the latest Hajin incidents as merely the last stand of a few ISIS bitter-enders, a final if gory footnote in the often horrifying trajectory of the caliphate declared by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi at the al-Nuri Mosque in Mosul on June 29, 2014.

Rather, the evidence shows that ISIS doesn’t care for last stands under which a line can be drawn. It had the opportunit­ies for such gestures in its main urban conquests of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria. It avoided them – leaving a core of fighters to carry out the last battles, while key leaders and cadres escaped to reorganize for the next chapter.

The Hajin incidents should rather be seen as reflective of a larger reality – namely, that the Islamic State organizati­on has not been destroyed. Reports of its demise have been much exaggerate­d. It is currently in a process of reorganiza­tion and regrouping, and it may well recommence major operations in the not too distant future.

THIS PROCESS is itself part of a broader strategic picture. Two large and interrelat­ed Sunni Arab insurgenci­es have arisen in the Levant and Iraq in the last decade – these are the Syrian rebellion and the caliphate of Islamic State. Both have, in convention­al terms, been defeated. The Syrian Sunni Arab rebel groups remain in existence only in a part of northwest Syria, and only because of the protection of Turkey. The caliphate, meanwhile, consists today of only the Hajin pocket and a few other isolated desert enclaves.

But the defeat of these armed campaigns has not resolved the issues that caused them to come into existence. A very large, discontent­ed and disenfranc­hised Sunni Arab population remains in the area of Syria and Iraq. Its needs, to put it mildly, are not set to be addressed by either the Alawi-dominated Assad dictatorsh­ip in Damascus, or the Shi’ite-led and Iran-inclining Iraqi government in Baghdad. The language that can mobilize this population, meanwhile, as the events of recent years confirm, is Sunni political Islam.

All this creates a ripe atmosphere for ISIS 2.0 to grow – on condition that the organizati­on can extricate from the ruins of the caliphate something resembling a coherent organizati­onal structure for the rebuilding of an insurgent network. The evidence suggests that ISIS has achieved this. It is therefore now regenerati­ng itself.

What form is this taking? A recent report by the Institute for the Study of War titled “ISIS’s Second Resurgence” quotes a US State Department estimate of August 2018 that puts the number of fighters currently available to Islamic State in Iraq and Syria at 30,000. These fighters, the report suggests, are evenly divided between Iraq and Syria.

ISW notes that the Islamic State infrastruc­ture does not lack for funding, the organizati­on having smuggled $400 million out of Iraq, where it has been invested in businesses across the region. ISIS also amasses funding from kidnapping, extortion and drug smuggling within the area of Syria and Iraq itself.

Embedded deep in the Sunni Arab communitie­s from which it draws its strength, ISIS maintains networks of support and de facto control in a number of areas identified by the report. These include the Hamrin Mountains in Diyala province, the Hawija area, eastern Salah al-Din province, the area south of Mosul city and Daquq.

Local government officials also in the Sinjar area have reported sharp increases in ISIS activities in the area to the south of Sinjar and in the Nineveh Plains in the recent period.

In all these areas, ISIS relies on the fear of the local populace, its lack of trust in the Shi’ite-dominated, often sectarian-minded Iraqi security forces, and in turn the unwillingn­ess of those security forces to make a real effort to root out the ISIS presence. To do so would require determined and risky deployment­s of a type that the security forces lack the determinat­ion or motivation to undertake.

Sheikh Ali Nawfil al-Hassan of the Al-Shammar Bedouin tribe, which has lands in eastern Syria and western Iraq, recently said in an interview with the Middle East Center for Reporting

and Analysis that “in these areas ISIS is coming and going as they want freely. They move about as they wish.”

There is an additional problem in that the US-led coalition is reluctant to share informatio­n with some elements of the Iraqi security forces, because of their closeness to the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps and Iran.

In Syria, meanwhile, ISIS maintains a presence in the desert east of Damascus, from which it can launch attacks. Less visibly, the organizati­on is engaged in efforts to reorganize sleeper cells among the Sunni Arab communitie­s that once lived under its rule across Syria – as was confirmed to this author in a recent conversati­on with senior security officials in the city of Raqqa.

The security of the porous border between the two countries also remains a major issue – with ISIS fighters able to utilize the erratic efforts of the Iraqi security forces to avoid the coalition war effort in eastern Syria by slipping across the border to Iraq’s Anbar province and the sympatheti­c Sunni communitie­s there.

SO ISIS as an organizati­on has survived the successful US-led destructio­n of the quasi-state it created in 2014. It has a leadership structure, money, fighters, weaponry, and it is currently constructi­ng a network of support in Sunni Arab areas of Iraq and Syria. These areas take in territory under the nominal control of the government of Iraq, the US-aligned Syrian Democratic Forces and the Assad regime. Small-scale attacks have already begun in some areas.

The return of Islamic State in the dimensions it reached in the summer of 2014 does not look likely or imminent. But an ISIS-led ongoing Sunni insurgency, with roots deep in the Sunni Arab outlying areas of Syria, Iraq and the border between them, is an increasing­ly likely prospect. The caliphate may be in ruins, but Islamic State is back. •

 ?? (Reuters) ?? SYRIAN DEMOCRATIC FORCES (SDF) celebrate the first anniversar­y of Raqqa province’s liberation from ISIS last week. Was the celebratio­n premature?
(Reuters) SYRIAN DEMOCRATIC FORCES (SDF) celebrate the first anniversar­y of Raqqa province’s liberation from ISIS last week. Was the celebratio­n premature?

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