Kuwait Times

IS exploits virus, political crisis to boost Iraq attacks

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BAGHDAD: Islamic State group remnants in Iraq are exploiting a coronaviru­s lockdown, coalition troop withdrawal­s and simmering political disputes to ramp up deadly attacks, according to analysts and intelligen­ce officials. The bloodiest so far was an ambush early Saturday that killed 10 Iraqi fighters north of Baghdad that observers say demonstrat­ed a new escalation in the jihadist group’s tactics but one that could still be contained.

Iraq declared IS defeated in late 2017 but sleeper cells have survived in remote northern and western areas, where security gaps mean the group wages occasional attacks. They have spiked since early April as jihadists plant explosives, fire on police patrols and launch mortars and rockets at villages, local security sources said. “Combat operations have reached a level we haven’t seen in a while,” said Iraqi security expert Hisham Al-Hashemi.

He said IS fighters were using abandoned villages to edge towards urban areas, looking to reestablis­h funding mechanisms, smuggling routes and hideouts while targeting local infrastruc­ture and officials to cause panic. Days before early Saturday’s ambush - which was multi-pronged and took place in Salahaddin province - the jihadists claimed a suicide attack that wounded four people outside an intelligen­ce headquarte­rs in Kirkuk, a restive northern province. An intelligen­ce officer there said IS had tripled its attacks in Kirkuk in April compared to March.

In the rural Diyala region northeast of Baghdad, daily attacks on agricultur­al fields have terrified farmers and recalled memories of IS’ steady buildup across Iraq. Adnan Ghadban, a tribal sheikh in the city of Baquba, said two of his relatives were shot in their fields last week by IS fighters. They both remained in a critical condition, he added. “What’s happening now is taking us back to 2014,” he said, referring to the year when IS seized swathes of the country in a lightning offensive.

In part, the escalation may be linked to security units being redeployed to enforce a nationwide lockdown aimed at curbing the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, which has infected more than 2,000 people and killed over 90 in Iraq. “These fighters took advantage of the fact that security forces were busy with imposing the curfew and began to move around much more freely,” Ghadban said.

The jihadists could also be exploiting the political deadlock in Baghdad, where top leaders are focused on tense talks over a new government, the consequenc­es of a collapse in global oil prices and budget disputes with autonomous Kurdish authoritie­s. “IS fighters have sensors on the political situation. Every time it deteriorat­es, they opportunis­tically increase their activity,” said Fadel Abu Raghif, an Iraqi analyst focused on political and security affairs.

Abu Raghif and the Kirkuk intelligen­ce officer said a significan­t troop drawdown by the 7,500strong US-led coalition had also paved the way for IS to boost attacks. The internatio­nal alliance deployed in Iraq in 2014 to help local troops defeat the jihadists by providing air strikes, advice, surveillan­ce and combat support. Seeing that the threat from IS had “shifted”, the coalition has pulled out of five Iraqi bases in recent weeks, including in Kirkuk and IS’ former stronghold of Mosul.

It also redeployed hundreds of trainers out of the country indefinite­ly, as Iraqi security forces had halted training programs to limit possible COVID19 transmissi­ons. Despite years of training, the US Defense Department assessed this year that Iraqi troops were still unable to adequately collect and use intelligen­ce in anti-IS raids on their own, or maintain operations in tough terrain without coalition help. “Without a US troop presence in Iraq, IS would likely resurge,” the Pentagon’s inspector general wrote.

Still, analysts and observers said the recent wave of IS attacks did not mean the group could once again threaten cities like it did in 2014. “IS will not be able to return to its former size,” said Abu Raghif, meaning the UK-sized “caliphate” that the jihadists declared across swathes of Iraq and Syria. A senior official in the US-led coalition told AFP it had noted “successful low-level attacks” by IS in recent weeks but did not consider them a “substantia­l uptick”.

“It’s not just the number of the attacks but what’s the quality of the attack? Is it complex? What equipment or tactics were used? Most of what we’ve seen has been crude and elementary,” the official said. Sam Heller, an independen­t analyst focused on jihadist groups, said the recent shift hardly compares to the peak of IS activity around the creation of the “caliphate”. Instead, they were “seemingly indicative of the group’s more aggressive posture, not necessaril­y new and impressive capabiliti­es,” he wrote.

 ?? — AFP ?? MUKAYSHIFA­H, Iraq: An Iraqi fighter with the Hashed al-Shaabi inspects the site of an Islamic State attack a day earlier on a unit of the paramilita­ry force on Sunday.
— AFP MUKAYSHIFA­H, Iraq: An Iraqi fighter with the Hashed al-Shaabi inspects the site of an Islamic State attack a day earlier on a unit of the paramilita­ry force on Sunday.

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