Manila Bulletin

IS militants disappear into Syrian desert

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BEIRUT (AP) — Islamic State (IS) militants, routed from one urban stronghold after another in Syria, have recently been moving deeper into Syria’s remote desert, where experts say they are regrouping and preparing their next incarnatio­n.

The Sunni militants’ self-proclaimed “caliphate” with its contiguous stretch of land — linking major cities such as Syria’s Raqqa and Iraq’s Mosul — may have been vanquished, but many agree this territoria­l defeat will not mark the end of IS.

Beyond the urban and inhabited areas lies the vast Syrian Desert, also known as Badiyat al-Sham, famous for its caves and rugged mountains. It encompasse­s about 500,000 square kilometers (200,000 square miles) across parts of southeaste­rn Syria, northeaste­rn Jordan, northern Saudi Arabia, and western Iraq.

The desolate landscape is a perfect hideout and a second home for many IS militants from the days before the birth of their caliphate. Experts estimate that hundreds of thousands of troops would be needed to mount search operations — and even more to put the desert under permanent control.

Once they melt into the desert, without an army of tens of thousands of supporters from dozens of countries, IS jihadis will resort to guerrilla-style attacks: Scattered hit-and-run attacks and suicide bombings.

“They love fighting battles in the desert and they will go back to the old ways,” said Omar Abu Laila, a Europebase­d opposition activist originally from Syria’s eastern province of Deir el-Zour, which lies in the heart of Badiyat al-Sham.

IS leaders appear to have made contingenc­y plans that involve precisely this — regrouping in the desert and launching attacks, much like IS’ predecesso­r, al-Qaeda in Iraq, did for more than a decade after the US-led 2003 invasion.

Some of those plans are already on display. In the eastern Syrian town of Mayadeen, a former IS stronghold, the militants pulled back and disappeare­d into the desert after only a few days of battle with Syrian government forces earlier this month.

Brett McGurk, the top US envoy for the anti-IS coalition, said the Sunni militant group is now down to the last 10 percent of the territory it once held in Iraq and Syria.

The group still maintains some appeal for Sunnis, who complain of discrimina­tion by Iraq’s Shiite-led government and by Syrian President Bashar Assad’s minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

IS will also look to buy time and benefit from political and other conflicts — such as this month’s clashes between Iraqi and Kurdish forces following the Kurdish independen­ce referendum. That fighting has already diverted resources from the war on IS, the top U.S. general in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Paul Funk, told The Associated Press last week.

Iraqi troops, Shiite militiamen and Kurdish forces have driven IS from nearly all of Iraq, but if they turn on one another, that could give the extremists an opening to regroup.

A similar dynamic threatens recent gains in Syria. The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces and Russia-backed government troops have been the most effective in the fight against IS, but are now waging parallel offensives in Deir el-Zour that could bring them into conflict with one another.

Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, called the SDF’s liberation of Raqqa an “inflection point” in the fight against IS, but warned that the coalition needs to stay focused.

“ISIS is on their heels right now and our job is to make sure they don’t recover,” Dunford said, using an alternativ­e name for the group. Experts say that will be difficult. Dana Jalal, a Sweden-based Iraqi journalist who closely follows jihadi groups in the Middle East, said IS “will become an undergroun­d terrorist organizati­on.”

“The lone wolf has nothing to lose. They have nothing to defend now,” Jalal said.

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