The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

ISIS funded Marawi siege: Military

- (Jim Gomez, AP)

President Rodrigo Duterte salutes to each of the troops who were preparing to leave at the Laguinding­an Airport in Misamis Oriental.

MARAWI CITY - The Islamic State group sent at least $1.5 million to finance the recently ended siege of the southern Philippine city of Marawi, with the assault leaders using the 2014 IS seizure of the Iraqi city of Mosul as a blueprint, Armed Forces Chief Gen. Eduardo Año said.

The battle defeats of the brutal group in Syria and Iraq, and now the Is-aligned gunmen in Marawi, however, show a major vulnerabil­ity of the extremists: Their audacious territoria­l occupation­s tend to crumble over time as they're cornered in urban settings by the relentless firepower of U.s.-backed offensives, Año said in an interview with The Associated Press.

counterter­rorism The victories have given government­s confidence that IS — which shocked the world with its rise a few years ago — could be stopped and defeated, said Ano, who oversaw the military campaign that ended the fivemonth siege in Marawi this week. "They underestim­ated the reaction of the different countries in the world, the alliances. With what happened in Mosul, the Philippine­s and Raqqa, the different countries are now confident that if ever an ISIS siege would erupt ... they now have the recipe or the formula to fight it," Año said, adding that the Philippine military is ready to share its battle experience­s in mosque-studded Marawi. The siege, which was launched on May 23, left more than 1,100 combatants and civilians dead, including more than 900 militants, and displaced some 400,000 residents, including the entire population of Marawi, a bastion of the Islamic faith in the predominan­tly Roman Catholic Philippine­s.

Military airstrikes, artillery and heavy machine-gun fire turned the lakeside city's central business district and outlying communitie­s into a smoldering wasteland of disfigured buildings and bullet-pocked mosques and houses.

It was one of the most devastatin­g urban fights the country has witnessed since World War II, the military chief said.

Like in Mosul, the black-flag waving militants plotted to launch the Marawi siege on the first day of Ramadan, the holy Muslim month of fasting, but they were forced to stage the attack prematurel­y after Philippine army troops raided the hideout of its leaders. They also took hundreds of hostages as human shields and employed snipers to slow the advance of the military, Año said.

"Every day, they watched videos of ISIS in Mosul," Año said of the Marawi siege leaders, including Isnilon Hapilon, a top Asian terror suspect who was recently killed by Filipino troops. "That was their blueprint, that was their pattern," he said, adding that troops recovered Islamic State group video discs of the Mosul violence in captured militant positions in Marawi.

It took about three weeks for thousands of government forces, which have been battling insurgents in jungle settings, to adopt to the urban fighting, Año said. Two battalions of marines, for example, got stuck in a beach until a combat engineerin­g battalion was quickly organized to clear mounds of debris that allowed them to move inland.

The massive offensive led to the killings of at least 10 key terror suspects from different extremist groups that have pledged allegiance to the IS, including Hapilon, four siblings belonging to the local Maute clan, and Indonesian and Malaysian militants, he said.

It would have taken five to 10 years for troops to hunt down and find all those militant leaders in the jungles of the south, where Ano said the extremists had mastery of the terrain and support from local clans.

The leaders of the bloody insurrecti­on, who came from different ethnic background­s, were linked by their desire to be recognized by IS as its Southeast Asian branch and obtain funding from the Middle East-based group.

When the militants forged an alliance, IS sent $1.5 million in batches to finance the attack, Ano said, citing intelligen­ce informatio­n, including some provided by the United States. But Año said the Marawi militants, like their Middle East counterpar­ts, were blindsided by their ambition and miscalcula­ted the response to their plot, which involved the seizure of a military camp in Marawi.

"They thought that they can get the helicopter­s and armored vehicles and the people of Marawi will protect them, and there will be a flag flying and they can all it their own, an enclave, and probably more foreign fighters will come," Ano said.

Tens of thousands of Marawi residents, however, abandoned the city in panic and troops managed to secure Marawi's military camp and other vital areas. The United States and Australia later deployed surveillan­ce aircraft that provided real-time images of militant positions, even at night — modern warfare technology that, coupled with the tenacity of Filipino troops, became a "game changer" in the massive effort to liberate the city, Año said.

The military firepower was designed to push the militants to a coastal area where they could be overcome more easily, said the veteran combat general, who called the Marawi offensive the greatest battle of his military career. Año retired last week. "We designed a very good campaign to flush them out and pressure them and canalize them into the chosen engagement areas," he said. "We call it constricti­on." Duterte named Eastern Mindanao Command chief Lieutenant General Rey Leonardo Guerrero as the new Armed Forces of the Philippine­s Chiefof-staff.

 ?? (Photo by Kiwi Bulaclac) ?? PRESIDENTI­AL PHOTOS
(Photo by Kiwi Bulaclac) PRESIDENTI­AL PHOTOS

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