Arab News

Daesh alive and well thanks to Iran’s militias

- MICHAEL PREGENT www.arabnews.com/opinion

The territoria­l defeat of Daesh was simply the first of a long series of phases needed to destroy the terrorist organizati­on and its ideology completely. This may be the first time a US-led campaign has knocked down buildings and destroyed cities and claimed victory over a terrorist insurgency. But Sunni insurgenci­es are not defeated by punishing Sunni population centers and destroying cities in bombing campaigns. Insurgenci­es are grown when a sectarian government indiscrimi­nately targets and disappears Sunni males in the tens of thousands. The children of non-affiliated Sunni males killed or imprisoned while awaiting execution for being Daesh collaborat­ors will grow up to seek revenge. They do not have to believe in a terrorist ideology to use the group as a vehicle for revenge.

The way Sunni areas of Iraq were destroyed in the anti-Daesh campaign simply reset the conditions that led to the terror group to begin with. The Iraqi government and the militias that destroyed Sunni towns, with US air power in support, took territory away by destroying city blocks and infrastruc­ture. But Daesh can now conduct an attack anywhere in Iraq.

Reconstruc­tion is lagging in the destroyed Sunni areas of Iraq by design. Sunnis are not being recruited into the ranks of a uniformed force to hold territory and secure the population in areas previously controlled by Daesh. The thinking in Baghdad and in prominent think tank sectors of Washington — both are wrong — is that Sunni and Kurdish areas are best when governed by Shiite forces; after all, it’s the Sunnis and the Kurds that are causing problems.

In the case of Iraq, the forces operating in these disenfranc­hised areas are not Iraqis that happen to be Shiite and wear the uniform of the Iraqi Army or the Iraqi Police — they are the militias, more loyal to Tehran than Iraq. The Iran-backed militias see every militaryag­ed Sunni male as a future Daesh fighter or a former or future Daesh collaborat­or. They do not know these Sunni areas, they do not know the tribes, they are not trusted, and they treat Sunnis as cells that are ready to be infected with the Daesh disease. The distrust between Iraqis from all sects and these Iran-backed militias is currently the highest it has ever been, and Daesh is watching.

At no time during the anti-Daesh campaign were Sunni military-aged males empowered by Baghdad or the US to take on this Sunni

Michael Pregent, a former intelligen­ce officer, is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. terrorist threat. The lessons of the 2007 surge, when the US empowered Sunnis to take back their neighborho­ods from Al-Qaeda and Iran-backed militias, were shelved. Instead, the US effectivel­y acted as the air force for Qassem Soleimani’s militias. US Central Command assesses Daesh as being as strong now as it was right before it occupied Mosul with 2,000 fighters. US officials believe there are thousands of Daesh fighters operating in the ungoverned spaces along the Iraq-Syria border. The caliphate is alive and well, as it now operates along the lines of the Al-Qaeda model in Iraq and Syria, while also holding and gaining territory in the ungoverned spaces of the Sahel region of Africa.

But who is actually paying attention? The US is more focused on protecting its forces from Iran-backed militias. The militias themselves aren’t focused on Daesh — they are focused on killing and disappeari­ng

Shiite youths in the protest movement, on defending their headquarte­rs in Shiite areas from these protesters, and on moving arms and forces into Syria. They are also attacking the US missions in Iraq and Syria and attempting to force the US out of Iraq.

Daesh is taking advantage of the coronaviru­s disease, the distrust of militias, protests, and a security situation where the US and its supposed partners have ceded territory in Sunni areas and along the Syrian border to Iran-backed militias. The Iraqi government and the US continue to take their eyes off the ball.

The US will carry on developing intelligen­ce to target Daesh cells and key leaders, but what is growing now in the unprotecte­d Sunni areas of Iraq and Syria is a pool of young recruits left without answers or a say in a country that has moved on. They want justice and they want revenge against Baghdad, Tehran and the US.

The US must pressure Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi to disarm and force the Iran-backed militias out of the security apparatus, as well as reform the electoral law and hold free and fair elections. The US must also pressure Baghdad to allocate and expedite funds toward reconstruc­tion in destroyed Sunni areas. These recommenda­tions are the only way to keep Daesh from learning from its lessons and applying them to wreak havoc at a time of its choosing. The current situation is making this a likely scenario — a very dangerous yet avoidable one.

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