The National - News

Truth about the strength of ISIL’s fighting force

- HASSAN HASSAN Hassan Hassan is a senior fellow at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy

I SIL’s loss of Raqqa last week is an appropriat­e time to look back on an aspect of the war long taken at face value, namely the true number of those who joined the organisati­on. Forty months of fighting since the group seized one third of Iraq and half of Syria can provide enough pointers as to whether official numbers make sense.

According to official data, ISIL attracted some 35,000 foreign fighters from across the world. The internatio­nal coalition provided no specific statistics about membership from Iraqi and Syrian locals, at least not as definitive­ly as numbers from foreign countries. Of course, it is easier for the coalition to gain a clearer idea about foreign membership since intelligen­ce agencies can provide details about volunteers from their respective countries travelling to join the so-called caliphate.

Close observatio­n of dynamics related to the anti-ISIL campaign as well as other battlefiel­ds, together with testimonie­s from locals who lived under ISIL’s rule and militants and officials involved in the war against it, suggest that publicly available statistics about the group’s membership and size may have been substantia­lly inflated.

Let’s start with locals. During countless interviews with people who lived through ISIL’s rule in different towns, villages and cities, I have never encountere­d a single person who would not question the veracity of official numbers. Even in supposed gathering centres for ISIL members, such as Raqqa, locals or visitors indicate the number of foreign fighters was limited. Locals report dozens, not hundreds, of fighters roaming the city. Defectors point to certain fighters as familiar faces in the city centres or internet cafes.

Not all fighters would be visible, but local testimonie­s from all the major areas occupied by ISIL should provide insights into the size of a group. If locals consistent­ly question the large numbers provided by officials, that should cast at least some doubt on those statistics. Some towns and villages have no ISIL fighters at all. In my hometown, an ISIL station would be located in one village to serve eight to 10 villages. Beyond such stations, ISIL establishe­s small patrols on critical routes to police an area.

Also, Iraqi and Syrian interviewe­es in multiple areas have insisted that locals formed the majority of ISIL’s members, especially in the first one or two years of the campaign. This meant that ISIL’s membership was more than 70,000, a number that would surely raise the eyebrows of those who engaged in fighting in the two countries. For perspectiv­e, estimates had the total number of fighters in Syrian rebel groups, who once controlled most of Syria, at 75,000 men. For ISIL to reach that number, one would assume most of those defected to it, but that was never the case.

Rebel commanders even question these estimates, and put them at a much lower level. Groups like Ahrar Al Sham, for example, inflate their numbers for prestige and foreign funding. The claim that it had 30,000 proved to be greatly exaggerate­d when the group went to war with Jabhat Al Nusra, which also attracted a large number of foreign fighters, and whose number ranges from 8,000 to 15,000, by the counting of clerics who joined it. Also for perspectiv­e, what the media report as a major offensive often involves a few dozen, not hundred, militants.

It is also common to hear locals ask the following question after major battles: where are the ISIL fighters? They raise such a question because they do not see the number of dead bodies they imagined in the wake of deadly battles. Of course, such proclamati­ons tend to be conspirato­rial; dead bodies are found under the rubble and a large number of local ISIL members are sometimes taken as prisoners. These questions, though, are all too common and are reflective of a wide disbelief related to the numbers provided by government­s.

Finally, it is important to examine these numbers against the way ISIL has shifted tactics after it began to face quick and major territoria­l losses. Both government and ISIL reports agree that ISIL shifted to small fighting units, relying mostly on snipers stationed in key buildings, supported by fighters to repel attacks and engage the enemy. These tactics defined the ISIl operation at least since early 2016.

And yet, the coalition says that 3,000 ISIL fighters were killed in a small city like Manbij and 6,000 fighters were killed in Raqqa — an ostensibly large number for small units scattered around the city. A few dozen of those left Raqqa by buses in an evacuation deal, and locals speaking to the Financial Times in April reported that ISIL militants “evaporated”. People would have surely noticed 6,000 militants even if they were trying to hide.

The numbers simply do not add up. While figures for foreign fighters from the West tend to be largely accurate, some officials from other countries have conceded their statistics may not be so. Also, ordinary people, as well as militants who fought ISIL, seem confident the numbers are grossly inflated.

The number aspect can have practical implicatio­ns. Officials involved in the internatio­nal coalition tend to play up the role of foreign recruits and the appeal of the caliphate, for reasons related to mobilisati­on of other countries and the legitimacy of the global campaign in Iraq and Syria. But that can misreprese­nt the threat and downplay its local dimensions. In Iraq, especially, locals make up the majority of ISIL’s cadres, and this will continue to be the case. In Syria, the group’s presence is less deep, but locals enabled its consolidat­ion of half of Syria, before many abandoned it.

Seeing it from a local perspectiv­e, the number of foreign fighters appears to be significan­tly inflated, and the undue focus on their role relative to that of local leaders and fighters can impede one’s understand­ing of the group and its future.

Seeing it from a local perspectiv­e, the number of foreign fighters appears to be significan­tly inflated

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