Albuquerque Journal

ISIS losing ground but not will

The Islamic State ‘caliphate’ is all but lost, but longtime observers say the militants’ will to continue the fight around the world is not

- BY NABIH BULOS, LAURA KING AND MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE LOS ANGELES TIMES

Mohammad Adnani — who would die a few months later in a fiery U.S. airstrike — shrugged off these losses as part of a divine plan that would leave the group ultimately victorious.

“Do you think, America, that defeat is the loss of a city or land?” he asked mockingly. “Defeat is to lose the will to fight … and you will only win, America, if you rip the Quran from our hearts.”

The nine-month battle of Mosul, where Iraqi forces are clearing out the last jihadist stronghold­s in the city’s western half, is all but done. But the price in what was once Iraq’s second city has been heavy, both in lives lost and the immense scope of destructio­n.

Swaths of Mosul’s storied Old City are now a denuded landscape. Railings and signs dangle from buildings reduced to crumbled masonry. Surviving civilians, still terrified, welcome coalition soldiers as liberators, but gesture — numbly yet insistentl­y — toward ruins under which loved ones lie buried.

In the few structures still standing, remnants of the Islamic State’s rule still can be seen. Here, a scatter of charred religious pamphlets, one with a special prayer for patients healing from wounds and injuries. There, an explosives belt with its detonator parts scattered. On a battered wall, a smear of graffiti with a signature Islamic State slogan: “Baqiyah wa tatamadad” or “Enduring and Expanding.”

That would seem a tall order for the group at this juncture, but the Islamic State has made resilience its trademark.

Reverting to insurgency

Even before Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi traveled to Mosul earlier this month to proclaim victory in the fight to retake the city, the group already was reverting to its roots as an insurgency, melting into desert hinterland­s on the Syria-Iraq border, launching hundreds of attacks from areas that had been deemed primarily pacified.

“They’ve got a playbook for this that they’ve used before,” said William McCants, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n and the author of a recent book about the group. “They go to ground. In territory they don’t control, they try to blend in. They carry out assassinat­ions and terror attacks, and prepare for a comeback.”

The Combating Terrorism Center at West Point in a report last month found that the Islamic State as of April had launched 1,468 attacks in 16 cities that had been “liberated” from its control, resulting in nearly 2,600 deaths.

The largest number was in West Mosul, which saw 130 attacks in the 30 days that followed that part of the city’s recapture from the Islamic State.

A recent case in point is the eastern Syrian town of Mansoura, about 50 miles from Raqqa, among the areas freed by coalition forces. Displaced families from areas still controlled by Islamic State have swelled its original population of about 12,000 to more than four times that. On street corners and the walls of former government buildings, the group’s telltale blackand-white signs have yet to be painted over.

A local leader of the Kurdish forces known as the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, acknowledg­ed that many in the town still live in fear of the militants. Women still wear black full-body gowns, with heads and faces covered.

“We need people to trust us and manage themselves,” said the Kurdish leader, Zinar Kobani, who created a post for his unit in the home of a former Islamic State leader, incongruou­sly fitted out with crystal chandelier­s and a marble fireplace. “They are still afraid. It takes time to trust and to be free.”

Days ago, he said, Kurdish forces unmasked a suspected militant disguised as a woman, mixing with shoppers at a market. The suspect, whom they believed was spying or plotting an attack, was handed over to military intelligen­ce officials.

Kurdish soldiers were still sniffing out militant tunnels under the town and fighting off attacks outside it. Recently, they caught an 11-year-old boy who had fought for the Islamic State — a so-called “cub of the caliphate” — and released him to his family.

Reconstitu­ting leadership

The caliphate may have lost its caliph; two weeks ago brought a new flurry of speculatio­n about the fate of the group’s chieftain, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. The American general who heads the coalition confrontin­g Islamic State, Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, said at the time that he had no idea whether the latest reports of al-Baghdadi’s death were true.

“I don’t have a clue,” Townsend told reporters in a video call from Baghdad. “Hope he’s deader than a doornail — and if he’s not, as soon as we find out where he is, he will be.”

But even if those reports are borne out, the group can in all likelihood reconstitu­te its leadership, analysts believe. The Islamic State has also shown its ability to withstand the loss of enormous numbers of foot soldiers in recent fighting.

“As an organizati­on, as an organism, it’s still intact, in my opinion, despite the killing of very important leaders,” said Hassan. “Ideologica­lly, the appeal persists. And the grievances it exploited are not yet addressed. Sectariani­sm, extremism — all the ingredient­s of 2014 are still there.”

In eastern Syria, militants have continued to harry the strategica­lly located city of Shaddadi, on the road connecting Raqqa and Mosul. Its seizure in February by U.S.backed ground forces, aided by coalition airstrikes, was considered a major victory against the militants because it severed their connection to Mosul and provided a bulwark against attacks on Kurdish-held areas to the north.

But the supposedly vanquished militants simply changed tactics. A local YPG commander said Islamic State fighters are employing small-scale strikes, sometimes using explosives-laden vehicles, while avoiding direct large-scale confrontat­ion.

“Now they are not attacking the front line,” the commander, Daman Frat, said over tea at his command post in Shaddadi, whose surroundin­g governorat­e is home to more than 1.5 million people.

Degree of free movement

Even maintainin­g the status quo against the militants is a drain on the coalition’s military manpower. The YPG still has about a thousand troops in Shaddadi, Frat said, countering a remaining Islamic State presence in the area of at least 500 fighters. An attack last month left five Kurdish soldiers dead, he said.

And the Islamic State maintains a degree of free movement even in liberated areas. South of Shaddadi, another Kurdish commander pointed from his unit’s outpost to what he said were militants moving among villages, traveling by motorcycle.

Over the past three years, the Islamic State has been “very well entrenched, and a number of local tribes have been complicit, and that will continue,” said McCants, the Brookings analyst.

“Look at their main slogan, ‘enduring.’ They coined that at a time when they were suffering heavy losses and recovered, so they can point back to that time,” he said.

MOSUL, Iraq — For a time, the caliphate really did exist: a terrifying medieval prophecy sprung to life and captured in the pitiless freeze-frames of propaganda videos. Even as U.S.-led forces in Iraq and Syria deal decisive blows to the Islamic State, the group remains a potent threat.

In 2014, ensconced amid the looted bank vaults of Mosul and on the killing fields of Raqqa, the Islamic State was at the apex of its strength. From its twin bases in Iraq and Syria, it subjugated millions, dispatched operatives to strike the capitals of Europe, bestrode the cyberspace battlefiel­d, and beheaded captive Americans and other foreigners whom the world’s mightiest militaries were powerless to pluck to safety.

Now an all-but-stateless Islamic State — largely driven from Mosul, and besieged in its selfdeclar­ed capital, Raqqa — might seem poised for oblivion.

But longtime observers warn that the group’s virulent ideology is still very much alive, along with its ability to threaten both the immediate region and the wider world.

“It’s on its way to losing the caliphate, but that’s not the end of the story,” said Hassan Hassan, a fellow with the Washington-based Tahrir Institute, who has written widely about the group. “It’s a different story now, with a different plot.”

The will to fight

In May of last year, as U.S.-backed forces were seizing large chunks of the Islamic State’s territory, the group’s then-spokesman, Abu

 ?? MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Kurdish peshmerga Major Haji Abu Hussein, 47, in a sandbag bunker late last month atop Mount Baashiqa with a view of Mosul. That morning, Islamic State militants mortared his front line, leaving a crater in the road. No one was injured.
MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Kurdish peshmerga Major Haji Abu Hussein, 47, in a sandbag bunker late last month atop Mount Baashiqa with a view of Mosul. That morning, Islamic State militants mortared his front line, leaving a crater in the road. No one was injured.
 ?? FELIPE DANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The heavily damaged al-Nuri mosque sits in ruins as smoke from explosions billow from the Old City of Mosul, Iraq, on July 4, 2017. Iraq’s U.S.-backed forces succeeded in wresting Mosul from the Islamic State group but at the cost of enormous...
FELIPE DANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS The heavily damaged al-Nuri mosque sits in ruins as smoke from explosions billow from the Old City of Mosul, Iraq, on July 4, 2017. Iraq’s U.S.-backed forces succeeded in wresting Mosul from the Islamic State group but at the cost of enormous...
 ?? MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Residents say this building was destroyed by airstrikes targeting the Islamic State in Mansoura, about 50 miles west of the militants’ capital in Raqqa.
MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Residents say this building was destroyed by airstrikes targeting the Islamic State in Mansoura, about 50 miles west of the militants’ capital in Raqqa.
 ?? MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Kurdish police in Mansoura catch a man disguised as a woman in a busy market. They said they suspect he was an Islamic State spy or fighter.
MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Kurdish police in Mansoura catch a man disguised as a woman in a busy market. They said they suspect he was an Islamic State spy or fighter.

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