Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Officials: ISIS fighters cross border into Iraq

- QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA AND PHILIP ISSA

BAGHDAD — Islamic State fighters facing defeat in Syria are slipping across the border into Iraq, where they are destabiliz­ing the country’s fragile security, U.S. and Iraqi officials say.

Hundreds — likely more than 1,000 — of Islamic State fighters have crossed the open, desert border in the past six months, defying an operation by U.S., Kurdish, and allied forces to stamp out the remnants of the jihadi group in eastern Syria, according to three Iraqi intelligen­ce officials and a U.S. military official.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly on intelligen­ce matters. But indication­s of the extremist group’s widening reach in Iraq are clear.

Cells operating in four northern provinces are carrying out kidnapping­s, assassinat­ions, and roadside ambushes aimed at intimidati­ng locals and restoring the extortion rackets that financed the group’s rise to power six years ago.

“[The Islamic State] is trying to assert itself in Iraq, because of the pressure it is under in Syria,” said Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasoul, the Iraqi army spokesman.

The militants can count between 5,000 and 7,000 among their ranks in Iraq, where they are hiding out in the rugged terrain of remote areas, according to one intelligen­ce official.

In Syria, Kurdish-led forces backed by the U.S.led coalition have cornered the militants in Baghouz, a Euphrates River village near the 370-mile border.

The Iraqi army has deployed more than 20,000 troops to guard the frontier, but militants are slipping across, mostly to the north of the conflict zone, in tunnels or under the cover of night. Others are entering Iraq disguised as cattle herders.

They are bringing with them currency and light weapons, according to intelligen­ce reports, and digging up money and arms from caches they stashed away when they controlled a vast swath of northern Iraq.

“If we deployed the greatest militaries in the world, they would not be able to control this territory,” Rasoul said. “Our operations require intelligen­ce gathering and airstrikes.”

At its height in 2014 and 2015, the Islamic State group ruled over a self-proclaimed “caliphate” that spanned one-third of Iraqi and Syrian territory. The extremist offshoot of Al-Qaida in Iraq threatened to exterminat­e religious minorities.

Iraqi forces, with U.S., Iranian, and other internatio­nal help, were able to turn the war around and Baghdad declared victory over the group in December 2017, after the last urban battle had been won.

But precursors to the Islamic State have recovered from major setbacks in the past, and many fear the militants could stage a comeback. The group is already waging a low-level insurgency in rural areas.

The Associated Press verified nine Islamic State group attacks in Iraq in January alone, based on informatio­n gathered from intelligen­ce officials, provincial leaders, and social media. The group often boasts of its activities through group messaging apps such as Telegram.

In one instance, a band of militants broke into the home of a man they accused of being an informant for the army, in the village of Tal al-Asfour in the northern Badush region. They shot him and his two brothers against the wall, and posted photos of the killing on social media.

In other instances, Islamic State cells have killed mukhtars — village leaders and municipal officials. They have attacked rural checkpoint­s with car bombs and mortar fire, and burned down militia members’ homes. In the town of Shirqat in central Iraq, militants stopped a police vehicle last month and killed all four officers inside.

Other activities have aimed at restoring the group’s financial footing.

On Sunday, militants kidnapped a group of 12 truffle hunters in the western Anbar province, marking a return to a strategy of intimidati­ng and extorting farmers and traders for financial gain.

Naim Kaoud, the head of provincial security, urged locals to suspend truffle gathering, which has just one season a year and is an important source of income for rural families.

Former lawmaker and Anbar tribal figure Jaber alJaberi cautioned against exaggerati­ng the Islamic State threat, saying the militants have been less successful at infiltrati­ng communitie­s than they were earlier this decade.

“These are different times,” he said.

Others are not so sure. Hans-Jakob Schindler, a former adviser to the U.N. Security Council on the Islamic State and other extremist groups, said the same grievances that gave rise to the Islamic State in 2013 remain today, including a large Sunni minority that feels politicall­y and economical­ly marginaliz­ed by the Shiite-led central government.

After President Donald Trump promised in December to pull American forces out of Syria, Iraqi lawmakers began clamoring for the U.S. to leave, arguing that the mission against the Islamic State was approachin­g its end.

But with no letdown to Islamic State militancy, those calls have petered out.

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