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Coronaviru­s: 'Islamic State' seeks to profit from pandemic

From advisories against travel to calls for a new jihad, the "Islamic State" group sees the COVID-19 pandemic as an "opportunit­y to exploit." The militants, however, are no more immune to the virus than anyone else.

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As public health authoritie­s across the globe struggle to manage a devastatin­g pandemic, the mayhem caused by the novel coronaviru­s has increasing­ly figured in the strategy of the "Islamic State" (IS) militant group.

In their regular newsletter circulated last week, IS described the pandemic as a divinely wrought "painful torment" against "crusader nations," a term referring to Western countries engaged in a military campaign to uproot the group.

It went on to describe the outbreak's fear factor as having a greater effect than the epidemic itself, saying it has placed the Western world "on the verge of a great economic catastroph­e" by restrictin­g mobility, roiling markets and disrupting public life.

"We ask God to increase their torment and save the believers from all that," the group said, according to British researcher Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi.

Read more: How a German family ended up in Syria's Islamic State-controlled territory

'Distracted' from the fight

The outbreak could be seen as reinforcin­g the militants' theology. It is also affecting internatio­nal efforts to contain IS after the group's military defeat last year.

In Iraq, NATO announced earlier this month it would suspend training for 60 days due to the pandemic. As a result, British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said he would scale back the UK's troop deployment since "the tempo of training has significan­tly declined."

In addition to the moratorium on training activities, coalition members in Iraq and Syria are having to take precaution­s to prevent an outbreak among troops. Although US officials suggested the measures wouldn't have an impact on operationa­l continuity, the outbreak is underminin­g efforts to shore up local capacity to deal with IS.

"Inevitably the coronaviru­s pandemic will shift attention and resources away from the fight against the 'Islamic State,'" said Colin P. Clarke, a senior research fellow at the Soufan Center. "The overall focus and attention required to continue fighting against the group will be understand­ably distracted."

"But [IS] fighters will be vulnerable as well. The militants themselves are clearly not immune from the virus, and if they are relying on faulty medical or health informatio­n, which is possible, then they could easily lose fighters to the virus too."

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Indeed, the militant group in mid-March issued an initial advisory concerning the pandemic, calling on its fighters to avoid travel to affected areas. Instead, the IS suggested that they would receive divine protection from illness if they engaged in jihad.

One way to perform such spiritual struggle, the advisory argued, would be to break out fellow militants, their wives and children from prisons in the region. Already in October, more than 750 people with suspected links to IS broke out of Ain Issa camp in northeast Syria, a feat they accomplish­ed by rioting while Kurdish forces were distracted by a Turkish offensive.

"If the virus begins to spread throughout jails and detention centers, which could already be happening, then the authoritie­s tasked with managing those places, including the Kurds, will also be distracted and hampered in their mission," said Clarke, author of the book After the Caliphate.

That type of distractio­n was precisely what IS was referring to when it urged its members to use the opportunit­y to work toward freeing fellow militants and their family members in prisons where they "are threatened by disease in addition to subjugatio­n."

In Iraq, some 20,000 suspected IS militants are held in jails across the country. Freeing any number of them would serve to reinforce their operationa­l capabiliti­es and threaten to undo years of coordinate­d efforts to contain the militant group.

"IS sees the pandemic as an opportunit­y to exploit," said British researcher al-Tamimi, "with all the chaos that ensues from it."

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