Kuwait Times

Islamic State ‘may survive’ Deir Ezzor

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PARIS: The Islamic State group may have just lost the last major city of its self-proclaimed “caliphate”, but experts and officials warn this is far from being the jihadists’ deathblow. Analysts say the Syrian army’s recapture of Deir Ezzor announced Friday will push IS undergroun­d after losing territory once as large as Italy spanning the Iraq-Syrian border. The most widely predicted scenario is that the group will transform into a guerrilla force on the ground in Sunni areas remaining outside the full control of Baghdad and Damascus.

At the same time, its “cyber-caliphate” will continue to churn out jihadist propaganda of the kind that inspired Tuesday’s deadly truck attack in New York. “Daesh is cornered,” French Defense Minister Florence Parly said Tuesday, using an Arabic acronym for IS. “It has lost its two capitals. The final offensives are under way to annihilate this pseudo-caliphate and its socalled soldiers,” she told the Senate. But she warned: “Daesh’s swansong will be accompanie­d by new clandestin­e terrorist acts, sometimes spectacula­r ones, and the group’s online influence will absolutely endure.”

She pointed to Africa’s unstable Sahel region along the southern rim of the Sahara, as well as Yemen, Nigeria, the Levant and the Philippine­s as areas where “the cancer of blind hatred is still spreading”. In Iraq, IS may have been drasticall­y weakened, but “the military victory is not being accompanie­d by a political vision for after Daesh in terms of re-integratin­g the Arab and Sunni population­s into politics,” warned Jean-Pierre Filiu, a professor at Sciences Po university in Paris.

‘From insurgents to terrorists’

In Syria, he said, “the prospects are even worse”. “This absence of a long-term strategy leaves Daesh a lot of room for regrouping in the near future, while continuing to work its networks of supporters around the world.” Analysts expect IS to revert to tactics it used in its earlier incarnatio­n as the Al-Qaeda in Iraq insurgency of 2004 to 2008. In the coming months or years, they warn, it could potentiall­y then re-emerge as a reinvigora­ted IS. —AFP

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