Khaleej Times

Daesh ups ante as Syria, Iraq grapple with virus

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baghdad — The man wearing an explosive vest emerged from a car and calmly marched toward the gates of the intelligen­ce building in Iraq’s northern city of Kirkuk. When he ignored their shouts to halt, guards opened fire, and he blew himself up, wounding three security personnel in the first week of Ramadan.

Days later, a three-pronged coordinate­d attack killed 10 Iraqi militia fighters in the northern province of Salahaddin — the deadliest and most complex operation in many months.

The assaults are the latest in a resurgence of attacks by the Daesh group in northern Iraq. The first was a brazen suicide mission not seen in months. The second was among the most complex attacks since the group’s defeat in 2017. In neighborin­g Syria, Daesh attacks on security forces, oil fields and civilian sites have also intensifie­d.

The renewed mayhem is a sign that the militant group is taking advantage of government­s absorbed in tackling the coronaviru­s pandemic and the ensuing slide into economic chaos. The virus is compoundin­g longtime concerns among security and UN experts that the group would stage a comeback after its “caliphate,” which once encompasse­d a third of Iraq and Syria, was brought down last year.

In Iraq, militants also exploit security gaps at a time of an ongoing territoria­l dispute and a US troop drawdown.

“It’s a real threat,” said Qubad Talabani, deputy prime minister of the northern Kurdish region of Iraq. “They are mobilising and killing us in the north and they will start hitting Baghdad soon.” He said Daesh was benefiting from a “gap” between Kurdish forces and federal armed forces caused by political infighting.

Intelligen­ce reports say the number of Daesh fighters in Iraq is believed to be 2,500-3,000.

In northeast Syria, Kurdishdom­inated police have become a more visible target for Daesh as they patrol the streets to implement anti-virus measures, said Mervan Qamishlo, a spokesman for US-allied Kurdish-led forces.

Daesh fighters in late March launched a campaign of attacks in government-held parts of Syria, from the central province of Homs all the way to Deir el-Zour to the east, bordering Iraq.

Some 500 fighters, including some who had escaped from prison, recently slipped from Syria into Iraq, helping fuel the surge in violence there, Iraqi intelligen­ce officials said.

Daesh is shifting from local intimidati­on to more complex attacks, three Iraqi military officials and experts said. Operations previously focused on assassinat­ions of local officials and less sophistica­ted attacks. Now the group is carrying out more IED attacks, shootings and ambushes of police and military. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Multiple factors help the militants. The number of Iraqi military personnel on duty has dropped 50 per cent because of virus prevention measures, the military officials said. —

They are mobilising and killing us in the north and they will start hitting Baghdad soon Qubad Talabani deputy prime minister of the northern Kurdish region of Iraq

 ?? AFP ?? Iraqis accompany the coffin of a fighter of the Hashed Al Shaabi during his funeral in the central city of najaf on Sunday, a day after he was killed in a Daesh attack in Baghdad. —
AFP Iraqis accompany the coffin of a fighter of the Hashed Al Shaabi during his funeral in the central city of najaf on Sunday, a day after he was killed in a Daesh attack in Baghdad. —

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