ISIS returns, activates sleeper cells in Iraq

ISIS sleeper cells still remain and are penetrating into Iraq, as the terrorist organization claimed responsibility for the explosion that occurred in a Baghdad market, and it was confirmed by Iraqi security sources that the terrorist organization is resuming its activity in recruiting and attracting youth to its ranks in Iraq.
According to media reports, the intelligence services
monitored the organization's efforts to adapt to security developments and
military operations targeting its members.
The attack on Wednesday night targeted Erbil International
Airport in Kurdistan, northern Iraq, where American soldiers are stationed. It
was carried out for the first time by drone, while a separate missile attack
simultaneously targeted a Turkish military base in Bashiqa, located 50 km from
Erbil, killing a Turkish soldier, according to the Turkish Ministry of Defense.
Militants detonated explosive devices in one of the wells of
the Bay Hassan oil field in Kirkuk governorate, northern Iraq.
An Iraqi police officer said that “gunmen who are likely to
be affiliated with ISIS detonated, using explosive devices (the number of which
was not specified), well No. 105 in the Bay Hassan field in the district of Dibis
in northwest Kirkuk,” explaining that “competent authorities are working to
extinguish the fire that broke out after the bombing.”
In turn, the Iraqi Oil Ministry said that gunmen attacked
two oil wells in the Bay Hassan field in the north of the country, without
causing any damage or affecting production.
The ministry stated that the attack did not cause a fire or
any damage and did not affect production or stop the pumping of oil.
Kirkuk governorate includes the oil wells of Bay Hassan, Bab
Gurgur and Havana, which together produce more than 370,000 barrels of oil per
day.
In recent months, attacks by suspected ISIS militants have
increased, especially in the area between Kirkuk and Salah al-Din (north) and
Diyala (east), which is known as the “Triangle of Death”.
It seems that the terrorist organization that had suffered
defeat in Iraq is seeking to target the Iraqi economy by striking its main
engine, which is oil.
In 2017, Iraq declared victory over ISIS by reclaiming all
of its lands, which were estimated at about a third of the country’s area after
ISIS invaded in the summer of 2014.
Reports indicate that ISIS has become able to organize
secret cells and attract youth, similar to what happened before 2014, in an
attempt to rearrange its ranks again, pointing to the existence of pockets of
organization in many areas of Iraq, stressing the need to organize training and
awareness sessions in order to limit the spread and return of ISIS again.
The reports indicated that despite ISIS’s exposure to major collapses
in its human capabilities over the past years, it is no longer able to control
an inch of Iraqi land, but it still has sleeper cells scattered in several
regions, which use the method of banditry in launching attacks by relying on
sniping and improvised explosive devices to target civilians and members of the
security forces.
Iraqi security expert Ahmed al-Sharifi indicated that there
are multinational ISIS elements inside Iraq and that influential leaders of the
organization are still effective in the regional environment, explaining that
the multinational ISIS elements are located in remote, uninhabited areas far
from the areas monitored by security and military.
The Iraqi government also faces the threat of the militias
who have recently escalated their attacks in Iraqi Kurdistan and targeted Erbil
airport this week.
Germany, France, Italy, Britain and the United States
condemned, in a joint statement, the attacks that took place this week in the
Kurdistan region of Iraq.
“Our governments will support the Iraqi government's
investigation into the attacks to ensure that those responsible are held
accountable,” the statement said.
In mid-February, a violent attack targeted Erbil airport
with 14 missiles that landed inside and around it, killing a foreign contractor
working for the international coalition and an Iraqi citizen, in addition to
wounding five American soldiers and two civilians, according to the Kurdistan
region authorities.
In the past weeks, attacks targeting US and coalition forces
and interests have escalated, as attacks are occurring almost daily.
Recently, Iranian media announced that a Mossad center in
Iraqi Kurdistan had been targeted, but the regional government denies the
presence of Israeli citizens on its territory.