Iraq intensifies operations against ISIS by targeting incubators
The Iraqi government continues to launch intensive campaigns
against ISIS, targeting its hideouts in several provinces, according to several
axes targeting the comprehensive blockade.
Among the strategies of the Iraqi government against ISIS is
information warfare and the arrest of elements that provide the organization
with information. The latest of these operations was announced by the Security
Media Cell regarding the arrest of an ISIS member who was providing the
terrorist organization with information about the presence and movements of the
security forces and the transportation of foodstuffs to the organization in
Kirkuk.
Strength of ISIS in Iraq
A UN Security Council report in February revealed the
strength of ISIS in Iraq and the number of its members, indicating that the
organization has about 500 fighters and that it has between 5,000-7,000 members
and supporters spread between Iraq and Syria.
According to the report, after Iraq declared victory over
the extremist organization in 2017, ISIS members are now active in rural and
remote areas of the country and launch sporadic attacks.
In previous statements, the deputy head of the Joint
Operations Command that regulates the cooperation of the Iraqi security forces
with the international coalition, Lieutenant General Qais al-Muhammadawi, said
that according to all intelligence agencies and according to accurate
information, the total number of the organization's elements does not exceed
400 to 500 fighters in three or four provinces.
Knights of Truth
Last March, the head of the Counter-Terrorism Service,
Lieutenant General Abd al-Wahhab al-Saadi, said that Operation Farsan al-Haq
(Knights of Truth) targeted an important camp that included ISIS leaders and
directed the organization's detachments in the provinces. A UN Security Council
report noted that despite the Iraqi efforts to combat terrorism, which
succeeded in killing approximately 150 ISIS members in 2022, the organization
is still active.
Targeting incubators
Dr. Anmar al-Droubi, an Iraqi researcher in the affairs of
extremist groups, said in exclusive statements to the Reference that the Iraqi
government is undoubtedly seeking to use new mechanisms to confront the ISIS
threat, specifically in the provinces of Kirkuk and Diyala, especially in the
Hamrin Mountains, which are considered incubators for the organization.
He pointed out that that region witnessed an escalation of
ISIS attacks during the month of December last year, as the victims of those
attacks included nearly 30 Iraqi citizens, both dead and wounded, both military
and civilians. Therefore, the Iraqi government, headed by Mohammed Shia’
al-Sudani, issued a set of directives to security leaders against the backdrop
of the recent series of ISIS attacks in Diyala, Kirkuk and other areas.
Droubi stressed the importance of targeting the incubators,
pointing out that in light of the survival of the
ISIS incubators in Kirkuk and Diyala, the organization will continue to carry
out terrorist operations. He noted that there was a failure on the part of the
Iraqi state at the beginning, which was reactionary, meaning that it did not
activate its intelligence and security services and did not take preemptive
strikes instead of just reacting.