How ISIS will look in 2020
In mid-2014, ISIS shocked the world by announcing the
establishment of a territorial caliphate in vast areas in both Syria and Iraq,
but the terrorist organization did not emerge out of nowhere, as it had been
present several years beforehand.
The first core of ISIS was the Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad led
by Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, which appeared in Iraq in 2003 after the US invasion
of Baghdad and the overthrow of former President Saddam Hussein's regime. Within
one year of its establishment, the group pledged allegiance to al-Qaeda, before
it merged with other Iraqi factions and formed what was known as the Islamic
State of Iraq.
The organization established a principality within Iraq’s
Sunni Triangle, but it was defeated by the US-backed tribal Sahwa (Awakening)
forces and was forced to move to the Great Iraqi Desert, where it continued to
operate as a gang organization.
During the period from 2011-2014, the terrorist
organization's fighters succeeded in expanding into Syria, taking advantage of
the security chaos left by the revolution.
In late October 2019, ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was
killed in a military operation by US forces, so the terrorist organization
appointed Abu Ibrahim al-Hashemi as his successor, declaring the continuation
of the long-term guerrilla war or "the war of attrition."
How will ISIS look in 2020?
Aaron Zelin, a researcher of jihadist groups, told the
magazine American the Atlantic that ISIS will remain as a gang organization
during the coming period, explaining that it has become weaker than before but
still exists.
The Pentagon's Inspector General released a report in which
it estimated the number of ISIS fighters in Syria and Iraq at 14,000 fighters,
the majority of whom were Iraqis.
The "central organization" of ISIS remained in
Syria and Iraq despite the loss of all its strongholds, but it still maintains
contact and coordination with its branches outside the two countries,
especially its branches in West and Central Africa, Afghanistan, and the
Philippines.
The terrorist organization launched a "war of
attrition", which falls under what the organization calls "a
generational strategy" for a prolonged war that extends within the region
and ultimately aims to establish an Islamist state under the banner of
punishment.
According to the Atlantic, US military leaders were divided
into two camps, with one camp viewing ISIS as living in a state of general
weakness due to the killing of Baghdadi and the arrest of thousands of its
members in detention camps in Syria and Iraq, in addition to the weak
communication between the central organization and its various branches.
In contrast to the first opinion, a number of other Pentagon
officials believe that ISIS is still able to coordinate and carry out major
terrorist attacks in various countries.
Planning to restore the caliphate
According to Russell Travers, the acting director of the US
National Counterterrorism Center, ISIS is planning for the post-collapse of its
caliphate and has benefited from the US withdrawal from Syria to plan attacks
against European countries.
Meanwhile, Jason Blazakis, a professor at the Middlebury
Institute of International Studies, expected that the new terrorist leader, Abu
Ibrahim al-Hashemi, would restructure the organization to accommodate the
necessities of the current stage in order to be able to carry out major
terrorist attacks.