IS tries to stage comeback amid rising US-Iran tensions
The Islamic State group’s self-styled “caliphate”
across parts of Iraq and Syria seemed largely defeated last year, with the loss
of its territory, the killing of its founder in a U.S. raid and an
unprecedented crackdown on its social media propaganda machine.
But tensions between the United States and Iran and
the resulting clash over the U.S. military presence in the region provide a
comeback opportunity for the extremist group, whose remnants have been
gradually building up a guerrilla campaign over the past year, experts say.
American troops in Iraq had to pause their
operations against IS for nearly two weeks amid the tensions. From the other
side, Iranian-backed Iraqi militiamen who once focused on fighting the
militants have turned their attention to evicting U.S. troops from the Middle
East.
In the meantime, Islamic State group sleeper cells
intensified ambushes in Iraq and Syria in the past few weeks, killing and
wounding dozens of their opponents in both countries. Activists and residents
say the attacks have intensified since the U.S. killed top Iranian general
Qassem Soleimani in a Jan. 3 drone strike at Baghdad’s airport.
It is not clear whether the uptick is related to the
repercussions that followed from the strike, and it is possible some of the
attacks had been planned before Soleimani’s killing. U.S. officials deny seeing
any particular increase in IS activities. “They haven’t taken advantage of it,
as far as we can see,” said James Jeffrey, the State Department envoy to the
international coalition fighting the Islamic State.
Mervan Qamishlo, a spokesman for Syria’s U.S.-backed
Kurdish-led force, said the intensification of IS attacks began even earlier,
since October, when Turkey began a military operation against Kurdish fighters
in northern Syria.
Still, the militants clearly gained at least
temporary breathing room as the killing of Soleimani, along with a senior Iraqi
militia leader, brought Iran and the U.S. to the brink of all-out war and
outraged Iraqis, who considered the strike a flagrant breach of sovereignty.
On Jan. 5, Iraq’s parliament called for the
expulsion of the 5,200 U.S. troops from the country who have been there since
2014 on a mission to train Iraqi forces and assist in the fight against IS. The
U.S.-led coalition then put the fight against IS on hold to focus on protecting
its troops and bases. It said last week that it had resumed those operations
after a 10-day halt.
“This tension will for sure help Daesh, as all
forces fighting it become busy with other matters,” warned Abdullah Suleiman
Ali, a Syrian researcher who focuses on jihadi groups, using the Arabic acronym
for IS.
Among other things, he said Iran-U.S. tensions help
give IS the opportunity to restructure as its new leader, Abu Ibrahim
al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, strengthens his grip. Al-Qurayshi was announced in the
post after longtime leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was killed by a U.S. raid in
Syria in October.
“The day the American-Iranian clash began, Daesh
started intensifying its attacks,” said Rami Aburrahman, who heads the
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor.
On Jan. 14, IS launched a cross border attack from
Syria into Iraq, killing an Iraqi officer. A day later, IS fighters attacked an
Iraqi force in the central Salaheddine region, killing two soldiers and
wounding five. Two days later, an Iraqi intelligence major was killed in a car
bomb north of Baghdad.
One of the deadliest attacks occurred in Syria on
Jan. 14, when IS fighters stole some 2,000 cattle from a village near the
eastern town of Mayadeen. One of the four shepherds that own the cattle
informed authorities, and a Syrian government military force was sent to the
area, where they were met by IS fire.
As the forces returned to their base, IS gunmen laid
an ambush, killing 11 troops and pro-government fighters as well as two
shepherds.
IS published photos showing bodies of soldiers said
to have been killed in the attack, along with a destroyed armored vehicle and
an overturned truck.
On the same day, seven shepherds were found shot
dead west of the eastern city of Deir el-Zour. On Jan. 4, 21 shepherds were
found shot in the back of their heads, their hands were tied behind their
backs.
Dozens of members of the U.S.-backed Kurdish-led
Syrian democratic Forces have been killed over the past months in attacks
claimed by IS as well.
With the painful strikes, IS is “taking advantage to
boost its influence” and send a message to their supporters that they are still
strong, said Omar Abu Laila, an activist from Deir el-Zour now based in Europe.
“Some civilians don’t dare leave their homes after
sunset because of fear of Daesh,” Abu Laila said.
The group is also trying to restore its presence on
social media and the Internet — a key component to its ability to raise financial
support from abroad and recruit new fighters.
IS members and supporters have for years sown fear
and projected power with the grisly videos they released on social media
showing beheadings, amputations and victims burned to death or thrown from
buildings.
In recent weeks, European authorities, coordinated
by Europol, have shut down thousands of IS propaganda platforms and
communication channels in an unprecedented crackdown. In particular, the
crackdown forced IS’s news agency and other channels off the Telegram text
messaging system, the group’s primary outlet since 2015.
“The Europol campaign of November had a massive
impact on ISIS support networks on Telegram,” said Amarnath Amarasingam, a
terrorism researcher at Queen’s University in Ontario, Canada.
Since then, the extremists have shifted to other
messaging platforms including the Russia-based TamTam, Canada-based Hoop
Messenger and BCM Messenger. They also tried to get back on Twitter using
hacked accounts, Amarasingam said.
So far, those efforts have not been very successful
as international authorities work to chase them down on those outlets as well.
“None of this is really matching the presence they
had on Telegram from 2015 onwards,” Amarasingam said.