ISIS attacks in Syria signal further violence

ISIS attacks in Syria signal further violence

ISIS may have lost most of its territory in Syria but recent deadly attacks against pro-regime fighters are a foretaste of more to come, analysts say. Despite pro-government forces ousting Daesh from urban centers in eastern Syria last year, surprise raids there in past weeks have killed dozens of regime and allied fighters.

The militant group rammed into Albukamal on the Iraqi border Friday in its first major incursion inside the town in more than half a year.

Despite being expelled from most towns of the proto-state it declared in 2014 in Syria and neighboring Iraq, analysts say Daesh has retained the ability to pounce from the desert.

“When the [Syrian] regime or the Iraqi government declared that they were able to vanquish Daesh, this is a very inaccurate statement,” military analyst Nawar Oliver at the Turkey-based Omran Institute said.

“You were able to vanquish Daesh in the city – such as Deir al-Zor, Albukamal, Mayadin, Palmyra – but you were not able to get rid of Daesh in the desert, which is your main problem right now,” he said.

Syria’s army backed by Russia retook these urban areas last year, the first three in the eastern province of Deir al-Zor and the last in the central province of Homs.

The militants consider raids like those on Albukamal to be victories, Oliver said, but there will be many more hit-and-run raids to come.

“The attacks will continue launched from the desert, targeting pipelines, main roads, border crossings – which will give any government a huge headache,” he said.

The border post near Albukamal is for now controlled by Syrian and Iraqi forces, but activist Omar Abu Leila said there was undoubtedly coordination between Daesh fighters on both sides of the frontier.

This came through “their hidden movement through the deserts and through disguise – perhaps with the uniforms of local drivers,” the Deir al-Zor native said.

Analyst Hassan Hassan, a senior fellow at the Tahrir Institute, warned that the militants would continue to rely on their deep knowledge of Syria’s vast desert and adjacent Iraqi areas in coming years.

“Eastern Syria and northeastern Iraq will continue to be the soft underbelly of both countries, and where Daesh will operate for many years to come,” he said.

“The group knows the area very well, has established an insurgency infrastructure in the deserts, river valleys and rural areas stretching from Kirkuk and Diyala in Iraq to the Qalamoun region near Damascus in Syria.”

Its enemies are unable “to police and secure these areas in a sustainable way,” Hassan said.

In Deir al-Zor, a U.S.-backed Kurdish-Arab alliance – the Syrian Democratic Forces – is also battling the extremists in a small slither of land east of the Euphrates River that cuts across the province.

But in past weeks, the militants have focused their raids on the river’s western banks as they are the gateway to their sandy stronghold in Homs province, military analyst Oliver said.

These have spiked since the militants were evacuated from their last bastion outside Damascus last month, many heading to Syria’s vast Badiya desert, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says.

Government posts there are easy targets, as they are few and far from each other so reinforcements are slow to arrive, the Britain-based group says.

The victims of these raids on regime forces have included Russian, Iranian and Lebanese fighters, even as the militants retain a presence in other parts of Syria.

The SDF backed by the U.S.-led coalition has been battling Daesh in a pocket in the northeastern Hassakeh province, where Oliver says high-profile commanders are present.

Last week, one of the group’s sleeper cells executed rival militants in the northwestern province of Idlib, and a surprise attack revealed Daesh’s presence in the southern province of Swaida.

Source: Zamanalwsl