Fleeing the offensives, where are Islamic State’s terrorists going?
The Islamic State group is under attack across the remaining parts of its self-proclaimed caliphate, but what happens to its thousands of fighters as their group loses grip on territory?
Facing multiple offensives, the jihadi group has lost the Libyan city of Sirte, Iraq’s Mosul and Ramadi, and is now on the verge of being ousted from its former Syrian hub Raqqa.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced Thursday that Iraqi forces have driven the group from one of its last strongholds in the country, the northern town of Hawija.
Baghdad and Iraq’s Kurdish region remain in a political deadlock following a controversial Kurdish independence referendum. But on the battlefield, Iraqi and Kurdish forces continue to collaborate, squeezing the jihadis, who once controlled nearly a third of the country.
At its peak IS counted tens of thousands of fighters among its ranks, with U.S. officials estimating that as many as 40,000 foreign fighters had traveled to join the jihadis over the years.
Forces attacking IS have regularly reported the deaths and arrests of large numbers of jihadis, but their figures are often vague and cannot be independently verified.
“We can’t give an exact number of those arrested but we can say that there are a good number of them being detained by our forces,” said Mustafa Bali, spokesman for the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces currently battling IS in Syria.
In Mosul, journalists saw the bodies of jihadis killed in fighting on the streets, but they numbered no more than a few dozen at any time — far fewer than the hundreds authorities often said had died in combat.
Other IS fighters may have been arrested and then executed.
In July, the Human Rights Watch group accused a unit of Iraq’s army of carrying out summary executions of suspected jihadi prisoners.
A persistent fear for forces attacking IS is that its fighters will try to blend into the civilian population, either fleeing along with the displaced or staying behind in homes.
“The problem of operatives hiding among civilians who flee is certainly a major issue,” said Aymenn al-Tamimi, a research fellow at the Middle East Forum.
“Operatives might stay behind and melt into the wider civilian population to function as sleeper cells or recruit others to become part of sleeper cells as well,” he said.
In Syria, Bali said, some IS fighters “have been discovered in camps for the displaced via our databases.”
Others have been turned in by civilians who recognized and reported them.
But some fighters slip through nonetheless, especially as “some civilians are afraid to report them, fearing revenge will be taken against them,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor.
Iraqi forces, like their counterparts in Syria, use a database to pick out suspected IS fighters from among civilians.
But a local Iraqi official said “a large number of Daesh elements are hiding among the population in Mosul, particularly in the Old City,” using the Arabic acronym for IS.
Their presence is evidenced by “the assassinations and bombings that continue daily,” said Hisham al-Hashimi, a researcher who specializes in jihadi movements.
The many non-Arab foreign fighters among IS’s ranks may not be able to blend so easily into the fleeing civilian populations, with their features and language betraying them.
“There’s a lot of (IS) foreign fighters there that don’t want to give up and intend to fight very hard,” the top coalition commander assisting and advising the SDF said.
Foreign fighters are often those carrying out suicide attacks, added Hashimi, and by the end of any given battle “the number of them left behind is very small.”
Their chances of returning home are slim, with intelligence services closely monitoring for returnees and the Turkish border now tightly surveilled.
Charlie Winter, a senior research fellow in London at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence, said IS’s own propaganda suggested a loosening of its once-tight rules against leaving its territory for that of the “unbelievers.”
“The group has very indirectly — but also in my opinion unambiguously — essentially said that it is no longer impermissible to flee the IS territories,” he said.
With its territory across Syria and Iraq rapidly shrinking, IS is now concentrating its resources in the Euphrates River valley that lies along the Syria-Iraq border, experts say.
“For a long time now the center of gravity for the Islamic State has been shifting … towards places like Mayadeen and Albu Kamal,” in the east of Syria’s Deir Ezzor province, said Winter.
“IS has very systematically been bulking up its infrastructure and its population in these places,” he added.
He said IS had likely ensured that large numbers of fighters moved to these areas well before they were surrounded in places like Raqqa and Mosul.
That means now that the fight for places like Mayadeen and Albu Kamal could be “surprisingly ferocious,” he said.
Source: Japan Times