After Mosul, Islamic State digs in for
guerrilla warfare
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[July 20, 2017]
By Michael Georgy
MOSUL (Reuters) - Islamic State militants
began reinventing themselves months before U.S.-backed Iraqi forces
ended their three-year reign of terror in Mosul, putting aside the dream
of a modern-day caliphate and preparing the ground for a different
fight.
Intelligence and local officials said that, a few months ago, they
noticed a growing stream of commanders and fighters flowing out of the
city to the Hamrin mountains in northeast Iraq which offer hideouts and
access to four Iraqi provinces.
Some were intercepted but many evaded security forces and began setting
up bases for their new operations.
What comes next may be a more complex and daunting challenge for Iraqi
security forces once they finish celebrating a hard-won victory in
Mosul, the militants' biggest stronghold.
Intelligence and security officials are bracing for the kind of
devastating insurgency al Qaeda waged following the 2003 U.S.-led
invasion, pushing Iraq into a sectarian civil war which peaked in
2006-2007.
"They are digging in. They have easy access to the capital," Lahur
Talabany, a top Kurdish counter-terrorism official, told Reuters. As
part of the U.S.-led coalition, he is at the forefront of efforts to
eliminate Islamic State.
"I believe we have tougher days coming.”
Some Iraqi Islamic State fighters have roots dating back to al Qaeda's
campaign of car and suicide bombs that exploded by the dozens each day
and succeeded in fueling a sectarian bloodbath in Iraq, a major oil
producer and key U.S. ally.
When a U.S.-funded tribal initiative crushed al-Qaeda, the hardcore
regrouped in the desert between Iraq and Syria. They reappeared with a
new jihadist brand that took the world by surprise: Islamic State.
Shortly after its lighting sweep through Mosul, the group outdid al
Qaeda's brutality, carrying out mass beheadings and executions as it
imposed its ultra-hardline ideology.
Unlike al-Qaeda, it seized a third of Iraqi territory, gaining knowledge
of land that could come in handy as it hits back at Iraqi security
forces.
SADDAM'S INTELLIGENCE AGENTS
Former Iraq intelligence officers who served under Saddam Hussein joined
forces with Islamic State in an alliance of convenience. These shrewd
military strategists from his Baath Party are expected to be the new
generation of Islamic State leaders, Talabany and other security
officials said.
Instead of trying to create a caliphate, a concept which attracted
recruits from disaffected fellow Sunni Muslims, Islamic State leaders
will focus on far less predictable guerrilla warfare, Iraqi and Kurdish
security officials said.
Iraqi forces have come a long way since they collapsed in the face of
the Islamic State advance in 2014, throwing down their weapons and
removing their military uniforms in panic.
They fought for nearly nine months to seize Mosul, with steady help from
U.S.-led airstrikes that flattened entire neighborhoods.
The key question is whether an army that is far more comfortable with
conventional warfare can take on an insurgency with sleeper cells and
small units of militants who pop out of deserts and mountains, carry out
attacks and melt away.
“They’ll try to hide with the population. Their cells will get smaller –
instead of companies and platoons, they’ll go to squads and cells, much
smaller elements hiding in the population," Lieutenant-General Steve
Townsend, commander of the U.S.-led coalition, told reporters.
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Members of the Iraqi Army's 9th Armoured Division are photographed
with an Islamic State flag, claimed after fighting with Islamic
State militants in western Mosul, Iraq June 17, 2017. REUTERS/Alkis
Konstantinidis/File Photo
“Our Iraqi security force partners will have to engage in
counter-insurgency style operations at some point and we’re already
making efforts now to start shaping their training towards that next
ISIS tactic."
History suggests training may not be enough.
The United States spent $25 billion on the Iraqi military during the
American occupation that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003 and
triggered an insurgency that included al Qaeda.
That did not prepare the army for the long-haired Islamic State
militants who sped into Mosul in pickup trucks with weapons stolen
from retreating Iraqi troops.
Iraqi forces can certainly point to successes in Mosul and the
cities of Falluja and Ramadi in Anbar province, once held by Islamic
State.
But local officials say the cities remain vulnerable to attacks from
the vast desert nearby mastered by militants.
"Security operations will be useless unless security forces control
the desert," said Anbar official Emad Dulaimi, adding that the
desert had become a safe haven for Islamic State.
"It is not present as an organization in cities but it carries out
attacks by individuals. Car bombs. Suicide bombers. People fear
Islamic State will come back. There are attacks every day."
Tareq Youssef al-Asal, leader of a tribal force, shares those
concerns and complains of what he says is a lack of a coordination
among numerous local security forces.
"In the end these leaderships have no experience fighting in the
desert," he said.
Some ordinary citizens still do not feel safe despite the Iraqi
army's improved performance.
Anbar resident Ahmed al-Issawy does not plan on re-opening his
restaurant anytime soon. He is afraid it will be destroyed the same
way it was in clashes between security forces and Islamic State in
2014.
"I am afraid there could be an attack at any second," he said.
Islamic State has not wasted any time in implementing its new
strategy despite a major loss in Mosul.
About 30 militants armed with machine guns and mortars crossed the
Tigris river in wooden boats, attacked the village of Imam Gharbi,
some 70 km (44 miles) south of Mosul in early July and then pulled
out, according to security officials.
"The notion of a caliphate is gone. The dream is gone. They will
revert back to their old tactics of hit and run attacks," said
senior Kurdish official and former Iraqi foreign minister Hoshiyar
Zebari. "The hardcore will keep fighting."
(Editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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