Instructions from headquarters: Islamic
State's new guerrilla manual
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[May 24, 2019]
By Lena Masri and Ali Abdelaty
CAIRO (Reuters) - After losing territory,
Islamic State fighters are turning to guerrilla war - and the group's
newspaper is telling them exactly how to do it.
In recent weeks, IS's al-Naba online newspaper has encouraged followers
to adopt guerrilla tactics and published detailed instructions on how to
carry out hit-and-run operations.
The group is using such tactics in places where it aims to expand beyond
Iraq and Syria. While IS has tried this approach before, the guidelines
make clear the group is adopting it as standard operating procedure.
At the height of its power IS ruled over millions in large parts of
Syria and Iraq.
But in March it lost its last significant piece of territory, the Syrian
village of Baghouz, and the group has been forced to return to its
roots: a style of fighting that avoids direct confrontation, weakening
the enemy by attrition and winning popular support.
This attempt to revive Islamic State has so far been successful,
analysts say, with many global attacks in recent weeks, including in
places never before targeted by the group.
"The sad reality is that ISIS is still very dangerous," said Rita Katz,
executive director of the SITE Intelligence Group, which tracks
extremists. "It has the tools and foundations needed to build
insurgencies across the world."
In a rare video published by IS's Al Furqan network in April, the
group's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi encouraged followers to fight on and
weaken the enemy by attrition, stressing that waging war is more
important than winning.
It was more downbeat than his only other video appearance from the
pulpit of the Grand al-Nuri Mosque in Mosul in 2014, when he was dressed
all in black and sporting a fancy watch.
In the new video, he sat cross-legged on a mattress as he spoke to three
aides. A Kalashnikov rifle rested against the wall behind him -- the
same type of weapon that appeared in videos of Al Qaeda founder Osama
bin Laden and Baghdadi's predecessor Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who both
adopted the guerrilla warfare tactic.
“He appeared as a commander of hardened mujahideen, of an insurgency
group, not the pampered leader of a well-off caliphate,” said Katz. “His
appearance totally mobilized Islamic State’s supporters all over the
world.”
ORGANIZED TACTIC
Hassan Abu Hanieh, a Jordanian expert on Islamists, said IS has used
guerrilla tactics to temporarily seize towns in order to attract media
coverage but also as part of a new strategic approach.
"This kind of war has turned into a strategy for the group," he said.
"At this stage they are using it as a war of attrition, like Baghdadi
said in his latest speech."
In April, IS claimed it had attacked the town of Fuqaha in Libya,
killing the head of the town council and setting fire to the municipal
guard headquarters. "They seized control of the town for several hours
and then returned to their bases safely," the claim said of the IS
fighters.
In recent weeks, al-Naba newspaper, one of IS's most important media
outlets, has published a four-part series titled "The Temporary Fall of
Cities as a Working Method for the Mujahideen".
In the articles, IS urged fighters to avoid face-to-face clashes with
the enemy -- something the group had previously encouraged.
The series explained how guerrilla fighters can weaken the enemy without
taking losses. It urged the jihadists to seize weapons from victims and
grab or burn their valuables.
Among the goals of hit-and-run attacks, the series said, was to take
hostages, release prisoners and seize cash from the enemy.
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A bearded man with Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's
appearance speaks in this screen grab taken from video released on
April 29, 2019. Islamic State Group/Al Furqan Media Network/Reuters
TV via REUTERS.
Other goals were to "secure the needs of fighters" by collecting
money, food, medicine and weapons "particularly when it is difficult
to secure these needs because (the fighters) are in a weak
position," one of the articles said.
AL QAEDA TACTICS
These guerrilla warfare manuals are the most detailed IS has
published yet, Katz said.
The language is similar to the one used in manuals published years
ago by Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia via its “al-Battar” electronic
magazine, which provided military instructions to supporters and
cells around the world, she said.
IS's new manuals show that the group is short on fighters and
finances, she added.
When it lost its territory, IS also lost an important source of
income, mainly taxes and oil revenue.
”Financially, territorially and militarily speaking, the group is
very weak," said Katz. "That said, ISIS leadership seeks to revive
its so-called caliphate, with special attention on areas outside of
Iraq and Syria.”
Although not all of the group's claims can be confirmed, it has
announced some wide-ranging operations.
On April 18, IS claimed its first attack in Democratic Republic of
Congo and announced the creation of a "Central Africa Province" of
the "Caliphate". Since then the group has claimed several more
attacks in Congo.
On May 10, IS claimed it had established a province in India. It
also said IS fighters had inflicted casualties on Indian soldiers in
Kashmir.
The same day, militants on motorbikes stormed a town in northeastern
Nigeria and opened fire on residents and soldiers in an attack later
claimed by Islamic State.
IS has claimed more operations in Nigeria and dozens of similar
attacks in recent weeks in Afghanistan, Niger, Somalia, Egypt,
Pakistan, Chechnya, Sri Lanka and elsewhere. In several cases, the
group published pictures of bullets, rifles and other weapons it
said it had collected from soldiers.
By striking in a wide range of places, IS is promoting itself and
proving it can reorganize and modify its strategy, said Laith
Alkhouri, co-founder and senior director at Flashpoint, which
monitors militants' activity online.
"ISIS super-temporarily seizes areas, flexes its muscles, subdues
locals, even recruits from amongst them, and taunts governments by
exposing security flaws or weaknesses," he said. "This is a
considerably important avenue for ISIS’s growth."
Guerrilla war is a less costly way to inflict damage and the group
is using the tactic where it wants to expand, such as eastern
Afghanistan, northeastern Nigeria, Somalia, North Africa, the Indian
subcontinent and central Africa, he said.
"The group's media realizes the importance of highlighting this, not
only for boosting the morale of the support base," Alkhouri said.
"But just as importantly for expanding its footprint geographically
— effectively setting up and expanding unrest zones around the
world."
(Reporting by Lena Masri and Ali Abdelaty; Additional reporting by
Maiduguri newsroom; Writing by Lena Masri; Editing by Giles Elgood)
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