ISIS Continues To Pose Significant Threat by Terri Moon Cronk, DoD News
August 26,
2019
ISIS still poses a significant threat to Iraq and Syria and to
the wider world, the deputy commander for stability for Combined
Joint Forces Land Component Command Operation Inherent Resolve said
today.
Providing a coalition operations update from Baghdad to reporters
at the Pentagon via teleconference, British Army Maj. Gen. Chris
Ghika said ISIS has “morphed into an underground network that we
must root out and destroy.”
The enduring defeat of ISIS is
OIR’s objective, the general said. Strong governance and effective
stabilization are the long-term keys to security and prosperity, and
the international community must do all it can to help, he added.
March 23, 2019 was the most recent significant ISIS defeat when
the terrorists lost control of any physical territory in Baghuz,
Syria, he noted.
U.S. Army mortarmen fire
mortars in support of 9th Iraqi Army Division near Tarab,
Iraq, during the offensive to liberate West Mosul from ISIS
on March 14, 2017. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Thomas Carwell)
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“We must reflect on this great achievement by our partner forces
and the coalition,” Ghika emphasized. “For five years, [ISIS’] reign
of terror instilled unbounded fear into innocent Iraqis and Syrians.
Today, it has been reduced to an underground organization, forced
out of population centers and into hiding in caves and the
mountains. Its aspirations for a global caliphate have been
destroyed.”
No Time For
Complacency
Yet, the general warned against
complacency, stating that this is not the end of ISIS or operations
against ISIS. “Although it is now on the back foot,” he said,
“[ISIS] foresaw the fall of its physical caliphate and has been
reorganizing itself into a network of cells, intent on striking key
leaders, village elders and military personnel to undermine the
security and stability in Iraq and Syria.”
ISIS fighters are
still ambushing security patrols, detonating improvised explosive
devices and kidnapping people, the general noted. And despite its
loss of territorial control in Iraq and Syria, ISIS’ ideology still
inspires people around the world, he warned.
The ISIS-claimed
Sri Lanka bombings on Easter prove the organization’s ongoing acts
of terrorism, while the online appearance of ISIS leader Abu Bakr
Al-Baghdadi for the first time in more than five years conceded
defeat in Baghuz, but roused ISIS supporters to fight, he noted.
“The Iraqi army, supported by the coalition and by Iraqi F-16
fighter jets and C-130 transport aircraft, are disrupting the
network of [ISIS] cells across Iraq’s Ninevah, Salah ad Din, Anbar,
Diyalah and Kirkuk provinces,” the general said. “Recent operations
in Wadi Ashai and the Hamrin Mountains have cleared successfully
hundreds of miles of territory in which [ISIS] groups were hiding.
[ISIS] commanders and fighters have been killed or captured, and
weapons, ammunition and IED-making equipment have been seized.”
Political Discussion
In northeastern Syria, political discussions are ongoing to ensure
regional stability. Militarily, the United States will continue
working with its partners to create conditions where ISIS cannot
thrive again, Ghika said. Coalition
partners are progressing steadily back up the Euphrates River valley
to clear remnants of ISIS, following the take back of Baghuz, he
added.
On a humanitarian level, the general said, tens of
thousands of internally displaced persons and refugees are in
northeastern Syria. Local and international humanitarian
organisations are managing the situation, he said, “but we must be
mindful that there is a large concentration of radicalized
individuals in these camps who will want to return to their homes in
Syria, Iraq and elsewhere. We need to assist with deradicalization
and education to prevent a new generation of [ISIS] emerging when
these people go home.”
Any instability will allow ISIS to
thrive, he said. “The terrorist organization will exploit divisions
in society and fragile governance. … We cannot allow this to
happen,” Ghika said. “[ISIS’] widespread killings, the brutal
executions, the destruction of towns, cities and ancient monuments
must remain a thing of the past.”
U.S. Department
of Defense
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