Reviving ISIS: A US weapon against the Resistance Axis
Is it a coincidence
that the world's foremost terror organization is being revived just as the US
struggles under a multi-front assault on its hegemony in West Asia? More
curiously, both ISIS and Washington's targets are exactly the same.
https://new.thecradle.co/articles/reviving-isis-a-us-weapon-against-the-resistance-axis
The Cradle's Iraq Correspondent
JAN 16, 2024
Iraqi security sources are warning of an ISIS revival in
the country, which coincides all too neatly with the spike in Iraqi resistance
operations against US bases in Iraq and Syria, and with widening regional
instability caused by Israel's military assault on Gaza.
More than six years after declaring victory over the
terrorist organization, Iraqi intelligence reports now indicate that thousands
of ISIS fighters are emerging unscathed, under the protection of US forces in
two regions of western Iraq.
The missing piece of the puzzle
According to intelligence reports reviewed by The
Cradle, at its height, ISIS consisted of more than 35,000 fighters in Iraq
– 25,000 of these were killed, while more than 10,000 simply “disappeared.”
As an officer of one Iraqi intelligence agency recounts
to The Cradle:
"Hundreds of ISIS fighters fled to Turkey
and Syria at the end of 2017. After the appointment of Abdullah Qardash as the
leader of ISIS in 2019, following the death of Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the
new Caliph began to restructure the organization, and ordered his followers to
return to Iraq. The organization exploited the long border with Syria, the
security disturbances, and the diversity of forces on both sides of the border
to infiltrate the Iraqi territory again."
Imprisoned ISIS officials admit that infiltrating that
border is not an easy task, because of the strict control imposed by the Iraqi
Border Guards and the use of modern technologies, such as thermal
cameras.
It therefore became necessary for the terror group to
identify intermediaries capable of breaking through or bypassing these
fortifications to transport its fighters across borders.
An Iraqi security source, insisting on anonymity,
tells The Cradle that the US plays a vital role in enabling
these border violations:
"[There are] several incidents that
confirm the American assistance in securing the crossing route for ISIS members
- mainly, by shelling Iraqi units on the border, especially the Popular
Mobilization Units (PMUs), to create gaps that allow ISIS fighters to cross the
border."
The Iraqi security source adds that there are confirmed
reports of US Chinook helicopters transporting fighters from eastern Syria to
the Anbar desert in western Iraq and Jebel Hamreen, in the country's east.
Munir Adib, a researcher specializing in Islamist
movements, extremist organizations, and international terrorism, confirms the
possibility of the return of ISIS after the organization's “dozens of attacks
in Syria and Iraq in the past few weeks,” which led to the death of tens of
civilians and soldiers.
According to Adib, “the international community's
preoccupation with the Gaza and Russia-Ukraine wars gave ISIS an opportunity to
reorganize its ranks, while continuing to receive internal and external
logistical support.”
Manufacturing and harboring terrorism
Houran Valley is the largest of its kind in Iraq, extending
369 kilometers from the Iraqi-Saudi border to the Euphrates River near the city
of Haditha in Anbar Governorate. Its topography is marked by soaring cliffs
ranging in height between 150 to 200 meters, and includes the hills surrounding
the valley and the sub-valleys that extend into its surroundings.
The valley was and still is one of the most dangerous
security environments in the state. Terrorist groups use it as a safe haven
because of its desert terrain, and distance from congested urban areas. The
valley and its environs have witnessed numerous security incidents, most
notably in December 2013, when ISIS killed the commander of the Iraqi army's
Seventh Division, his assistant, the director of intelligence in Anbar
Governorate, eight officers, and thirteen soldiers.
Iraqi MP Hassan Salem has called for launching a military
operation to clear Houran Valley of terrorist fighters. He confirmed to The
Cradle that “there are thousands of ISIS members in the valley
receiving training in private camps, under American protection,” noting that US
forces have “transferred to this area hundreds of ISIS members of different
nationalities.”
US foreign policy, of course, is rife with historical
evidence of the creation of proxy armed militias in West Asia and Latin
America, often utilizing these organizations to overthrow governments in target
countries. We know Washington has no aversion to allying with Islamist
extremists largely because of its direct involvement with arming and financing
the Afghan Mujahideen, from which the Taliban and Al Qaeda emerged.
An early US-ISIS connection exists quite clearly: the
terrorist group's founding and second rank leaders were among the inmates
of Camp
Bucca prison in southern Iraq, an internment facility run by the
US military. The roster of high-value terrorists captured, then set free by the
Americans is quite extraordinary: ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, his
successor Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi, Abu Mohammed al-Adnani, Abu Muslim
al-Turkmani, Haji Bakr, Abu Abdulrahman al-Bilawi, Abu Ayman al-Iraqi, among
others.
Camp Bucca, known for abuses against its detainees, brought
together extremist elements, slow-boiled this combustive formula for six years
(2003-2009), then let the now well-networked extremists go free.
The religious officials of ISIS even say they used their
time at the prison to obtain vows from prisoners to join the terrorist group
after their release.
US intelligence also protected the terrorist organization
indirectly, by allowing ISIS convoys to move between the cities that were under
its control. Other forms of protection, according to Iraqi security experts,
include refusing to implement death sentences issued by Iraqi courts against
detained ISIS members, and establishing safe havens for the organization’s
members in western and eastern Iraq.
ISIS: US foot soldiers in the regional war
In a speech on 5 January, Hezbollah Secretary General
Hassan Nasrallah warned that the US was supporting an ISIS revival in the
region.
The Cradle obtained security
information monitoring the new activity of extremists in Lebanon,
communications between these elements and their counterparts in Iraq and Syria,
and suspicious money transfer activities among them.
Lebanese Army Intelligence also recently arrested a group
of Lebanese and Syrians who were preparing to carry out security operations.
Importantly, this surge in terror activities comes at a
time when the Lebanese resistance is engaged in a security and military battle
with Israel, which may expand at any moment into open war. It is also notable
that renewed ISIS activity is concentrated in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Iran;
that is, in the countries that support the Palestinian resistance politically,
militarily, and logistically.
On 4 January, ISIS officially claimed responsibility
for two bombings in
the Iranian city of Kerman that targeted memorial processions on the
anniversary of the assassination of Quds Force Commander Qassem Soleimani by US
forces. The dual explosions killed around 90 people and injured dozens, in an
unprecedented attack targeting the biggest US-Israeli adversary in West Asia –
just one day after Tel Aviv killed top Hamas leader Saleh al-Arouri in Beirut.
Before that, on 5 October 2023, ISIS drone-attacked an
officers graduation ceremony at the Military College in the Syrian city of
Homs, killing about 100 people. These attacks, and others in Iraq, Syria,
Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Africa, indicate that fresh blood, money, and
weapons are being pumped into the ISIS organization’s arteries again.
A high-ranking PMU officer, who asked to remain unnamed,
tells The Cradle that US forces are preventing Iraqi forces
from approaching Houran Valley by attacking any security forces approaching the
area. “This happened when American aircraft targeted units of the PMU that were
attacking ISIS in the region,” he reveals, citing intelligence reports
confirming the presence of dozens of ISIS members and other extremist
organizations in the valley, where they receive training and equipment from US
forces.
Security sources in the Anbar Operations Command confirm
this information:
“Noticeable activity by the organization had
been recorded a few weeks ago in the west of the country. Near the Rutba
desert, ISIS fighters were spotted digging underground hideouts. Information
indicates that the organization is in the process of carrying out terrorist
operations in many locations,” they tell The Cradle.
Concurrently, ISIS is expanding its operations in the east
of Iraq, within the geographical triangle that includes eastern Salah al-Din
Governorate, north-eastern Diyala, and southern Kirkuk, particularly in the
geographically challenging Makhoul, Hamrin, Ghurra, Wadi al-Shay, and Zaghitoun
areas.
It should be noted that US forces are deployed in Iraq
under the umbrella of the International Coalition to Combat ISIS. Last week,
four years after the Iraqi parliament first voted to expel foreign forces,
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammad Shia al-Sudani weighed in on the “destabilizing”
impact of US troops and demanded a
“quick and orderly” exit of those combat units.
Washington not only countered by
saying it has “no plans” to withdraw from Iraq, but announced on 14 January
that it would be sending an additional 1,500 troops to Iraq and Syria
illegally, and without the consent of either nation.
One irony here is that ISIS appears to regain momentum each
and every time Baghdad raises the issue of US military withdrawal from
Iraq.
It can also no longer be seen as a coincidence that the
terror group is now re-assembling its forces to target Washington and Tel
Aviv's most capable regional foes – the Axis of Resistance – just when the US
and Israel are struggling to handle a region-wide, multi-front assault from the
Axis.
The extraordinary synergies between the Americans and the
world's foremost terror group can no longer be ignored: their targets are one
and the same, and ISIS is only now entering the fray, just as Washington begins
to lose its hold on West Asia.
The views expressed in this article do not
necessarily reflect those of The Cradle.
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