On December 14 two Typhoon fighter
aircraft of the UK’s Royal Air Force were patrolling over Syria and Iraq, when
they noticed an unidentified drone flying towards allied troops on the ground
at the al-Tanf coalition base, in Syria.
Deeming the drone a threat, the RAF conducted its first air-to-air
missile firing in almost 40 years.
The RAF were
participating in Operation Shader, Britain’s contribution to the global
coalition against Islamic State (IS). UK
defense minister, Ben Wallace, said: "This strike is an impressive
demonstration of the RAF's ability to take out hostile targets in the air
which pose a threat to our forces. We continue to do everything we can
alongside our coalition partners to stamp out the terrorist threat and
protect our personnel and our partners."
The
partners that Wallace was referring to are the members of the Global Coalition
against Islamic State (or Daesh, as it is known in many Muslim countries). The body was formed under US auspices in
September 2014, its sole purpose to degrade and ultimately defeat IS. The coalition,
consisting today of no less than 79 countries and 5 international organizations
like the EU, NATO, and the Arab League, is engaged in countering IS on all
fronts, weakening its financial and economic infrastructure; preventing the
flow of foreign terrorist fighters across borders; helping restore essential
public services to areas liberated from IS; and countering the group’s on-line
presence and its propaganda.
Their combined efforts
have diminished IS’s military capability, territorial control, leadership,
financial resources, and online influence. In helping to stabilize territory
liberated from IS, they are sharing information and collaborating in law
enforcement, countering terrorist recruitment, neutralizing IS narrative, and
providing humanitarian assistance to communities suffering from displacement
and conflict.
All of which attests to
the continuing threat IS represents to the civilized world. Following its
defeat on the ground in Syria and Iraq, and the killing of its first leader in
an air strike, IS is slowly regrouping, forming sleeper cells to launch
attacks, waging low-level guerrilla insurgency and mobilizing new support. Between January 2020 and September 2021 IS
claimed an average of 90 operations per month in Iraq alone. In short, it continues to be a highly active
and lethal force. Iraq, Syria, and the
Sinai are its three main hotspots. but it continues to operate sporadically in
Yemen, Somalia, and Libya, while in the past two years terrorist attacks linked
to IS have been reported in Niger, the UK, Austria, Pakistan and New Zealand.
IS’s main fields of
operation are in rural Iraq and Syria – the so-called “Iraq Province” and “al
Sham Province.” Despite what these names
suggest, IS does not control them. In the
Sinai Peninsula – its so-called “Sinai Province”– IS maintains a low-level
insurgency in hopes of wearing down the Egyptian forces.
Its strategy in these
areas was set out in its official weekly newsletter, al Naba. Distinguishing between guerrilla warfare (harb
al isabat) and state-building (tamkin), the article explains that during
the collapse of the territorial caliphate, IS decided to revert to guerrilla
warfare. The new IS leader, Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi has maintained a
low profile, but just over two years after the death of its founder, Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, IS remains a potent threat, not only to communities in Syria and
Iraq, but in Africa and more widely.
Logic
would suggest that foremost among the nations banded together under US auspices
to defeat IS would be Israel. After all,
IS is dedicated to Israel’s destruction, while Israel must see IS as akin to
the many terrorist bodies it declares enemies like Hamas and Hezbollah. Yet Israel is not one of the 84 members of
the Coalition.
As
Eran Etzion, once head of policy planning in Israel’s foreign ministry, wrote
in 2016, Israel and IS have demonstrated high levels of restraint toward one
another. Israel has refrained from joining the Global Coalition, while IS has never
mounted a serious attack on Israel itself. Five years later, that remains the
case.
Etzion believed that the
two parties were held in a sort of strategic balance, each side’s political
priorities inhibiting direct action against the other. IS’s core interest is the intra-Muslim fight
for religious and political dominance. In this struggle Israel is almost
irrelevant. Back in pre-Abraham Accord
days, Etzion believed IS saw Israel as a common denominator between itself and
its Muslim opponents, and so counterproductive for its purposes. If or when IS
re-established its caliphate, then would be the time for “the march on Jerusalem”.
As for Israel, its
priority was its clear and present enemies and threats – namely Iran and its
nuclear and geopolitical ambitions. Israel was concentrating on denying Iran
the ability to acquire a nuclear arsenal and strengthen its political hold on
the region by arming Hezbollah in Lebanon, Bashar Assad in Syria, Hamas in Gaza
and the Houthis in Yemen.
Israel’s concentration
on the threat from Iran has not, until recently, swayed US or most world
opinion. It was considered more
important to eliminate residual IS influence and activity in Syria, Iraq and,
until its takeover by the Taliban, Afghanistan. By reducing IS power and
status, global terrorist activity that linked itself to IS would be inhibited.
The world’s attention has refocused recently on Iran, but the anti-IS action program of the Global Coalition – now a structured organization conducting well-coordinated activities across a wide field – continues unabated. It will surely succeed finally in overcoming the nihilistic ambitions of this terrorist organization.
Published in the Jerusalem Post, 28 December 2021:https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-689915
Published in Eurasia Review, 8 January 2022
https://www.eurasiareview.com/08012022-the-continuing-war-against-islamic-state-oped/
Published in the MPC Journal, 9 January 2022
https://www.eurasiareview.com/08012022-the-continuing-war-against-islamic-state-oped/
Published in Jewish Business News, 7 January 2022
https://jewishbusinessnews.com/2022/01/07/the-continuing-war-against-islamic-state/
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