The self-proclaimed
Islamic State is a militant movement that has conquered territory in western
Iraq and eastern Syria, where it has made a bid to establish a state in
territories that encompass some six and a half million
residents. Though spawned by al-Qaeda’s Iraq franchise, it split
with Osama bin Laden’s organization and evolved to not just employ terrorist
and insurgent tactics, but the more conventional ones of an organized militia.
In June 2014, after seizing territories in Iraq’s
Sunni heartland, including the cities of Mosul and Tikrit, the Islamic State
proclaimed itself a caliphate, claiming
exclusive political and theological authority over the world’s Muslims. Its
state-building project, however, has been characterized more by extreme
violence, justified by references to the Prophet Mohammed’s early
followers, than institution building. Widely publicized
battlefield successes have attracted thousands of foreign recruits, a
particular concern of Western intelligence.
The United States
has led an air campaign to try to roll back the Islamic State’s
advances, and a series of terrorist attacks outside of Iraq and Syria in
late 2015 attributed to the group spurred an
escalation in international intervention. The U.S.-led coalition has worked
with Iraqi armed forces and irregulars and the Kurdish armed forces, or
peshmerga, in Iraq. In Syria, a small number of U.S. Special Operations Forces
have embedded with some opposition forces. Meanwhile, militant groups from
North and West Africa to South Asia have professed allegiance to the Islamic
State.
What
are the Islamic State's origins?
The
group that calls itself the Islamic State can trace its lineage to the
aftermath of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. The Jordanian militant Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi aligned his Jama’at al-Tawhid w’al-Jihad with al-Qaeda, making
it al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI).
Zarqawi’s organization took aim at U.S. forces), their international
allies, and local collaborators. It sought to draw the United States into a
sectarian civil war by attacking Shias and their holy sites, including the Imam
al-Askari shrine in 2006, to provoke them to retaliate against Sunni
civilians.
Zarqawi was killed in a U.S. air strike that
year. The emergence of the U.S.-backed Awakening councils, or Sons of Iraq,
further weakened AQI as Sunni tribesmen reconciled with Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki’s Shia-led government. Zarqawi’s successors rebranded AQI as the
Islamic State of Iraq, and later, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS).
The name refers to a territory that roughly corresponds with the Levant,
reflecting broadened ambitions as the 2011 uprising in Syria created
opportunities for AQI to expand. The group is known to its followers as il-Dawla (“the
State”) and to its Arabic-speaking detractors as Daesh, the Arabic
equivalent of the acronym ISIS.
The Islamic State’s current leader, the
self-proclaimed caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, spent time in U.S.-run prisons in
Iraq. Cells organized within them, along with remnants of former
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s ousted secular-nationalist Ba’ath party, make
up some of the Islamic State’s ranks. Excluded from the Iraqi state since
occupying U.S. authorities instituted de-Ba'athification in 2003, they see
collaboration with the Islamic State as a way back to power.
How has the
Islamic State expanded?
The
militant group has capitalized on Sunni disenfranchisement in both Iraq and
Syria. In Iraq, the Sunni minority was sidelined from national politics after
the United States ousted Saddam Hussein, a Sunni, in 2003. In Syria, an
uprising in 2011 pitted the ruling minority Alawis, a Shia offshoot, against
the primarily Sunni opposition, spawning a civil war fought largely along
sectarian lines.
In Iraq, Maliki cemented his own power as
U.S. forces pulled out in 2010 by practicing what was widely denounced as divisive politics that excluded Sunni political rivals and
gave Shias disproportionate benefits.
The Awakening councils effectively came to
an end as Maliki reneged on a pledge to integrate many of their militiamen into
the national security forces and arrested some
of its leaders. In 2013, the security forces put down broad-based protests,
contributing to the Sunni community’s sense of persecution.
Maliki also purged the officer corps of
potential rivals, which, combined with desertion and corruption, contributed to
the Iraqi military’s collapse as
Islamic State militants overran Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, in June
2014.
Syria’s 2011 uprising gave the Islamic State
new opportunities to expand. Some analysts have even described a tacit nonaggression pact between
Islamic State militants and President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, with each
focused on fighting the main antigovernment opposition forces for territorial
control. As extremists came to dominate territory in Syria’s north and east and
overran more moderate forces, Assad claimed it validated his argument that only
his government could mount an effective opposition to “terrorists”—a term he
has applied to opposition forces of all stripes.
The northern Syrian city of Raqqa is often
cited as the Islamic State’s de facto capital.
There, the group has established some new institutions (e.g., judicial, police,
economic) and coopted others (e.g., education, health, and infrastructure) to
provide residents a modicum of services and consolidate its control over the
population.
After
rapid expansion through Iraq in much of 2014, the Islamic State seemed to run
up against its limits as it pushed up against majority Kurdish and Shia Arab
regions, where it faced greater resistance from Iraqi forces and local
populations, along with U.S.-led air strikes. Its militants have failed to
advance on Baghdad or the Kurdish capital, Erbil.
What is the
Islamic State's relationship with al-Qaeda?
The group became an al-Qaeda franchise by
2004, but has since broken with bin Laden’s organization and become its rival.
The split reflects strategic and ideological differences. Al-Qaeda focused on
attacking the United States and its Western allies, whom it held responsible
for bolstering Arab regimes it considered apostate, like those in Saudi Arabia
and Egypt, rather than capturing territory and establishing a state. Bin Laden
also envisaged the establishment of a
caliphate—but for him, it was a goal for future generations.
In 2005, bin Laden deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri castigated AQI’s
Zarqawi for indiscriminately attacking civilians, particularly Shias. Zawahiri
believed that such violence would alienate Sunnis from their project. That was
indeed the case, as many Sunnis allied with the government during the Awakening
movement.
A more thorough rupture came after the start
of Syria’s uprising. Zawahiri, who succeeded bin Laden as al-Qaeda’s chief,
privately ruled that the emergent Syrian al-Qaeda affiliate, Jabhat al-Nusra,
remain independent, and Baghdadi’s organization restricted to Iraq, a move
Baghdadi publicly rebuffed.
Since then, the two groups have at times fought one another on the Syrian
battlefield.
How is the Islamic State
financed?
Oil extraction constitutes the Islamic
State’s largest source of income.
The groupproduces an estimated forty-four
thousand barrels a day from Syrian wells and four thousand barrels a day from
Iraqi ones. It then sells the crude to truckers and middlemen, netting an
estimated $1 million to $3 million a day. By selling well below market price,
traders are incentivized to take on the risk of such black-market deals. The
oil-starved Assad regime, Turks, and Iraqi Kurds—all putative enemies of the
Islamic State—are rumored to be among its customers.
In a rare raid on Syrian
territory in May 2015, U.S. Special Operations Forces killed an
Islamic State official believed to have managed the group’s oil and gas
operations.
The Islamic State is believed to extort
businesses in Mosul, netting upwards of $8 million a month. Christians who have
not fled the city face an additional tax levied
on religious minorities. Protection rackets bring
in revenue while building the allegiance of some tribesmen. Exploitation of
natural resources and trafficking in antiquities also
contribute to the Islamic State’s coffers.
Ransom payments
provided the Islamic States upwards of $20 million in 2014, including large
sums for kidnapped European journalists and other captives, according to the
U.S. Treasury. The United States maintains a no-concessions policy, at odds with
its European counterparts.
The Islamic State pays its fighters
estimated monthly wages of around $400,
more than rival rebel groups or the Iraqi government offer, and as much as five times what ordinary Syrians earn in
territory controlled by the Islamic State.
Does the Islamic
State pose a threat beyond Iraq and Syria?
The Islamic State’s claim to be a caliphate
has raised concerns that its ambitions have no geographic limits, and a
series of attacks in November 2015 highlighted its ability to strike beyond its
territorial base. The group has seized territory in Libya that spans more than 150
miles of Mediterranean coastline between the cities of Tripoli and Benghazi. As
the United States and European powers have grown increasingly concerned about
the Islamic State there, they have intensified pressure on Libya’s divided governments and
factions to reconcile, and signaled they are considering expanding
military operations there.
Militant groups in Egypt, Nigeria, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, and
the Philippines have also taken up the Islamic State’s trappings and sworn
allegiance to Baghdadi.
The conflicts in Syria and Iraq have
attracted foreign fighters by
the thousands. Middle Eastern and Western intelligence agencies have raised
concern that their citizens who have joined the fighting in Iraq and Syria will
become radicalized and then use their passports to carry out attacks in their
home countries. U.S. Director of National Intelligence James Clapper estimated in February
2015 that more than thirteen thousand foreign fighters joined Sunni Arab
antigovernment extremist groups, including the Islamic State, in Syria, and
that more than 3,400 of more than twenty thousand foreign Sunni militants
hailed from Western countries. (Estimates of
the group’s total forces range from around thirty thousand to more than a
hundred thousand.)
In November 2015, the Islamic State claimed
responsibility for downing a Russian passenger jet over the Sinai peninsula,
shortly after Russia began conducting air strikes in Syria. Over the following
two weeks, the group also claimed responsibility for two suicide bombings in a
Shia-majority suburb of Beirut—the city's deadliest attack since the end of its
civil war in 1990—and coordinated attacks in Paris that killed at least 129
people. France retaliated by bombing Raqqa, marking its first major involvement
in the anti–Islamic State campaign in Syria, even as questions persisted as
to whether these attacks were centrally directed.
Another concern is Turkey’s five-hundred-mile border with Syria,
through which foreign fighters have entered and exited the conflict. Turkey
kept its border open as it sought Assad’s overthrow. But as the Islamic State
crowded out other armed opposition groups and came up to the Turkish
border, international pressure mounted for Turkey to seal
it. In July 2015, Turkey joined the U.S.-led coalition despite concerns
about Kurdish gains on its southern border and domestic reprisal attacks.
A series of bombings over the course of the campaign
season culminated with an attack in Ankara in October 2015 that killed
more than one hundred people—the worst such attack in the country's history.
What is U.S. strategy
vis-Ã -vis the Islamic State?
U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration
has assembled a coalition of
some sixty countries to “degrade and ultimately defeat”
the Islamic State, but has privately expressed frustration that many of these
countries, particularly Sunni Arab states distracted by a Saudi-led conflict against Houthi rebels in Yemen, have contributed littlemore
than rhetorical support. As of late February 2016, the coalition has carried
out more than ten thousand air strikes, three-quarters of them by U.S. forces,
in Iraq and Syria, the Pentagon said.
In Iraq, the United States has deployed more
than three thousand uniformed personnel and armed the Kurdistan Regional
Government's paramilitary, the peshmerga. Meanwhile, Shia militias known
as Popular Mobilization Forces have done much of the fighting on the ground,
making up for the hollowed-out Iraqi army. Those backed by Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps played a critical role in
Iraq’s March 2015 push to oust Islamic State forces from Tikrit. Another
militia involved in the fight against the Islamic State is loyal to the
nationalist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr,
whose Mahdi Army battled U.S.-led forces early in the occupation.
The Obama administration insisted that
Maliki step down and be replaced by a less polarizing politician as a condition
of military assistance. His successor, Haider al-Abadi, assumed office in
September 2014, pledging to practice more
inclusive politics and bring Shia militias aligned with Iraqi
security forces under the state’s control. But rights groups allege that these
militias have evicted, disappeared, and
killed residents of Sunni and mixed neighborhoods in the wake
of operations to root out Islamic State militants. Acknowledging these abuses,
Sadr temporarily froze his
militia.
As Islamic State forces fought for control
of the heavily Sunni-populated Anbar province, the United States opposed the
deployment of Shia paramilitary groups to fend them off. Washington believed
they would exacerbate sectarian tensions and Sunni alienation from the state
while undermining the government. Seven months after the provincial capital,
Ramadi, fell to the Islamic State, local Sunni fighters, trained by U.S.
special operators and backed by U.S. air power, recaptured the city in January
2016 in alliance with a reconstituted Iraqi army. Meanwhile, the Iraqi cities
of Fallujah and Mosul remained under Islamic State's control.
In early 2015, the Pentagon began a
three-year program to train and equip five thousand “appropriately vetted elements
of the Syrian opposition” a year to attack Islamic State forces—but not the
Assad regime and its allies. But the Obama administration abandoned
the $500 million program in October 2015 after it was revealed to
have yielded just “four or five” fighters in Syria. In its place, the White House
said it would adopt a looser approach, screening just commanders rather than
individual fighters.
Regional geopolitics have complicated U.S.
efforts there. The YPG, a Syrian Kurdish militia, has proven to be one of the
forces most effective at rolling back the Islamic State. But Turkey says the
YPG is an extension of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which the United
States, EU, and Turkey all consider a terrorist organization. Russia launched
air strikes of its own in late 2015. Though it claimed to be targeting
extremist groups like the Islamic State, it has mostly targeted Syrian
opposition forces, helping Assad recapture lost territory as international
negotiations gained momentum. Iran remains committed to the Assad regime's
survival, while the Gulf Arab states are more interested in containing Iran
than fighting the Islamic State. "The caliphate survives because its
defeat is nobody’s priority," the Economist wrote in August 2015.
These
military measures may contain the Islamic State, but are unlikely to help
resolve the governance problem, which the Obama administration has said is the
only solution to this conflict. But the diplomatic efforts of major powers
appear deadlocked as the regime's backers and opponents remain unable to agree
on what a political transition ought to look like.
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