ISIS is losing momentum

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Warning: No flaming hostages were included in this story.

Just truth bombs.



ISIS Is Losing Its Greatest Weapon: Momentum

There was a time when the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria appeared unstoppable. In September and October, as the jihadist group captured territory through a major offensive in Iraq’s Anbar province, culminating in the fall of the town of Hit on October 13, observers feared that even Baghdad was in danger of being overrun. ISIS is now in the midst of another major military movement in Anbar, but the always-overblown fears about the organization’s advance are now receding—and the group’s decline has grown increasingly apparent.

ISIS’s signature attributes, ferocity and unpredictability, have raised the group’s profile and inspired a spate of lone-wolf attackers. But the organization has also made several strategic errors along the way. The Islamic State’s lifeblood is partially money and territory, but primarily momentum against weak and ill-prepared enemies. And that momentum, which peaked in early August, has stalled.

Where has ISIS overplayed its hand? The group already had an impressive array of foes when a June blitzkrieg extended its reach into Iraq—enemies that included the Iraqi government, the Iranian regime, and even other jihadist groups like the Nusra Front, with whom it frequently skirmished in Syria. This offensive wasn’t solely the work of ISIS, which fought alongside a coalition of Sunni insurgent groups that included former members of Saddam Hussein’s Baath party. The offensive was also widely backed by Iraq’s disaffected Sunni elite.

But once its initial gains were secured, ISIS quickly betrayed the very groups that had aided its advance. Most prominently, ISIS declared the reestablishment of the caliphate, with the group’s spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani claiming that “the legality of all emirates, groups, states, and organizations, becomes null by the expansion of the khilafah’s authority.” The statement clearly signaled that ISIS believed it had usurped the authority of its allies; indeed, in early July it rounded up ex-Baathist leaders in Mosul (doing so proved particularly problematic for ISIS because the ex-Baathists were also managing the actual governance and administration of the northern Iraqi city, and their arrest hastened the rapid disintegration of basic services).

ISIS committed a more damaging error at the beginning of August, when it launched a surprise incursion into Iraq’s Kurdish territory and promptly engaged in a campaign of genocidal slaughter and enslavement against the Yazidi minority sect. The moves were pointless from a military perspective, since the Kurdistan Regional Government’s Peshmerga forces weren’t fighting ISIS and the Yazidis didn’t pose a threat to the incipient caliphate. These decisions, along with the beheading of the American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, helped draw even more enemies into the theater, including the United States and an international coalition backing U.S. military action.

The most obvious sign of ISIS’s decline is that the group is no longer conquering territory, seizing no major towns or cities since Hit (and this hasn’t been for lack of effort on its part). ISIS continues to capture villages from time to time; for example, on December 27 it gained control of 14 villages in Anbar after Iraqi security forces withdrew from the area. But those villages aren’t equivalent to a major urban area and had been taken from ISIS by Iraqi forces just two days earlier. In October, ISIS advanced ominously on the Syrian city of Kobane; the French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy declared in The New Republic that “Kobane will fall. In a matter of hours.” It has yet to fall, and Kurdish forces now appear to have the advantage, though the town remains contested. ISIS has even been losing ground, albeit unevenly. In December, the group pulled its forces from Iraq’s Sinjar district, home to one of ISIS’s main resupply routes from Syria into Iraq (the other being Tal Afar). This has threatened to isolate ISIS-held Mosul.

ISIS’s brutality has also proven isolating. Local opposition against the group, including by Sunnis, is mounting in Mosul and Anbar, although ISIS did recently succeed in suppressing a revolt against it in Syria’s Dayr al-Zawr. These uprisings are certain to grow if ISIS weakens. Meanwhile, the group’s leaders seem increasingly paranoid, reportedly executing many of their own fighters in Mosul and elsewhere. In December, for example, Muammar Tawhlah, ISIS’s top official in Mosul, was killed by firing squad for suspected espionage. And ISIS’s bureaucratic mismanagement has alienated local populations, leaving them with a lack of job opportunities and essential services. As a resident of Mosul told the Financial Times, “When I was seven years old the war against Iran started. Since then, we’ve been at war. We’ve endured international sanctions, poverty, injustice. But it was never worse than it is now.”

ISIS’s financial and military resources have also shrunk as U.S. airstrikes have destroyed the group’s materiel and capacity to refine oil. The Islamic State is still able to sell unrefined oil on the black market, but the difference between the price it can set for unrefined versus refined oil is significant. Reports this week indicated that ISIS expects a $250-million surplus in its $2-billion budget, but these figures are entirely self-reported: Accountants aren’t exactly lining up to get into ISIS-controlled territory and perform an outside audit.

ISIS, moreover, lacks an industrial base capable of sustaining its military efforts (Ninawa and Salahaddin governorates have a number of factories, but the group has a shortage of qualified technical personnel to man and supply them). It cannot build its own heavy armor, armored personnel carriers, Humvees, anti-tank weapons, surface-to-air missiles, anti-aircraft weapons, or radar stations. Only through military raids can the organization capture the equipment it needs for battle, and the last time it did this successfully was in August.

All of these setbacks seriously threaten ISIS because of its reliance on momentum—a dependency articulated in a recent issue of the group’s English-language magazine Dabiq. An article carrying the byline of the British journalist John Cantlie, ISIS’s forcefully conscripted propagandist, noted that “as an entity enjoys success, it attracts more to its fold, thereby causing expansion and breeding more success until it achieves some sort of critical mass, the point at which it becomes self-perpetuating, self-sustaining.” ISIS is not yet self-sustaining. Drawing a steady flow of zealous recruits remains a necessity for the group, not a luxury.

Nevertheless, to borrow President Obama’s words, the United States and its allies are far closer to degrading ISIS than destroying it. The Islamic State is currently positioning itself to attack the Al-Asad airbase in Anbar province, where U.S. military advisors are now located, and such an assault could amplify calls in the United States for an American withdrawal from the region. ISIS could conceivably launch a major cross-border attack against Jordan or move into Suwayda, the only majority-Druze province in Syria, carrying out massacres comparable to those that the group committed in Sinjar or Hit. In the latter scenario, the Islamic State would be goading the U.S. to intervene militarily on what could be seen as the side of Bashar al-Assad’s supporters. ISIS could yet seize the Iraqi cities of Ramadi or Haditha, which would represent powerful symbolic gains for the group and disasters in terms of lives lost, but would do little to improve the Islamic State’s overall strategic position. Even if ISIS lost all its Iraq holdings (which won’t happen anytime soon), the organization would simply be back to where it started before the June offensive, hunkered down in its stronghold of Raqqa, Syria. Even if its “caliph,” Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, is killed, and even if large portions of the organization subsequently reconcile with—and return to—al-Qaeda, a core is likely to persist for a long time under the ISIS label.

None of these developments, however, would necessarily reverse the Islamic State’s noticeable decline. Indeed, ISIS’s jihadist rivals have been gaining ground. The Nusra Front, which Syria watchers once considered a spent force, has in recent weeks made major gains in Idlib, Hama, and Daraa, and its growing strength has effectively marginalized the “moderate” Syrian opposition. It’s a clear sign that jihadism will bedevil Iraq and Syria for some time to come—and that this problem is much broader than ISIS.

The Decline of ISIS Has Already Begun - Atlantic Mobile
 
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Spade

Ace Poster
Nov 18, 2008
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Well, of course IS(IS(L)) is losing momentum. Any group who doesn't know it's own name can't be taken seriously too long. And, this seventy -two virgins business for blowing one's self up or standing in the open waving at an F18 has serious logical drawbacks. If heaven is forever, then seventy- two virgins would get rather boring after the first forty or fifty years. Just think how poor Moe, after a millennium or so, would some starry night in heaven cry out, "Jesus, it's not Hanna's turn again!" Mind you, the gods might grant Moe continuous senility and erase his memory. But, then he'd forget what Hanna was for.

If dudes just thought about it, volunteers would dry up.

And, when the entire civilised world thinks you're shltheads, that can't be good for your self image.
 

Serryah

Executive Branch Member
Dec 3, 2008
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I think the death of the Jordanian pilot is sign of the desperation they have and that one act will likely bite them in the behind. So long as it was Westeren/Foreign people ISIS was killing the ME didn't really care.

Now they've shown that even if you are from the ME and outside their zone of influence, you're a real target. This wasn't something the ME was prepared to face. Now they have to.

Should be interesting to see the back and forth.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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We have to stop DOUCHE because it's a dire and immediate threat to Canada! DOUCHE's ability to walk on water and fly through the air means the Atlantic Ocean is no barrier! The U.S. and Canada must immediately shut down all social programs and dedicate that funding to defeating an "enemy" that cannot and never will be able to threaten us!

Paris is lovely, BTW. A bit chilly (it is February, y'know) but sunny and pleasant. No scary brown people so far.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
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According to the O.P. writer, "Ladders" present a more eminent danger.........
im·mi·nent

adjective \ˈi-mə-nənt\ happening very soon

em·i·nent

adjective \ˈe-mə-nənt\
: successful, well-known and respected
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
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Thats pretty obvious. Their territory is shrinking, a good chunk of their fighters are dead and not being replenished. Only a matter of time before they collapse completely - then another similar group will pop up somewhere else in the region as it so often does.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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So what you are really saying is that we need to start spying on people here because they are such a serious and imminent threat.

Phew, boy am I glad our government is taking care of us.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Can't just toss all that fancy hardware in the trash just because other nation are becoming closed to our brand of 'friendship'. May I suggest chipping the Politicians and bankers before sailing the homeless over some horizon and dumping them in the ocean. (to cheers of 'better them that us)

"Phew, boy am I glad our government is taking care of us."
Until it comes mass exterminations I hope.
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
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im·mi·nent

adjective \ˈi-mə-nənt\ happening very soon

em·i·nent

adjective \ˈe-mə-nənt\
: successful, well-known and respected

So what you are really saying is that we need to start spying on people here because they are such a serious and imminent threat.

Phew, boy am I glad our government is taking care of us.
Pete & re-Pete
 

Spade

Ace Poster
Nov 18, 2008
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[QUOTE=Tecumsehsbones;2062013]We have to stop DOUCHE because it's a dire and immediate threat to Canada! DOUCHE's ability to walk on water and fly through the air means the Atlantic Ocean is no barrier! The U.S. and Canada must immediately shut down all social programs and dedicate that funding to defeating an "enemy" that cannot and never will be able to threaten us!

Paris is lovely, BTW. A bit chilly (it is February, y'know) but sunny and pleasant. No scary brown people so far.[/QUOTE]

Don't wear dark glasses. Everyone will look brown. I find staying in my hotel room and not venturing outdoors the safe way to travel abroad. Avec soin!
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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let's hold a root-cause rave...give away molly and groove to the beats of flossistan you cool cats...free pacifiers at the door.



anyway, what a load of sh!t that OP. :lol:
 

Zipperfish

House Member
Apr 12, 2013
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let's hold a root-cause rave...give away molly and groove to the beats of flossistan you cool cats...free pacifiers at the door.



anyway, what a load of sh!t that OP. :lol:

Looks pretty good to me. Would you prefer to lose the war, just to make Obama look bad.

From Hell's heart, I stab at thee; For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at thee."
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Looks pretty good to me. Would you prefer to lose the war, just to make Obama look bad.

From Hell's heart, I stab at thee; For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at thee."

While the variously named terrorists hordes are indeed at war this is not the war that counts for anything other than terrorizing braindead western football fans while their bank accounts are emptied by the worlds finest terrorists. The whole idea is for the west to loose the war. Dead creditors can't collect. insert smiley How does someone make dung look bad?
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
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Red Deer AB
Did Jordan Train The ISIS Fighters Who Burned Their Pilot Alive?

We need to look much deeper here to see who may have had a hand, albeit indirectly, in the horrific death of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh. Jordan is far from innocent when examining who is responsible for the creation of ISIS.


It has been known, for almost two years now, that Jordan has been allowing its territory to be used for the training of rebels fighting the Assad regime in Syria. The “effort is led by the US”, but has also included French and British instructors. The British element was providing “logistical and other advice” to the rebels; with ‘other advice’ possible being tactical information.

Although allegedly “focused on senior Syrian army officers who defected”, we now know that at least some of these training operations focused on supposedly ‘moderate’ rebels doing the day-to-day fighting on the ground.

The problem here is that ‘moderate’ rebels no longer exist in Syria, with the extent to which they ever existed at all also being up for debate. The supposedly moderate Free Syrian Army (FSA) admitted “to cooperating with Islamist groups in military operations along the Syrian-Lebanese border“. Bassel Idriss, an FSA commander, stated that he was “collaborating with the Islamic State“. Further analysis has shown how the myth of ‘moderate’ rebels, apparently existing in Syria, is nothing more than a ploy by those with a vested interest in war.

Moreover, there are numerous reports available to substantiate mass-defections of ‘Syrian rebels’ over to ISIS, including reports in 2013, in 2014 and in 2015.


WHY DID ISIS BURN THE JORDANIAN PILOT? THE VIEW FROM SYRPER

Either I’m correct in my assessment that the U.S. and the Zionist Abomination created ISIS but lost control of it – or – and it’s a big “or” – ISIS was created by Turkey, given refuge and training on Turk soil, in order to appease the Saudi vermin who could not abide the presence of the independent, secular and nationalistic Dr. Bashar Al-Assad in Damascus. Erdoghan could expect to score big financially for his cooperation. The first option is the best when linked to Erdoghan’s role in the second. All evidence points to Abu Bakr Al-Baghdaadi as having been released by the Americans while they were in Iraq and his being transferred to a Mossad psyops warfare clinic outside Tel Aviv.
The gist of all this, if you’ve read my study on the origins of ISIS, is that the Jordanian was burned on order of the Turk handlers who were at the service of the Saudi degenerates who still insist on a NATO strike against the secular government of Syria. The failure to garner support for a military intervention through the purposefully staged mock beheadings (Johnny Jihad nonsense) and outlandish scenes of tossing homosexuals off buildings – or the mockery of Sex Jihad – convinced the Saudis that the pilot had to be burned in a scene so horrifying even hardened blokes, like your editor, would barely be able to look without wincing.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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let's hold a root-cause rave...give away molly and groove to the beats of flossistan you cool cats...free pacifiers at the door.



anyway, what a load of sh!t that OP. :lol:

Of course it would be to you.

It doesn't fit in with the Conservative fear script that is all they've got left since they lost the war on the economy.

Is it any surprise that their main enforcer has now jumped ship?

Maybe they'll replace him with Ford or Hudak lol