Iraq finds itself in a precarious security situation today.
The insurgency has been able to rebuild itself in Anbar, while violence is
taking off in other provinces such as Babil and Salahaddin. That goes along
with the continued attacks in Baghdad and Ninewa. The Iraqi Security Forces
(ISF) has been hard pressed to stop this resurgence and appears to be losing
ground in some areas. To help explain the current scenario and provide a bit of
background to how Iraq arrived at this place is Alex Mello a student of
Classics and Oriental studies who has extensively studied the Iraqi insurgency
and security forces. He can be followed on Twitter @MemlikPasha.
Ansar al-Sunna fighters in Mosul. Their operations pale in comparison to to how many ISIS launches in Iraq (via Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi) |
1. Most of your research
has focused upon the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s (ISIS) operations.
By your estimations how much of the violence in Iraq are they responsible for
today compared to the other insurgent groups such as the Naqhshibandi, Ansar
al-Sunna, etc.?
Compared even to the 2006-2007 period, when the then Islamic
State of Iraq (ISIS) was making its bid for control of the insurgency, the
current insurgency is far more homogenous. ISIS is the only insurgent group that
operates extensively countrywide and has the capacity to carry out attacks in
the Shiite south. In total ISIS is probably responsible for some 75 to 95% of
all insurgent attacks. Ansar al-Sunna largely operates in Ninewa and Kirkuk,
but has also carried out operations in Diyala and Salahuddin provinces, and
recently expanded into Anbar. To give an example of the extent to which ISIS is
the dominant group in the insurgency, the regular monthly total of all Ansar
al-Sunna operations in Iraq is considerably less then the number of attacks
ISIS carries out in a month in any one of Iraq's provinces in which it is operationally
active. [Jaish Rijal al-Tariqa al-Naqshibandi] JRTN operates mainly in its
historic strongholds in Ninewa, Kirkuk and northern Salahuddin and Diyala
provinces, though it has capitalized on the Anbar uprising in January 2014 to
expand to other Sunni provinces through setting up Military Tribal Council
(MCTs) as local front groups. Other insurgent groups have reemerged with the
Anbar uprising, including Jaysh al-Mujahideen, which operates mainly in the
Fallujah area and the Baghdad belts but has recently expanded into Ninewa and
Kirkuk provinces, the Islamic Army in Iraq, which was once one of Iraq's
largest insurgent groups, and the 1920 Revolution Brigades. These newly
reactivated groups are still too operationally insignificant to be a major
factor in the insurgency.
2. Back in 2011 when the
United States withdrew its military from Iraq it appeared that the country was
only dealing with a bad terrorism problem, which could be managed. What was the
state of ISIS and the other insurgent groups at that time, and how were they
able to rebuild their networks and strength from that period to the present?
By the drawdown of USF-I [U.S. Forces-Iraq] forces in late 2011
ISIS had collapsed into a network of isolated cells and local units with a
minimal centralized hierarchical command structure. ISIS had the capacity to
maintain a low-level insurgency and carry out VBIED [Vehicle Borne Improvised
Explosive Device] wave attacks and complex assaults, but not to control terrain
or exercise area denial against ISF and was no longer an existential threat to
the Iraqi government. Continuous, industrial-scale spec ops raids by Joint
Special Operations Command (JSOC) had massively degraded ISIS' attack
capabilities and depleted its middle and upper tier leadership and VBIED
network, killing 34 of the 43 top ISIS leaders. In April 2010 a joint JSOC/ISOF
operation in the Tharthar area of Salahuddin province killed ISIS leader Abu
Omar al-Baghdadi and its top military commander, Abu Ayyub al-Masri, and by
late 2011 it was estimated that ISIS' core strength had been reduced to around
1,500 fighters.
After the US withdrawal in 2011, the ISF largely stopped carrying
out proactive counterinsurgency operations. Without U.S. troops in an advise
and assist role, the ISF fell back on reactive, ineffective search and raid
operations, large-scale clearing operations and a reactive operational posture
of defense of fixed positions like checkpoints and combat outposts. The Iraqi
government also released large numbers of insurgents that had been held in
detention by U.S. forces, many of who rejoined ISIS, boosting its strength with
an infusion of experienced, veteran manpower. In early 2012 without the
pressure from JSOC's special forces raids, ISIS began reconstituting its
leadership structure, centralized command hierarchy and VBIED network,
escalating its operational tempo in June 2012 with the start of the insurgent summer
offensive. Already by late 2012 ISI had reportedly increased its core strength
to around 2,500 fighters.
ISIS attacked Abu Ghraib prison in July 2013 and early sign of its resurgence (AFP) |
In July 2012 ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announced the
launch of the "Breaking the Walls" campaign, a year long campaign of
prison breaks, VBIED attack waves and attacks on key Iraqi government targets
that culminated with the assault on Abu Ghraib and Taji prisons in July 2013.
By the time ISIS launched "Breaking the Walls" it had reconstituted
as an effective fighting force, regenerated its attack capabilities, and
reestablished a centralized command structure capable of coordinating
multi-province offensives and synchronized VBIED attack waves across Iraq. In
retrospect we can identify the period between December 2011 and launch of ISIS'
"Breaking the Walls" campaign in July 2012 as the critical period
when the changed ISF posture enabled ISIS to reconstitute and regenerate its
attack capabilities.
3. What were some early
signs that the militants were making a comeback in the country?
ISIS was at its nadir in 2010 and 2011. In April 2010 the top
ISI leadership had been decapitated in a joint US/ISF operation, much of its
middle and upper tier leadership cadre had been killed or captured and its
VBIED attack capabilities has been severely degraded. However, ISIS gradually
began to recover from its 2007-2009 defeat and near extinction, and to
operationally adapt and respond to its weakened state. From late 2011 on, ISIS
evolved into an operationally leaner and more effective force. Instead of wasting
manpower trying to assert control of territory and fight the ISF head on, ISIS
waged an effective campaign of targeted killings using silenced weapons and
covert operations disguised as ISF personnel, primarily against Awakening
leaders and ISF personnel. It also developed the use of Adhesive Explosive
Devices (AEDs) or 'sticky bombs' to more accurately target ISF and Iraqi
government personnel, and gradually reconstituted, rebuild and expanded its
VBIED construction capabilities. The large VBIED attack waves on Arba'een in
January 2012 and during the Arab League Summit in March 2012 demonstrated ISIS
had already begun to rebuild and expand its VBIED cell network and take
advantage of the new security environment without the presence of US forces. The
March 2012 raid in Haditha showed ISIS retained the capacity to carry out
sophisticated assault operations. By early to mid-2012 security in northern
Babil province had already begun to deteriorate after an effective ISIS
campaign against the Awakening elements in the province. Finally, the July 2012
announcement by ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi of the "Breaking the
Walls" campaign was a clear indication that ISIS had reconstituted,
regenerated its capabilities and was making a comeback, although this would
only become apparent in 2013, when the insurgency was fully reborn.
4. After the U.S.
pullout the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) went through its own transformation. It
stopped carrying out counterinsurgency operations and began to steadily lose
ground to the insurgency. Why did the security forces change for the worse
after 2011?
The ISF at the drawdown of USF-I in late 2011 were still more
dependent on the U.S. troop presence then was apparently realized at the time.
The U.S. had withdrawn its troops from the cities in 2009 and its forces had
shifted to an advise and assist role in 2010. The ISF were definitely capable
of carrying out large-scale independent operations and the Iraqi Special
Operations Forces (ISOF) were effective special ops and counterterrorism units.
However, counterinsurgency doctrine and the capabilities for effective
counterinsurgency had failed to penetrate into the ISF operational doctrine and
military culture. Without U.S. forces partnering in joint operations and in an
overwatch role, the ISF lacked the capacity to carry out the population-centric
counterinsurgency operations U.S. troops had used to clear insurgents from
Anbar and the Baghdad belts in 2007-2008. Instead, ISF reverted to the model of
counterinsurgency operations that has been standard among Middle Eastern
militaries for decades, similar to the sort of ineffective, brute-force
clearing operations the U.S. had been carrying out in the Sunni triangle
2003-2004. As we've seen, ISF can frequently clear an area of insurgents, but
often fail in the 'hold' and 'build' stages of counterinsurgency operations as
they withdraw to static defense of fixed positions and insurgents reinfiltrate
the area.
The U.S. withdrawal also left ISF without sufficient aerial
reconnaissance and surveillance capabilities to support ground operations and
carry out intelligence-drive spec ops raids. As a result, ISF frequently fail
to synchronize airstrikes and accurate fire support with ground operations and
lack the intelligence gathering, fusion and rapid-response capabilities that
enabled JSOC to massively degrade ISIS' leadership and VBIED network. ISF were
also left with limited aerial strike capabilities, except for a small force of
helicopter gunships and ground-attack aircraft. Lack of air cover has enabled
ISIS to operate with impunity in many areas and launch assaults on ISF combat
outposts and bases that would have rapidly drawn airstrikes or a quick-reaction
force during the time of the U.S. troop presence. Finally, the ISF logistics
systems began collapsing soon after the U.S. withdrawal, and Iraqi army units
fighting in Anbar are now reportedly suffering from low ammunition and high
rates of desertion.
5. The U.S. is
attempting to re-engage with Baghdad now that the insurgency has been reborn.
It has been shipping ammunition, small arms, and Hellfire missiles to Iraq, and
announced new arms deals are in the works. American forces have also stepped up
training for the Iraqi Special Forces in Jordan. Will this aid help or is it
the strategy and tactics of the ISF that are at the root of its problems?
U.S. re-engagement with Iraq is still on too small a scale to
make a significant difference against the insurgency. Since the Anbar uprising
in January, ISIS has captured massive quantities of ISF equipment including
hundreds of M16 rifles, RPGs, night-vision equipment and sophisticated
anti-tank missiles and dozens of U.S.-upgraded Humvees, 4x4 technicals with
mounted weapons, and even an M113 APC. It is not much of an exaggeration to say
that for every Hellfire missile the U.S. has sent, ISIS has captured or destroyed
an ISF Humvee or police truck. The arms deals that are in the works, including
for F-16s and Apache helicopters from the United States and Mil Mi-28NE Night
Hunter attack helicopters from Russia along with the reconnaissance drones and
surveillance balloons the U.S. has already supplied will help the ISF overcome
its lack of aerial reconnaissance and airstrike capability. Similarly, U.S.
training of ISOF in Jordan will help, especially since the ISF are forced to
deploy elite special operations units like the Golden Division in regular
combat in Ramadi to shore up regular units suffering from high attrition and
desertion rates. However, to make a significant difference against the
insurgency the U.S. would have to massively expand its training of ISF
personnel, and possibly redeploy personnel on the ground in Iraq to partner
with ISF in joint operations.
6. History appears to be
repeating itself in Iraq right now. After the 2003 invasion Anbar was the first
place where the insurgency really took off, and that is true with its rebirth
today. What is the current disposition of the opposing forces in the province,
and has the ISF made any headway there since January when fighting took off?
The insurgency's main strongholds and control zones in Anbar are
the rural corridor between Ramadi and Fallujah and the area stretching east of
Fallujah to Baghdad and south to northern Babil province. The provincial
capital of Ramadi has seen intense, continuous fighting since January. The
Iraqi government has deployed elite counterterrorism units like the 1st
Commando Division, the so-called 'Golden Division' in Ramadi and has repeatedly
claimed to have cleared the city of insurgents. However, the ISF have failed to
clear the insurgent support zones and sanctuaries in rural belts surrounding
the city, as a result of which insurgents reinfiltrate into areas cleared by the
special forces troops and push out the regular army and police units charged
with holding the area. Fighting has been especially intense in the south-eastern
area of the city bordering historic ISIS strongholds in the rural area to the
east. In al-Huz, Mua'almeen, Thuba't and Mala'ab districts ISIS continues to
control terrain and launch daily attacks on ISF.
Fallujah remains entirely outside government control, and the
zone south-east of the city including the critical Nuaimiyah dam is still
largely insurgent controlled and denied area for the ISF. ISIS has used the
Nuaimiyah dam to flood nearby agricultural areas and villages to make it
difficult for ISF vehicles to move and to force the ISF to withdraw from the
area. In early May the ISF launched a series of large-scale clearing operations
in the area stretching from Fallujah to Baghdad and have managed to again
partially secure a cordon around the perimeter of the city and launch probing
attacks into the Fallūjah urban area, possibly preparatory to a major assault.
These operations now appear to have bogged down, and intense fighting is still
ongoing around the outskirts of the city and in the surrounding rural belts.
7. ISIS appears to be
following the same plan that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi outlined in 2005, which is to
move from Anbar to the Baghdad belts to the capital itself. Where has ISIS been
able to establish itself in the areas surrounding Baghdad, how do those compare
to where it was before the Surge, and how closely is it following Zarqawi’s
strategy?
ISIS is largely following Zarqawi's classic strategy, with
certain adaptation for the slightly different security conditions and operating
environment. ISIS has been able establish itself most securely in the
north-western belts in the rural corridor between Fallujah and Baghdad. In
areas like Nuaimiyah, Zowba'a and Nahiyat al-Karmah ISIS has demonstrated
extensive control of terrain and effective area denial against ISF, even
establishing proto-governance institutions like sharia courts and holding mass
repentance ceremonies of Sahwa fighters. In April, ISIS paraded a huge convoy
through Abu Ghraib on the western Baghdad outskirts at the edge of the Baghdad
security perimeter, a mere twenty-five miles from the Green Zone, and five
miles from the former Coalition headquarters at Camp Victory in Baghdad
International Airport, something it was unable to do even during the height of
the insurgency in 2006-2007.
In the south-western quadrant, the growth of ISIS is developing
very similar to 2004-2005. ISIS controls or can deny to the ISF an extensive
belt of territory between the Euphrates and the outskirts of Baghdad. Since
early 2014 ISIS has been escalating operations in the area around Yusufiyah,
Latifiyah, and Iskandariyah, what Coalition forces called the 'triangle of
death', launching complex assaults on ISF bases and attacks on convoys. In Jurf
as-Sakhar in northern Babil, ISIS has also asserted control over a wide area,
as evidenced by the forced displacement of local residents and mass
'repentance' of local Awakening fighters.
In the northeastern quadrant, the area of operations for ISIS'
wilayat of northern Baghdad, ISIS appears to be attempting to replicate its
successes in Jurf as-Sakhar south of the capital, maintaining a constant stream
of VBIEDs, suicide bombers and complex attacks against ISF bases and convoys to
exercise area denial and assert control of terrain over this area in the area
between Taji, Khan al-Mashahidah and the historic ISIS stronghold of Tarmiyah.
In the Diyala river valley to the east, ISIS launched an offensive in the area
in late March which saw intense fighting in Buhriz on the outskirts of Baq'ubah
and in Khan Bani Saad, but so far the strong ISF and Shiite militia response
appears to have prevented ISIS from advancing down the Diyala river to Baghdad.
In contrast to the 2004-2006 period of the insurgency, the
south-eastern quadrant around the Tigris river and the historic ISIS
strongholds of Salman Pak, Arab Jabour, Jisr Diyala and Hawr Rajab has been,
with the exception of sporadic attacks and the VBIED cells projecting attacks
into eastern Baghdad and Wasit province, relatively quite when compared to
2005-2006 when the low level of MNF-I and ISF presence in the southeast let the
insurgency assert greater control over this area then any other sector.
8. Besides Anbar
northern Babil has become a battleground between ISIS and the ISF. The
government has announced one security operation after another there in recent
weeks. How has the fighting there gone?
ISIS dismantling security installations set up by ISF in Jurf al-Sakhr May 2014 (via Alexandre Massimo)
The security situation in northern Babil began to deteriorate
in early 2012, soon after the U.S. withdrawal. ISF began a series of security
sweeps in the area in the summer 2012, but ISF control over the area really
collapsed in the late summer and fall 2013. ISIS was able to assert control
over the Jurf as-Sakhar area of northern Babil and exercise effective area
denial and control of terrain against ISF. Since the beginning of 2014 ISF have
launched numerous clearing operations in Jurf as-Sakhar, all of which have
consistently failed, with high losses in personnel and vehicles. In response to
these failures, Maliki created a new Operations Command for Babil province in
March but, since then he's already twice sacked and replaced its commander as
follow up ISF operations have also failed. As of May 2014 ISIS has apparently
expanded its control zone south from Jurf as-Sakhar to areas in the outskirts
of Musayyib and north to ISIS controlled areas around Amiriyat al-Fallujah and
Yusufiyah. ISIS is now openly using earthmoving vehicles to dismantle captured
ISF combat outposts in broad daylight, an indication that it has achieved near
total operational freedom in this area.
9. Looking into the
future what do you think the security situation in the country will be like by
the end of the year?
The current security situation is similar to what it was ten
years ago in the summer 2004, with Fallujah under insurgent control, and the
insurgency metastasizing and escalating its tempo of operations. By late 2014
and early 2015, even if Fallujah is cleared, we can expect to see a situation
similar to what we saw almost exactly ten years ago. Violence will continue to
grow, and ISIS will begin to push in from the rural belts surrounding major
cities and attempt to assert control of urban terrain in provincial centers and
major towns. We will probably see this process begin to occur in many of the
same cities that it did in 2004-2005, like Baq'ubah in Diyala province, Samarra
and Tikrit in Salahuddin, and Tall Afar and Mosul in Ninewa. ISIS will also
escalate from projecting VBIED attacks into Baghdad to staging raids and actual
fighting in the Sunni districts of the capital, a development similar to what
we saw in 2005. Watching the current growth of the insurgency is like seeing
the 2003-2006 period being replayed on fast-forward. The difference is that now
the insurgency is much more homogenous and dominated by ISIS, and most insurgents
are combat -hardened veterans of years of fighting.
2 comments:
Please could you confirm whether Abu Risha has been killed or not today in Anbar? He has been close to Maliki lately but at the same time most of Anbar governorate dislike Maliki. His dead will benefit Maliki or the opposition?
Yes Sheikh Abu Risha's nephew was killed by a suicide bomber last night. Some are hoping that it will rally tribes in Anbar against ISIS, but they are so divided I doubt that will happen. Big picture I don't see it changing things much in Anbar.
Post a Comment