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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

IS: What happened to all the foreign fighters?

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An estimated 40,000 people travelled from around the world to take up arms for the IS group as it occupied territory in Syria and Iraq and declared a caliphate in 2014.


A few hundred are believed to still be fighting as IS struggles to survive, having lost most of its territory to campaigns by Western-backed Syrian and Iraqi coalition armies.


But what happened to the rest?


US experts believe many have survived, posing a formidable threat going ahead.


“The issue is: how many have died? How many are still there and willing to fight? How many have gone elsewhere to fight?” said Seth Jones, director of the International Security and Defense Policy Center at the Rand Corporation.


International counterterror groups are putting huge efforts into answering those questions, working hard to name, count and track IS foreign fighters.


In France, officials say, around 1,700 people went to Iraq and Syria since 2013 to join IS. Of those, 400 to 450 have been killed, and 250 returned to France.


Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said about 500 are still in the Iraq-Syria theatre.


That leaves another 500 whose whereabouts are unknown, many of them with the skills of war, wielding weapons and making bombs. Terrorism specialist Bruce Hoffman of Georgetown University estimated during a conference Wednesday that “thousands” have escaped the war zone.


“Today, some of them are most likely in the Balkans, lying low for the time being, waiting for the opportunity to infiltrate themselves to the rest of Europe,” he said.


Some have travelled to other extremist fronts, according to Thomas Sanderson, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Transnational Threats Project.


For example, he said, at least 80 IS fighters from Morocco, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Yemen have joined since May the IS-allied Abu Sayyaf insurgents battling government forces in the southern Philippines. Local people in the northern Afghanistan province of Jowzjan have said that French-speaking IS veterans — from France or northern African countries — have recently set up camp there. — AFP


Michel Moutot


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