Friday, March 29, 2024 | Ramadan 18, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Lasting IS defeat not soon

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The threat from the IS group will likely endure for years to come, even if it loses all the territory it once held under its so-called “caliphate,” experts have warned.


In a report, 20 experts on the Middle East and extremism also described how organisations such as Al Qaeda and the group formerly known as the Al Nusra Front are adapting methods and continuing to expand.


A US-led coalition has since 2014 been striking IS targets in Iraq and Syria, pushing the extremist group out of vast areas and forcing it try to cling to two remaining power centres, Mosul in Iraq and Raqa in Syria.


Operations have already cost more than $10 billion and coalition aircraft have dropped more than 16,500 bombs.


Coordinated by the United States Institute of Peace (USIP), the report highlights how the relatively narrow military focus overlooks broader issues that enabled the rise of groups like IS.


“Eliminating an extremist group physically does not defang its ideology or change the underlying circumstances that allowed the group to gain traction in the first place,” the report states.


“Reconstruction, rehabilitation and particularly reconciliation are just as important as any military counterterrorism campaign in building societal resilience against the appeal of extremism. Failure to carry out these steps has been a recurrent problem.”


The report highlights regional youth unemployment, with the rate of jobless youths in Gaza and the West Bank now 43 per cent, 35 per cent in Iraq, and 42 per cent in Egypt.


As the coalition chips away at IS, the group retains appeal for would-be extremits, the report notes, saying IS will likely endure for “years to come as a pure insurgency using terrorist tactics.”


Meanwhile, another extremist group has grown rapidly in Syria.


Fateh Al Sham, the former Al Qaeda affiliate previously known as Al Nusra Front, now has about 10,000 fighters, with nearly a third of its ranks coming from Russia, Europe and elsewhere in the Middle East, the report states.


Additionally, Al Qaeda has persisted despite the 2011 death of its leader Osama bin Laden. Al Qaeda “has demonstrated an ability to evolve and adapt to shifting political trends,” the report states.


“In the future, Al Qaeda has the potential to be a greater threat than” IS, it says.


“The extremist agenda is likely to be heavily defined by where and how — and how much —the outside world intrudes. The larger the intervention, especially by the West, the greater the reaction,” it states.


—AFP


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