ISIS Has Army of 200,000, Claims Kurdish Leader
The
Islamic State (Isis) has recruited an army hundreds of thousands
strong, far larger than previous estimates by the CIA, according to a
senior Kurdish leader. He said the ability of Isis to attack on many
widely separated fronts in Iraq and Syria at the same time shows that
the number of militant fighters is at least 200,000, seven or eight
times bigger than foreign in intelligence estimates of up to 31,500 men.
Fuad Hussein, the chief of staff of the Kurdish President Massoud Barzani said in an exclusive interview with The Independent on Sunday
that "I am talking about hundreds of thousands of fighters because they
are able to mobilise Arab young men in the territory they have taken."
He
estimates that Isis rules a third of Iraq and a third of Syria with a
population of between 10 and 12 million living in an area of 250,000
square kilometres, the same size as Great Britain. This gives the
jihadis a large pool of potential recruits.
Proof that Isis has
created a large field army at great speed is that it has been launching
attacks against the Kurds in northern Iraq and the Iraqi army close to
Baghdad at the same time as it is fighting in Syria. "They are fighting
in Kobani," said Mr Hussein. "In Kurdistan last month they were
attacking in seven different places as well as in Ramadi [capital of
Anbar province west of Baghdad] and Jalawla [an Arab-Kurdish town close
to Iranian border]. It is impossible to talk of 20,000 men or so."
The
high figure for Isis's combat strength is important because it
underlines how difficult it will be eliminate Isis even with US air
strikes. In September, the CIA produced an estimate of Isis numbers
which calculated that the movement had between 20,000 and 31,500
fighters. The underestimate of the size of the force that Isis can
deploy may explain why the US and other foreign governments have been
repeatedly caught by surprise over the past five months as IS inflicted
successive defeats on the Iraqi army, Syrian army, Syrian rebels and
Kurdish peshmerga.
The US and its allies are beginning to take on
board the obstacles to fulfilling President Obama's pledge to degrade
and destroy Isis. General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, arrived in Baghdad on Friday
in a surprise visit. He said he wanted "to get a sense from our side
about how our contribution is going". Earlier in the week, he told
Congress that to defeat Isis an efficient army of 80,000 men would be
necessary. Few in Iraq believe that the regular army is up to the task,
despite winning a success last week by retaking the refinery town of
Baiji and lifting the siege of the refinery, the largest in Iraq.
In
a wide-ranging interview, Mr Hussein spelled out the new balance of
power in Iraq in the wake of the Islamic militants' summer offensive and
the military re-engagement of the US. The Kurdistan Regional Government
now faces Isis units along a 650-mile front line cutting across
northern Iraq between Iran and Syria. Mr Hussein said that the US air
intervention had enabled the Kurds to hold out when the unexpected Isis
assault in August defeated the peshmerga and came close to capturing the
Kurdish capital Irbil: "They were fighting with a strategy of fear that
affected the morale of everybody, including the peshmerga."
As
well as terrifying its opponents by publicising its own atrocities, Isis
had developed an effective cocktail of tactics that includes suicide
bombers, mines, snipers and use of US equipment captured from the Iraqi
army such as Humvees, artillery and tanks. To combat them, Mr Hussein
says the Kurds need Apache helicopters and heavy weapons such as tanks
and artillery.
The Kurdish leaders are now much more relaxed about
Isis because they have a US guarantee of their security. The grim
experience of the US in seeing the collapse of the government and army
in Baghdad, which the Americans had fostered at vast expense, also works
in favour of the Kurds.
Mr Hussein does not like to talk about it
today, but the Kurdistan Regional Government got a nasty surprise in
August when it asked the Turkish government for help in stopping Isis
only to be told Ankara planned no immediate assistance. It was only then
that the Kurds turned to Iran and the US, both of which immediately
acted to prevent a complete victory by the Islamic militants. Iran sent
some officers, military units and artillery while the US started air
strikes on 8 August.
Mr
Hussein speculates that the CIA and US intelligence agencies may only
have been speaking about "core" fighters in claiming that the jihadis
had at most 31,500 men under arms. But the fighting over the past five
months has shown that Isis has become a formidable military force. "We
are talking about a state that has a military and ideological basis,"
said Mr Hussein, "so that means they want everyone to learn how to use a
rifle, but they also want everybody to have training in their ideology,
in other words brainwashing."
A sign of the military
professionalism of Isis is the speed with which they learned to use
captured US tanks, artillery and other heavy equipment captured after
the fall of Mosul on 10 June.
The same thing happened in Syria where Isis captured Russian-made arms
which it rapidly started using. The most likely explanation for this is
that IS's ranks contain many former Iraqi and Syrian soldiers whose
skills Isis has identified. Mr Hussein says that the peshmerga has been
impressed during the fighting by Isis's training and discipline.
"They
will fight until death, and are dangerous because they are so
well-trained," said Mr Hussein. "For instance, they have the best
snipers, but to be a good sniper you need not only training on how to
shoot, but discipline in staying put for up to five hours so you can hit
your target."
There is supporting evidence for Mr Hussein's high
estimate for Isis numbers. A study by the National Security Adviser's
office in Baghdad before the Isis offensive showed that, when 100
jihadis entered a district, they would soon recruit between five and 10
times their original number. There are reports of many young men
volunteering to fight for Isis when they were in the full flood of
success in the summer. This enthusiasm may have ebbed since the US
started air strikes and the Isis run of victories ended with their
failure to capture Kobani in northern Syria despite a long siege.
In
an impoverished region with few jobs, Isis pay of $400 (£250) a month
is also attractive. Moreover, Mr Hussein says that in the places they
have conquered Isis is remodelling society in its own image, aiming to
educate people into accepting Isis ideology.
The Kurds have
recovered their military self-confidence in the knowledge that they are
backed by the US and Iran. The peshmerga have taken back some towns lost
in August, notably Zumar close to the Syrian border, but not Tal Afar
and Sinjar where 8,500 Yazidis are still besieged on their mountain top.
But there are limits to how far the Kurds are willing to advance even
if they succeed in doing so. Mr Hussein says that the Kurds can help an
Iraqi army, supposing a non-sectarian one is created, but "the Kurds
cannot liberate the Sunni Arab areas".
This is the great problem
facing a counter offensive against Isis by Baghdad or the Kurds: it will
be seen by the five or six million Sunni Arabs in Iraq as directed
against their whole community. Hitherto, the US has been hoping to
repeat its success between 2006 and 2008 in turning many Sunni against
al-Qaeda in Iraq. Mr Hussein ticks off the reasons why repeating this
will be very difficult: the Americans then had 150,000 soldiers in Iraq
to back up anti-al-Qaeda tribal leaders. Isis will savagely punish
anybody who opposes it. "We have seen what happened in Anbar to the Albu
Nimr tribe [that rose up against Isis]. They stood bravely against the
terrorist but 500 were killed. It was a disaster."
Overall, Mr
Hussein says he does not see any convincing sign of resistance from the
Sunni Arabs. Many of them may be unhappy, particularly in Mosul, but
this is not translating into effective opposition. Nor is it clear what
outside force could organise resistance. The Iraqi army might be
acceptable in Sunni areas but only if it is reconstituted so that is not
dominated by the Shia.
At the moment, the Kurds see little sign
of its presence. They have been asking for regular troops to defend the
Mosul Dam on the Euphrates so they can use up to 3,000 peshmerga
stationed there, but no Iraqi troops have turned up. "Those who are now
defending Baghdad are the army of the [Shia] parties. To re-establish a
professional army needs time."
Mr Hussein did not say so, but it
may be too late to establish a competent cross-confessional regular army
in Iraq. The counter-offensive by Baghdad is led by the three main Shia
militias which have almost the same ideological fervour and sectarian
hatred as Isis. Any advance on the battlefield leads to the population
deemed loyal to the losing side taking flight so the whole of northern
Iraq has become a land of refugees.
Sunday, November 16, 2014
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