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Islamic State launches chemical weapons: How great is the threat?

Two groups have confirmed that the Islamic State launched a chemical weapons attack against Kurds in Iraq. But it's likely a sign of frustration, not strength.

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AP Photo
A militiaman allied with the Iraqi security forces dismantles a weapon from a destroyed vehicle belonging to the Islamic State group following a U.S.-led coalition airstrike against IS positions in southern Ramadi, Anbar province, Iraq, Monday, July 20, 2015. Two groups have since confirmed that the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, launched a chemical weapons attack against Kurds in Iraq.

Confirmation from two reputable organizations this week that the Islamic State used chemical weapons against Kurds in Iraq offers clues into the group鈥檚 capabilities and intentions.

Though the use of chemical weapons can create fear, the recent attack in some ways points to the Islamic State鈥檚 limitations.

The type of chemical weapon used, which contained chlorine, is not very potent. And while chlorine can cause a violent physical reaction, the effect of such weapons is mostly psychological. Indeed, the Islamic State might have used chemical weapons primarily to save their conventional ammunition.

So the message some analysts are taking from the attack is that the Islamic State is frustrated at having been repeatedly rebuffed by Kurds, and that frustration is bubbling over.

鈥淭hey are particularly irritated by the fact that they can鈥檛 consolidate the territory,鈥 says Nicholas Heras, research associate in the Middle East Security Program at the Center for a New American Security. 鈥淭hey have got the message that the Kurds won鈥檛 bend to their will, and they will fight for every inch.鈥

The two groups that confirmed the use of chemical weapons come from Britain, and one reported that its investigative team in Mosul, Iraq, found 鈥渄ark yellow liquid鈥 leaking from an Islamic State mortar, emitting a powerful odor. The team said it experienced symptoms related to the use of chlorine, said James Bevan, executive director of Conflict Armament Research.

Chlorine wasn鈥檛 designed to be a weapon of mass destruction, which 鈥渕akes the term [chemical weapon]聽a little bit misleading,鈥 says Jennifer Cafarella, Syria analyst and Evans Hanson fellow at the Institute for the Study of War.

It is an industrial chemical that can be bought commercially in Turkey and in Syria. It is certainly a form of chemical warfare, since the Islamic State is using it on the battlefield, and it can affect a number of victims, but 鈥渋t鈥檚 not necessarily lethal, and has lower casualty counts,鈥 Ms. Cafarella says.聽

鈥淚 would say it鈥檚 another asymmetric tactic that ISIS has in its arsenal,鈥 she adds, using another name for the Islamic State. 鈥淚t generates psychological effects in a way that鈥檚 incredibly cheap.鈥澛

In the list of Islamic State atrocities, it would rank comparatively low, says Mr. Heras of the Center for a New American Security.

鈥淔rom targeting civilians to selling women into slavery to boasting about recruiting children and formalizing a process by which they militarize children,... the limited and episodic use of homemade chemical weapons for tactical purpose鈥 鈥 while unfortunate 鈥 鈥渇alls lower on that scale,鈥 he says.

The Islamic State is packing these agents into mortars in an effort to force an end to its battle with the Kurds, Heras says.

This means that, for the time being, the Islamic State is using chlorine 鈥渢actically.鈥 It is cheaper to use chlorine than to expend the precious resource of arms and ammunition.聽

But if the Islamic State increases its use of the weapons 鈥 for example, using them against Sunni tribes that it first tried to cajole into declaring loyalty 鈥 the shift could indicate increasing desperation.

鈥淚SIS history is to try to mix force with conciliation,鈥 Heras says. 鈥淚f they use chemical weapons to target Sunni Arab villages, they have made the calculation that they would rather make an example out of those areas, and show, 鈥楾his is what happens if you don鈥檛 accept our good graces.鈥 鈥

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