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Under cover of COVID, ISIS is seeking a comeback

The world鈥檚 focus on the coronavirus pandemic and neglect of the battle against extremism have created opportunities ISIS is poised to seize.

By Taylor Luck, Special Correspondent
AMMAN, Jordan

The Islamic State is eyeing a comeback on the battlefield and the world stage, testing a fragile global community that is combating the coronavirus and distracted from its fight against extremism.

ISIS is taking advantage of the pandemic鈥檚 burden on local governments and world powers鈥 inward focus to step up attacks and pitch to new recruits, the United Nations and experts warn, and reemerge from the hinterlands to strike in the Arab world and Africa.

The reawakening of ISIS exposes not only the fragility of the status quo, but the extremist group鈥檚 evolution as a movement. 听

Editor鈥檚 note: As a public service,听all our coronavirus coverage听is free.听No paywall.

Three years after the destruction of its so-called caliphate and the dismantling of its organizational leadership by an American-led coalition, ISIS has since March shown renewed strength, staging dozens of attacks in Iraq, Syria, Egypt, and West Africa.

鈥淔rom approximately March 2020, the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic became a factor in ISIL operational, propaganda, and fundraising activities,鈥 the U.N. Security Council was warned last week. 听

ISIS is 鈥渃onsolidating in Iraq and the Syrian Arab Republic,鈥 said a U.N. report to the Council, 鈥渁nd showing confidence in its ability to increasingly operate in a brazen manner in its core area.鈥

Alarming experts is ISIS鈥檚 ability to move freely between eastern Syria and western Iraq 鈥 territory that once fell under its 鈥渃aliphate鈥 鈥 entering towns and villages with relative ease. Its ranks boast around 10,000 fighters, according to U.N. and analysts鈥 estimates.

鈥淭he pandemic came at a time with preexisting conditions on the ground in Iraq and Syria that allowed ISIS to benefit,鈥 says Hassan Hassan, director of the Non-State Actors and Geopolitics program at the Washington-based Center for Global Policy.

鈥淣amely, the pandemic came amid already existing political and security issues in Iraq and Syria and a vacuum left behind by the Trump administration,鈥 he adds. 鈥淎dd to this the fact that with the pandemic, the last thing on people鈥檚 minds was ISIS.鈥

COVID as catalyst

Iraq has struggled with a surge in coronavirus cases. And across Syria, despite government statistics claiming the contrary, the virus is ravaging communities, according to citizens, the U.N., and health officials in neighboring states.

Syria and Lebanon are also witnessing economic collapse, and in much of the Arab world, populations are struggling under lockdown-imposed economic costs and rising joblessness.

With health sectors and economies crumbling, experts are highlighting what they call a 鈥渟ymmetry鈥 between the militant group and the vicious virus.

COVID-19 amplifies, they say, what ISIS attempts to achieve through its attacks and propaganda, exposing inequality, communities鈥 disenfranchisement, and the failures of the state.

鈥淚SIS focuses on exposing the same failures in a country that the coronavirus is now exposing: collapse of the nation-state, weak security, and deep economic, political, cultural, and sectarian crises,鈥 says Hassan Abu Haniya, an Amman-based Jordanian expert in Islamist and extremist movements.

鈥淎lthough the U.S.-led coalition focused on containing and dismantling ISIS, they never addressed the root grievances in Arab countries that allowed its rise in the first place,鈥 he says. 鈥淐oronavirus is now laying these bare once again and exacerbating them.鈥

Divisions in Iraq

In Iraq, political and security setbacks are lowering the resistance to ISIS.

Sectarian infighting among and between Shiite, Kurdish, and Sunni militias has created local power vacuums, allowing ISIS to fill back in, including north of Baghdad and in the disputed areas near Iraqi Kurdistan, experts and analysts say.

And the Iraqi government, under a new prime minister, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, is consumed with an uphill battle against powerful Shiite militias unwilling to lay down their arms or accept central government authority.

In Baghdad, protests against corruption and militias鈥 influence continue.

Meanwhile, joint operations against ISIS with U.S. forces have largely come to a standstill amid the tensions with Iran-backed militias following the January assassination of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad.

Not only did the U.S. strike disrupt America鈥檚 fragile common cause with Shiite militias against ISIS, but it triggered a wave of revenge attacks that prompted U.S. forces to retreat to non-frontline bases, crucially forcing a halt to U.S.-Iraqi and U.S.-Kurdish operations. The U.S. expertise in counter-insurgency operations is needed now to stem ISIS鈥檚 resurgence and is especially missed, analysts note.

鈥淭he fact that ISIS can operate almost freely in a massive and expansive space in Iraq and Syria without popular support says a lot about how Iraq cannot secure itself 鈥 without current American involvement,鈥 says Mr. Hassan at the Center for Global Policy.

Mr. Abu Haniya, the Jordanian expert, takes a longer view.

鈥淭he West and the world shouldn鈥檛 forget that ISIS has gone through this phase and metamorphosis before,鈥 he says.

鈥淚n 2009, after the U.S. surge and the Sunni 鈥楽ahwa鈥 awakening movements drove Al Qaeda in Iraq to the desert in the hinterlands, it reorganized, adapted and waited to stage a comeback as ISIS in 2014,鈥 he notes.

鈥淭his is history repeating itself.鈥

Africa push

ISIS has also used the pandemicas a diversion to expand further into West Africa and the Sahel, using a network of surrogate groups and affiliates to connect cross-border territories and overwhelm local forces in a way that experts say mirrors the rise of the caliphate in Iraq and Syria in 2014.

ISIS affiliate Boko Haram, under the umbrella Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), is expanding territory in Nigeria, Niger, and Chad; ISIS affiliate Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS) is extending in Niger and Mali.

March 23 saw twin attacks by ISIS affiliates killing a combined 160 soldiers on both sides of the Nigerian-Chad border.

This April saw the bloody arrival of ISIS鈥檚 鈥渃entral African province,鈥 with affiliates waging their first large-scale attack in Mozambique, massacring 50 villagers on April 7, and the same day killing seven civilians in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

With the global preoccupation with COVID-19, West and Sub-Saharan Africa has seen ISIS strategy evolve from 鈥渇illing the gaps鈥 where international presence was weak to creating connected territories and a public presence in communities and villages.

鈥淲est African states show much more potential because the conditions are ripe for a bigger presence,鈥 says Mr. Hassan, who chronicled ISIS鈥檚 rise in Syria.

鈥淚t almost looks like 2013 in Iraq and Syria. ISIS can move freely, control territory, and they can work with locals who do not have the knowledge of their brutality that Iraqis and Syrians have.鈥

Combined with its activities in the Arab world, ISIS鈥檚 Africa presence has given it a new hybrid model: an ever-shifting insurgency on the move in Syria and Iraq, and held territory in Africa where militias are able to extract resources, funds, and recruits.

鈥淭hese are opportunities for these terrorist organizations such as the Islamic State to step in and provide alternative services and gain legitimacy in some of these populations,鈥 says Nikita Malik, director of the Centre on Radicalisation and Terrorism at the Henry Jackson Society, a trans-Atlantic think tank based in London.

Battle for ideas

ISIS鈥檚 bold re-emergence is not only taking place on the battlefield.

In a world consumed with the coronavirus, with economies crumbling, lives halted, and people losing hope for the future, groups such as ISIS are making a pitch for followers, experts say.

鈥淵ou have people out of work, you have isolation, people staying at home and going on the internet and searching for a rationale why this has happened,鈥 says Ms. Malik, noting that 鈥渃onspiracy theories are increasing [that are] blaming groups and communities for the pandemic.鈥

鈥淚t is a toxic mix, and what we might be seeing in the long term are spikes in both extremism and terrorism,鈥 she says.

ISIS鈥檚 online propaganda has depicted the coronavirus as 鈥渄ivine retribution鈥 against the West and highlighted states鈥 failures.

鈥淲hat we are seeing is not COVID replacing terrorism concerns, but adding to terrorism concerns,鈥 Ms. Malik says.

Editor鈥檚 note: As a public service,听all our coronavirus coverage听is free.听No paywall.