From Counter Extremism Project <[email protected]>
Subject Resurgent ISIS Violence Underscores Revitalized Threat In Syria
Date September 9, 2020 9:45 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
In August, ISIS fighters carried out more than 35 attacks and killed at least
76 pro-Assad regime fighters across Syria in the Homs, Deir Ez Zor, Raqq


<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>
Resurgent ISIS Violence Underscores Revitalized Threat In Syria

(New York, N.Y.) – In August, ISIS fighters carried out
<[link removed]>
more than 35 attacks and killed at least 76 pro-Assad regime fighters across
Syria in the Homs, Deir Ez Zor, Raqqa, Hama, and Aleppo governorates. Since
losing its territory in Syria, ISIS has shifted its strategy in the country
from holding territory to an insurgency against the state. Nonetheless, the
increased volume of violence, sophistication of attacks, and total number of
pro-regime casualtiesdemonstrates
<[link removed]>
ISIS’s “robust logistical and strategic capability,” despite the defeat of its
self-proclaimed caliphate.

 

In his analysis, “ISIS Redux: The Central Syria Insurgency in August 2020,”
Counter Extremism Project (CEP) Research Analyst Gregory Waters details the
nature and scope of the ISIS attacks. According to Waters, in August, ISIS
fighters conducted at least one “high-quality attack
<[link removed]>
” in each Syrian province where they were present and staged multiple attacks
in one day for eight straight days. ISIS’s ability to commit recurrent and
far-reaching attacks has stoked fear that the insurgency group will once again
establish a Syrian stronghold for its operations.

 

Although the terror group once controlled large swaths of territory across
Iraq and Syria at the peak in the summer of 2014, ISIS lost control of that
land over the course of 2017. In June 2017, U.S.-backed forces began an
offensive to drive ISIS out of its self-declared capital in Raqqa, Syria. On
October 17, 2017, U.S.-backed forces announced the liberation of Raqqa. By
December 2018, ISIS retained only a small foothold in the Syrian town of Baghuz
along the Syrian-Iraqi border. In March 2019, the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic
Forces (SDF) launched an assault on ISIS forces in Baghuz.

 

The ISIS insurgency has since been carrying out small-scale attacks throughout
rural territory along the porous border of Iraq and Syria and the informal
border of Iraqi Kurdistan and the rest of Iraq. Notwithstanding its territorial
losses, security officials expect ISIS to remain a threat and lead an ongoing
insurgency in the region.

 

To read CEP’s ISIS resource, please click here
<[link removed]>.

 

To read CEP’s blog post, ISIS Redux: The Central Syria Insurgency in August
2020, please click here
<[link removed]>
.



###



Unsubscribe
<[link removed]>
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Counter Extremism Project
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Iterable