CEP Research Analyst Gregory Waters On The ISIS Insurgency In Central Syria
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ISIS Redux: The Central Syria Insurgency In January 2021
CEP Research Analyst Gregory Waters On The ISIS Insurgency In Central Syria
Read ISIS Redux: The Central Syria Insurgency In January 2021 by clicking here
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ISIS Redux: The Central Syria Insurgency In January 2021
By Gregory Waters
Following is the January 2021 installment of “ISIS Redux: The Central Syria
Insurgency,” a monthly chronicle of attacks by the terrorist group ISIS in
central Syria. Previous editions of ISIS Redux can be viewed through the
following links:December
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,November
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,October
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,September
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,August
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,July
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,June
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,May
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, andApril
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full background and analysis of ISIS’s resurgence in Syria, including its
methodology, can be exploredhere
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andhere
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ISIS militants carried out at least 46 confirmed attacks in January, killing
at least 55 pro-Assad regime fighters, 26 civilians, and one local political
leader, while wounding at least 22 in the Homs, Deir Ez Zor, Raqqa, Hama, and
Aleppo governorates. January witnessed a significant increase in the number of
ISIS attacks, high quality* attacks, and confirmed deaths compared with
previous months. They were in fact the highest of all three metrics since the
start of the insurgency two years ago.
Fighting in Homs and Deir Ez Zor provinces increased sharply, with ISIS
carrying out 18 and 13 attacks, respectively. Attacks in east Hama (7) dropped
slightly compared to December, largely due to an apparent pause in attacks
there since January 18. Attacks in Raqqa (5) province were also down, though
attacks here were evenly spread throughout the month. Aleppo (3) continues to
be the least active region of the insurgency, although ISIS conducted two
attacks in theAndarin
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Rahjan for the first time in January, indicating a possible northward expansion
from the east Hama town.
Homs
The jump in reported attacks in Homs was largely due to a significant increase
in fighting around the city of Sukhnah. ISIS claimed to have conducted three
attacks near Sukhnah on both January 20 and January 26, marking the most
intense periods of fighting around the town since November.
In addition to this, ISIS cells carried out several significant attacks
against regime forces in the regions immediately surrounding Sukhnah. During
the first nine days of January, ISIS forces twice attacked regime patrols in
the al-Hayl gas field, south of Sukhnah, killing 10 Liwa al-Quds fighters. On
January 16, ISIS killed five Liwa al-Quds members near Taybeh, northeast of
Sukhnah, and two days later killed at least three more militiamen during
intense battles near Kawm, further to the north.
Meanwhile, ISIS kept up its sporadic attacks around Palmyra. On January 1, two
5th Corps vehicles disappeared while on patrol, with all occupants presumed
dead. On January 5, a regime soldier was found dead near the Shayrat Airbase,
75 miles west of Palmyra. The next day, ISIS cells clashed with regime forces
around the T4 Airbase, 35 miles west of Palmyra.
Map of ISIS attacks in Homs, January 2021.
Deir Ez Zor
Most of the attacks in Deir Ez Zor were in response to an ongoing regime
operation north of Shoula. Syrian Arab Army (SAA) and local Syrian and foreign
militias launched this operation following the December 30 ISISattack
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transports nearby that left 31 soldiers dead. For the entire month of January,
ISIS and pro-regime forces clashed north of Shoula and nearby Kababbj, marking
the most sustained fighting between them since the insurgency began. ISIS’s
response to the regime operation has involved both high and low quality
attacks. ISIS carried out at least one complex ambush that killed six Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)-backed foreign fighters. The regime also
sustained losses due to ISIS mines and harassment fire on its patrols.
Historically, ISIS cells have proven more fluid in the face of regime sweeps,
harassing patrols while temporarily moving out of the area. ISIS’s apparent
refusal to give up its positions on the northern side of the crucial
Palmyra-Deir Ez Zor highway mark an important evolution in the group’s
strategy. This change appears to indicate that ISIS is both more prepared for
head-on battles with regime forces now, and that the group is placing
increasing importance on the ability to impede regime movement along the M20
Highway. Indeed, on January 24, an ISIS cellattacked
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to three buses carrying Syrian Republican Guard fighters just five miles west
of Deir Ez Zor city and three and a half miles south of the SAA’s 137th Brigade
base.
Unlike the December 30 attack, when the militants used pre-placed Improvised
Explosive Devices (IED) or mines to attack the buses, this time ISIS moved in
on trucks in the middle of the day, firing on the buses with small and heavy
arms. The fact that this attack occurred so close to heavily fortified regime
areas and in the midst of a large-scale anti-ISIS campaign demonstrates the
apparent confidence cells have on their ability to move freely about the area.
Three days later, regime forces scored their first victories against ISIS in
the area, destroying an ISIS truck and killing three militants onJanuary 27
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two militants and uncovering a hideout onJanuary 28
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the operation and intermittent clashes continue along the Shoula-Kababbj
corridor.
Map of ISIS attacks in Deir Ez Zor, January 2021.
Hama-Aleppo-Raqqa
ISIS activity in Hama was carried out at the same intense pace for the first
half of January as it had been in December. On January 3, insurgents cut the
Salamiyah-Ithriya highway less than seven miles west of Ithriya, ambushing a
convoy of oil tankers, lorries, and an overnight bus. ISIS destroyed the nine
oil tankers and one of two lorries, killing seven civilians and two soldiers.
Loyalist media claimed the militants were attempting a mass kidnapping, but
were stopped by the arrival of security forces. Shortly after the first attack,
ISIS fighters hidden nearby attacked the first responders, forcing emergency
vehicles to retreat until additional security forces cleared the area.
These attackers likely came from north of the highway, where ISIS cells appear
to have embedded themselves. These cells have regularly attacked regime forces
around the town of Rahjan in past months, and did so again on January 8.
Farther north, regime forces were twice attacked when attempting to patrol in
the Andarin area of Aleppo, close to the Hama border. The regime has long been
absent from this area, and it is likely that northeast Hama cells have an
established presence here.
ISIS also continued attacking regime forces along the Ithriya-Raqqa highway,
targeting soldiers at the Zakia junction in Aleppo on January 22, and clashing
with pro-regime fighters in southwest Raqqa on January 25. Further east, ISIS
fighters launched a large attack on Resafa on January 1 and successfully
captured three soldiers somewhere in the province on January 11. The next day,
militants massacred 18 shepherds near Sabkhawi, the same hamlet tribal forces
had liberated on August 29, 2020. This massacre was followed by regime
airstrikes on multiple locations in southeast Raqqa.
Map of ISIS attacks in east Hama and south Aleppo, January 2021
On January 9, ISIS killed an IRGC 2nd Brigadier General in Deir Ez Zor. The
general had reportedly been touring Liwa Fatemayoun positions in the days prior
to his death, suggesting that he was either killed in the fighting near Shoula,
or somewhere near Bukamal. He was the 25th commander killed in the Badia
(Syrian desert) since January 2020, and his death marks the 14th month in a row
that ISIS militants have successfully killed a pro-regime officer.
Five days later, ISIS assassinated a local Sheikh in northeast Hama. According
to loyalists, the Sheikh has played a major role in arresting many local ISIS
sympathizers, making him a prime target for insurgents. It was the first
confirmed killing of a civil society leader in the Badia since the ISIS
insurgency began, and hints strongly at heavy local support for ISIS in the
volatile northeast Hama region. On January 17, ISIS killed its third regime
commander of the month, destroying the vehicle of a National Defense Forces
(NDF) field commander with a mine in southeast Hama.
For their part, the Syrian regime and its allies conducted three main
operations in January. The first, as previously described, was launched north
of Shoula and was ongoing through the end of the month. The second operation
was launched following the January 3 ISIS highway attack in east Hama, and was
said to span from Ithriyah to Resafa. The third operation was conducted from
Palmyra to the T2 Pumping Station, on the Homs-Deir Ez Zor border. This
operation ended on January 28, and, according to local loyalists, “cleared”
four hamlets north of the Palmyra-T2 road. There were no claims of this
operation encountering any ISIS fighters.
In addition to these operations, there was increased activity by Syrian and
Russian jets in central Syria. Airstrikes were conducted regularly throughout
the month, both in support of the operations and in response to ISIS attacks in
Raqqa and Homs. As always, there is no evidence of the impact of these strikes,
although the regime continues to largely hit pre-selected locations, leaving
little chance for the strikes to have any material impact on ISIS operations.
Since many of ISIS’s January’s attacks were a reaction to sustained regime
operations, February’s fate will likely be determined by what the regime
chooses to do. If regime operations around Shoula and Sukhnah end, attacks will
likely drop back to the late 2020 levels. ISIS activity is certain to return to
east Hama, with the cells there leveraging their local intelligence-gathering
to hit high value targets. Meanwhile, with both the Salamiyah-Raqqa and
Palmyra-Deir Ez Zor highways under constant ISIS pressure during the past two
months, the likelihood that militants again ambush civilian or military
vehicles in February remains high.
Map of locatable ISIS attacks (highlighted dots) in January 2021. To view an
interactive version of this map, please clickhere
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*High quality attacks are defined as attacks behind frontlines, those that
result in seized positions, target regime officers, involve coordinated attacks
on multiple positions, fake checkpoints, ambushes on military convoys, or
attacks on checkpoints that kill at least three soldiers or lead to POWs.
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