ISIS winning in Iraq despite being greatly outnumbered by 15 to 1
Bare Naked Islam
The seizure
of Iraq’s second largest city by a group too ruthless to make it in core
al Qaeda represents the culmination of years of history and a U.S.
foreign policy that has failed to properly conceive of and counter the
Al Qaeda movement at its most basic level.
Breitbart Long War Journal recently produced an excellent GEOINT model of
ISIS’s gains across Iraq and Syria; though ISIS’s control of the towns
and cities in question is not universal or uniform, neither is the Iraqi
or Syrian government’s respective control of their own space. Including
recent gains, Al Qaeda now controls a space roughly the size of Syria.
From a
tactical standpoint, ISIS’s recent assault fits squarely within
traditional special operations doctrine; in fact, it is almost as if Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of ISIS, has read William McRaven’s master’s thesis.
ISIS forces moved swiftly to remove Iraqi army and national police
forces from Mosul and other cities under control, outpacing national
forces’ ability to react and respond accordingly, despite larger numbers
and better equipment.
According to
STRATFOR, a private intelligence and geopolitical analysis firm, Iraq’s
30,000-strong military presence in Mosul was caught by surprise, retreating against
a much weaker force and regrouping only near Samarra, 100 miles north
of Baghdad. For perspective, ISIS forced more than a full division of
the Iraqi army—once the fourth largest in the world—into a 200-mile
retreat, all the while suffering a reported numerical disadvantage of 15 Iraqi soldiers for every single ISIS jihadist.
The Iraqi
military relies on U.S. equipment and training and maintains a
relationship with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), but
it still turned tail as soon as ISIS made any show of gain. If you can’t
win with 15:1 odds, American equipment, years of U.S. training, and
guidance from Iran’s Qods force, you probably are not very long for this
world.
Irregular
warfare such as that we are seeing in Iraq is almost always a dual-sided
affair involving (1) a clandestine political entity that seeks to build
support and “out-govern” the enemy, and (2) a militant organization
designed to intimidate locals, seize space, then weaken and occupy the
enemy until a larger political goal can be enforced. For the Viet Cong,
this was practiced by what the U.S. government called the “Viet Cong
Infrastructure” which was covertly supported by Hanoi.
The same strategic principles apply in Islamist forms of insurgency; ISIS and the larger Al Qaeda apparatus are militant organizations that seek establish political control.
To this effect, ISIS’s assault has opened up the door for ISIS to put
down roots in new neighborhoods, broadening their foothold in a region
that is neglected if not ignored by Baghdad and at odds with the state
on sectarian terms.
History is
determined by the people who care enough to make it happen. ISIS, like
the rest of Al Qaeda, is not merely composed of well-armed young men but
also of seasoned strategists who have read Mao, McRaven, and Lenin, not
just the Qu’ran and Hadith.
Arab
nation-states, the basic building blocks of any kind of regional peace,
are dying; the Shi’a governments of Iraq and Syria are now more than
ever mere rumps of their former selves, barely able to project power
outside of their ethnic and sectarian fiefdoms. The only reason ISIS
didn’t expand into Irbil and the Kurdish region of Iraq is that
autonomous Kurds met them with greater force than did the Iraqi army.
Al Qaeda
hasn’t won the titles of Damascus and Baghdad, but it’s time to quit
pretending that they have to do so before being recognized as an actual
geopolitical threat that controls a huge swath of territory at the heart
of the Islamic world.
Ignore
every “expert” who tells you that ISIS is not al Qaeda because their
leaders don’t get along. ISIS, like al Qaeda, is involved in a global
press to restore a totalitarian conception of an Islamic Empire across
the Muslim world, and in the absence of a clear-headed strategy by their
enemies, they are winning.
Click on link for video...
http://www.barenakedislam.com/2014/06/13/isis-winning-in-iraq-despite-being-greatly-outnumbered-by-15-to-1/
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