MEOPOTAMIA NEWS : THE THEORETICAL ORIGIN OF THE POSTMODERNISTS : HEIDEGGER, THE NAZI-COLLABORATOR HENDRIK DE MAN + THE AYATOLLAHS

Michel Foucault & Iran’s Ayatollahs

By Dr. Reza Parchizadeh May 28, 2020 – BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 1,586, May 28, 2020 / ISRAEL

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The Islamic Revolution in Iran, which brought Islamists to power for the first time in modern history, pitted the global left—perhaps best personified by Michel Foucault—against the global right. To this day, the global left’s advocacy for Islamism continues to guide the West’s general approach toward the Middle East.

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MESOPOTAMIA NEWS LATEST : Putin appoints third special envoy to Syria

Putin’s decision to appoint a new special envoy for developing relations with Syria likely has several aims, including to balance military and diplomatic involvement in Russia’s Syria policy.

Anton Mardasov –  AL MONITOR – Russia in Syria – May 28, 2020 – Russian President Vladimir Putin appointed Moscow’s ambassador in Damascus, Alexander Efimov, as his special envoy for developing relations with Syria on May 25. It is a newly created post and an addition to the two already existing envoys working with Damascus, the Kremlin’s special envoy for Syria Alexander Lavrentiev and its special presidential envoy on the Middle East, Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov.

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MESOPOTAMIA NEWS ANALYSIS : THE FUTURE OF IRAQ’S POPULAR MOBILIZATION FORCES

Featuring Michael Knights, Hamdi Malik, and Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi

Policy Forum Report – May 28, 2020

Three experts examine one of the most sensitive problems facing Iraq’s new prime minister: the future of militias that were mobilized to fight the Islamic State but have since balked at subsuming themselves to the government’s authority.

On May 20, The Washington Institute held a virtual Policy Forum with Michael Knights, Hamdi Malik, and Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, coauthors of the recent study Honored, Not Contained: The Future of Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces. Knights is a senior fellow with the Institute’s Military and Security Studies Program. Malik is a London-based Middle East analyst at IITV. Tamimi is an independent analyst and a doctoral candidate at Swansea University. The following is a rapporteur’s summary of their remarks.

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How the United States Can Bolster Economies In a Post-Coronavirus Middle East

MESOPOTAMIA NEWS : The Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis

By Sarah Elzeini is a US-Foreign and Defense Policy consultant based in Washington, DC.  -Also available in العربية May 22, 2020 FIKRA FORUM

The Middle East, engulfed in numerous domestic and regional crises, has seen these challenges deepen with the appearance of the novel coronavirus and a sharp drop in oil prices. As the virus has placed additional pressures on the region’s governments, the severity of these countries’ positions—especially from an economic perspective, are likely to intensify. Foreign policy strategists should expect that Middle Eastern governments will face even greater constraints in safeguarding peoples’ livelihoods and their countries’ economies after the threat of coronavirus subsides. Therefore, the United States must begin to forge a path towards a more collaborative foreign policy that seeks input from allies abroad without neglecting the values that are important to the people on the ground.

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MESOPOTAMIA NEWS: JULIAN REICHELTS  NEIGUNGS-CLIQUE  HENDRICK STREECK & MICHAEL MRONZ UND DIE REVANCHE AM EHRENWERTEN DROSTEN

„Bild“ & Kekulé gegen Drosten : Nachtreten bis zum Umfallen

  • Von Michael Hanfeld –  28.05.2020-15:11  -Zielscheibe der „Bild“-Zeitung: der Virologe Christian Drosten.

Die „Bild“-Zeitung macht mit dem perfiden Kesseltreiben gegen den Virologen Christian Drosten weiter. Ein paar Helfershelfer springen auf den Zug auf. Und dieser rast mit Vollgas, so wie das Boulevardblatt es sich wünscht.

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MESOPOTMIA NEWS SYRIA / EUPHRAT REGION : Meeting results in expansion of Syrian regime control over rural Daraa – A demonstration in the square of Al-Omari Mosque in Daraa city (Horan Free League)

اجتماع يفضي إلى توسيع سيطرة قوات النظام في ريف درعا

Syrian regime officers met with figures from Daraa’s “Central Committee” to speak about conditions in rural western Daraa after recent events there.

An Enab Baladi correspondent in Daraa reported that the meeting took place on Monday, and included Ghiath Dalla, commander of the “al-Ghaith Forces” within the Fourth Division, as well as the committee’s security head Hussam Louqa and the head of the military security branch, Louay al-Ali.

The meeting ended with an agreement to reinforce the regime-run Fourth Division’s roadblocks in rural western Daraa, as well as the roadblock in Masaken Jilleen, which was under the control of military security before it was attacked in March.

The regime officers carried out a patrol encompassing the Fourth Division’s points up to the Zeizoun and al-Saaqah military camps.

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MESOPOTAMIA NEWS : Erdogan dashes hopes of Turkey-Israel reconciliation

 

The resumption of El Al cargo flights to Turkey does not  / HAKAN FIDAN

Amberin Zaman –  28 May 2020  – There has been a surge of optimism lately about a possible thaw in relations between Turkey and Israel. Signs of a possible breakthrough came when Israel’s national carrier, El Al, resumed its cargo flights to Turkey, with the first plane landing in Istanbul on May 24 after a decade-long pause. The flights had stopped after Israeli commandos killed nine Turkish activists on board the Mavi Marmara flotilla carrying aid to Gaza in May 2010, sending relations between the former allies into a tailspin.

Yet even as El Al was loading medical supplies to combat COVID-19 for onward delivery to US doctors, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was blasting Israel’s plans to annex nearly half of the West Bank in an Eid al-Fitr address to American Muslims the same day.

Noting that “a new occupation and annexation project, which disregards Palestine’s sovereignty and international law,” had been set in motion by Israel, Erdogan vowed to “not allow the Palestinian lands to be offered to anyone else.”

Moreover, Jerusalem is a “red line for all Muslims, worldwide,” he said, making it clear that Ankara’s overall stance toward the Jewish state remained unchanged.

Few will have likely been more dismayed than Israel’s charge d’affaires in Ankara, Roey Gilad. In a May 21 essay for the Turkish online publication Halimiz, Gilad had called for mutually reinstating ambassadors. There has been no ambassador in either capital since May 2018, when Turkey asked Israel’s ambassador, Eitan Na’eh, to “go on leave” because of carnage in Gaza and Washington’s decision to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Gilad said the sides did not have to “agree on everything” and do have mutal concerns. Most critically, Turkey is at odds in Syria with Israel’s biggest bugbear, Iran, and its Hezbollah proxies. So why not just push differences aside to focus on common interests and enemies, Gilad suggested.

The reality remains that neither side has any compelling reason to do so, particularly since the hawkish Benjamin Netanyahu remains at Israel’s helm.

As matters currently stand, Erdogan doesn’t believe that relations can normalize so long as Netanyahu is in charge and Netanyahu thinks the same of Erdogan. “It’s business as usual,” said a well-informed Israeli source speaking not for attribution. “Unlike [the period between] 1949 and 2010, Israel is not running after Turkey. Its interests are diversified and all the more so because Erdogan’s Turkey hardly followed those interests. Relations with Israel were thrown under the bus,” the source said. The source was alluding to the halcyon days of Turco-Israeli friendship in the 1990s when Turkey’s anti-Islamist generals had the final say and Israeli jets trained in Turkish skies.

Under Erdogan, Turkey hosts top-level Hamas operatives on its soil and continues to engage in “blatant” anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic rhetoric. Under Netanyahu, Israel has all but abandoned a two-state solution to the Palestinian problem.

“Is there a political will in Israel to gamble [on better relations with Turkey ] again? What for? What will Israel and Turkey get that they already don’t have?” the source asked.

The idea that Erdogan would jettison his status as the champion of the Palestinian cause — a valued domestic propaganda tool — just as Israel mulls further annexation of Palestinian territory was fanciful to start with. The only obvious downside for Ankara not having an ambassador in Israel is that “this will require it to come up with a more creative or harsher than needed reaction to the annexation as it doesn’t have the more soft diplomatic option of withdrawing its ambassador,” wrote Gallia Lindenstrauss, a senior research fellow at the Israeli Institute for National Security Studies, in emailed comments to Al-Monitor.

Meanwhile, business between the two countries, mainly in Turkey’s favor, keeps growing anyway. The resumption of the El Al cargo service is a reflection of that trend. And despite friction over Hamas, intelligence cooperation between the sides is continuing, Israeli sources confirm.

Turkish spy chief Hakan Fidan and his Israeli counterpart Yossi Cohen have met at least twice within the last 10 months, most recently in January, according to two well-placed sources speaking on condition of strict anonymity. If true, that would not be unusual. Even Gulf nations that have no diplomatic ties with the Jewish state share intelligence with it against common foes.

One of the sources said the January meeting took place in Washington and an earlier meeting in Berlin. The same source said Syria, Libya and the eastern Mediterranean were the focus of the talks.

Turkey’s troubles in the eastern Mediterranean — where it is locking horns with Greece, Cyprus and Egypt over drilling rights — inspired some of the talk about detente with Israel. Israel’s absence from a statement signed two weeks ago by Greece, Cyprus and Egypt that condemned Turkey for its “illegal activities” of gas drilling and “expansionism” in the eastern Mediterranean was seen as a sign that relations are on the mend (Israel has signed a gas pipeline agreement with Greece and Cyprus). This in turn prompted claims that Turkey and Israel were in secret talks for a maritime delimitation deal. These were promptly debunked by the Israeli Embassy in Ankara.

Either way, “The decline in energy prices makes the future development and export of the natural gas from the area highly questionable,” said Lindenstrauss. “If this has not already changed the calculus of all the actors, then it will in the near future,” she said. The dramatic fall in global energy prices make it less likely that Turkey and Israel will revive negotiations for a gas pipeline to export Israeli gas to Europe.

As for Libya, “Israel already has enough problems — being sucked into other conflicts the actors have with Turkey is not that attractive,” Lindenstrauss added.

In Syria, however, Turkey and Israel’s interests align somewhat more. Israel has, since Iranian intervention in the Syrian conflict, been striking Iranian military assets across the country. Gilad said the confluence of interests was evident when Turkey struck Iran-backed forces in Idlib after losing around 50 of its own men in a Syrian regime attack. “The fact that Turkey is clashing with Iranian and Hezbollah-backed groups in and around Idlib and that it has influence over Hamas makes it a useful partner for Israel. Therefore, the idea that Israel may be seeking a new opening with Turkey as the Shia axis grows stronger cannot be entirely dismissed,” said Ceng Sagnic, a Washington-based analyst.

Hamidreza Azizi, a visiting fellow at the Berlin-based SWP think tank, agrees that tensions between Ankara and Tehran in Syria are rising but that the potential for Turkish-Israeli cooperation there is exaggerated.

“It was clear since the beginning that Turkey’s desire to establish a zone of influence northern parts of Syria is in contradiction with Iran’s desire to bring all of Syrian territory under [Syrian President Bashar al-] Assad’s control. It was this exact contradiction that resulted in a direct faceoff between Turkey and Iran-backed groups in Idlib,” Azizi told Al-Monitor in emailed comments.

Azizi continued, “However, I don’t think this is something that could help Israel and the United States achieve their goal of rooting out Iran’s influence in Syria. Iran has already established its positions in the south, and especially in the southeast in Deir ez-Zor and Turkey appears to have neither the potential nor the willingness to go that far against Iranian-backed groups.”

More from  Amberin Zaman
Read more: https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2020/05/turkey-israel-relations-erdogan-netanyahu-syria-annexation.html#ixzz6Nl7ZNL7P

Iraqi Kurdistan does not owe $27 billion in debt: parliament speaker

27 May 2020 – MESOP NEWS – HEWLÊR-Erbil, Iraq’s Kurdistan region,— In order to make a political point about the way in which debt was accumulated over the past several years, the Speaker of Iraqi Kurdistan Parliament said on Monday that the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) could officially not owe $27 billion in debt because it would not have been lawfully authorized to do so.

During a speech on Friday, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Prime Minister Masrour Barzani said that the government holds $27 billion in debt to highlight its precarious financial position, a figure which shocked many observers and posed questions about how the figure had grown so large.

Speaker Rewaz Fayaq said in a post on her Facebook page that the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) could not be carrying any debt because no money has been officially allocated to the servicing of debts since the General Budget Law of 2013.

The KRG has failed to pass a budget since 2014, which has led to accusations that the government has been less than transparent about its finances.

She said that the government, however, does owe significant debts to its public sector workers as a result of the salary withholding scheme, and to contractors.

Fayaq also cited the KRG’s Law No. 7 of 2015, which she said prohibited the government from borrowing more than $5 billion per loan. She added that if the government had in fact done so then those who authorized the loans should be prosecuted.

Iraqi Kurdistan prime minister Masrour Barzani

Iraqi Kurdistan prime minister Masrour Barzani, Erbil, December 7, 2019. Photo: KRG video.

Later on Tuesday, Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Prime Minister Masrour Barzani’s office responded by saying that Barzani has already explained the Region’s debts on several occasions.

“The Prime Minister promised the citizens of the Kurdistan Region clarity,” the statement said, adding that Barzani has requested that the Council of Ministers prepare a detailed report about the Region’s debt to be sent to the Kurdistan Parliament and released publicly.

He also took the opportunity to blame the debt on budget disputes with Baghdad.

In a separate statement to a Kurdistan Democratic Party-affiliated media outlet, the prime minister’s advisor for financial affairs Rebaz Hamlan said that the $27 billion figure was in part made up by the $10 billion that the KRG owes public sector employees from the salary withholding system it put in place during the 2014 financial crisis.

He said that the remainder includes money owed to Turkey, oil and electricity companies, and a loan from an Iraqi bank.

Copyright © 2020, respective author or news agency, nrttv.com

 

MESOPOTAMIA NEWS EXCLUSIV : Deir Ezzor 24 network conducts an exclusive interview with the International Coalition’s spokesman

Deir Ezzor 24 network conducted an exclusive interview with the international Coalition’s spokesman “Colonel Myles Caggins”. The interview covered most of the questions that many people are interested to know answers to. Colonel Caggins answered most of the questions we asked:

1- Recently, there have been intensive security operations against Daesh, especially the airborne operations. Do you think that these operations are sufficient to eliminate Daesh cells?

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MESOPOTAMIA NEWS INTEL BY MEIR AMIT INTELLIGENCE & TERRORISM INFORMATION CENTER / ISRAEL – Spotlight on Global Jihad (May 21-26, 2020)

Overview

  • The synchronized wave of attacks known as the Raids of Attrition, which began on May 14, ended on May 24, 2020. Over a period of 10 days, more than 100 attacks were carried out, the vast majority in Iraq (about 40) and Syria (about 30). After them, by a wide margin, are Nigeria (8 attacks) and other provinces in Africa and Asia (a few attacks in each province).
  • A comparison of the current wave of attacks and the four waves of attacks carried out in 2019, leads to the following conclusions:
    • Duration: The current wave of attacks lasted longer than its predecessors, although not significantly (8 days in December 2019; 8 days in August; 4 days in May-June and 4 days in April).
    • Location of the attacks: In all of the waves of attacks, most of the attacks were carried out in Iraq and Syria. A small number of attacks were carried out in ISIS’s provinces in Africa and Asia, mainly in West Africa.
    • Nature of the attacks: Most of the attacks were unsophisticated; no unusually complex or deadly showcase attacks were carried out. No attacks were carried out in the West.
  • Hence, an analysis of the current wave of attacks indicates an improvement in ISIS’s operational capability, mainly in the Iraqi arena and to some extent in the Syrian arena as well, in contrast with ISIS’s other provinces around the world. In the current wave of attacks, ISIS has again demonstrated the ability to focus its efforts on a defined and scheduled mission and to time its attacks and media activity in its various provinces. The image of power that ISIS is attempting to convey is only partially borne out on the ground and, in the ITIC’s assessment, has failed to rehabilitate its image after the severe blows that it suffered with the fall of its territorial strongholds in Iraq and Syria, and the killing of its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
  • A noteworthy attack carried out by ISIS during the past week was an attack against an Egyptian border patrol force east of Sheikh Zuweid. Four members of the force were killed. Photos published by ISIS show some of the operatives who participated in the attack wearing Egyptian army uniforms. In the ITIC’s assessment, this was in order to mislead the Egyptian forces at the scene. In another operation carried out in the area of Sheikh Zuweid, eight ISIS operatives killed four so-called Egyptian spies. According to ISIS, the eight operatives also wore Egyptian army uniforms.
The Idlib region
Overview

The ceasefire in the Idlib region was maintained this week. It was violated by local clashes between the Syrian army and the rebel forces around the town of Kafrnubl (about 30 km south of Idlib). The joint patrols of the Syrian and Turkish armies continued uninterrupted. A protest prayer was held by local residents on the M-4 highway near Idlib, without any unusual events. In the ITIC’s assessment, it took place on the initiative of the Headquarters for the Liberation of Al-Sham.

Joint patrols of the Russian and Turkish armies continue
  • The joint patrols of the Russian and Turkish armies continued this week. On May 20, 2020, Turkey and Russia carried out their 12th joint patrol on the M-4 highway (Aleppo-Latakia). For the first time, the patrol went beyond the town of Ariha (about 10 km south of Idlib) and reached a village about 17 km southwest of Idlib (Enab Baladi; Anatolia, May 20, 2020).
  • On May 22, 2020, civilian activists called on residents of the Idlib region to take part in the Eid al-Fitr prayer and listen to a sermon on the M-4 highway, near the bridge of the town of Ariha. The prayer and sermon were intended to express the residents’ objection to the joint patrols. In the ITIC’s assessment, the call to attend the prayer and sermon came from the Headquarters for the Liberation of Al-Sham, which is trying to instigate the local population to disrupt the joint patrols. In practice, on May 24, 2020, a holiday prayer was led by Abd al-Razzaq al-Mahdi, an operative affiliated with the Headquarters for the Liberation of Al-Sham (Enab Baladi, May 24, 2020). The protest prayer and sermon took place without any unusual events.

Eid al-Fitr prayer on the M-4 highway, led by Abd al-Razzaq al-Mahdi (right), who is affiliated with the Headquarters for the Liberation of Al-Sham (Enab Baladi, May 24, 2020)
Eid al-Fitr prayer on the M-4 highway, led by Abd al-Razzaq al-Mahdi (right), who is affiliated with the Headquarters for the Liberation of Al-Sham (Enab Baladi, May 24, 2020)

Turkish army reinforcements arriving at the Idlib region
  • On May 23, 2020, a Turkish army convoy comprising 30 military vehicles entered Syrian territory. The convoy was escorted by operatives of the Faylaq al-Sham rebel organization[1]. It reached the rural area southeast of Idlib (Khotwa, May 23, 2020).
Turkish army armored vehicles en route to the Idlib region (Khotwa, May 23, 2020)      Turkish army armored vehicles en route to the Idlib region (Khotwa, May 23, 2020)
Turkish army armored vehicles en route to the Idlib region
(Khotwa, May 23, 2020)

Prisoner exchange between an organization affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Syrian army

  • On May 22, 2020, a prisoner exchange deal was carried out between the Syrian army and the “Awaken the Believers” operations room (an Al-Qaeda-affiliated umbrella network of jihadi organizations led by the Guardians of Religion Organization). The Syrian army released two women and three boys. One of the women is the wife of a commander in the Headquarters for the Liberation of Al-Sham. In return, the jihadi operatives released three members of a militia supporting the Syrian army, who were captured during the clashes in the Turkmen Mountain (southwest of Idlib) (Twitter account affiliated with the “Awaken the Believers” operations room; Khotwa, May 22, 2020).
 Three members of a militia supporting the Syrian army, a short while before being released (Twitter account affiliated with the “Awaken the Believers” operations room, May 23, 2020)   Operatives of the “Awaken the Believers” operations room and a member of the Syrian Red Crescent welcoming two women and one of the three boys who were released.
Right: Operatives of the “Awaken the Believers” operations room and a member of the Syrian Red Crescent welcoming two women and one of the three boys who were released. Left: Three members of a militia supporting the Syrian army, a short while before being released (Twitter account affiliated with the “Awaken the Believers” operations room, May 23, 2020)
  • This is the third prisoner exchange deal carried out recently between the rebel organizations and the Syrian army. The first deal was carried out with the Headquarters for the Liberation of Al-Sham[2], the second with the National Liberation Front (a Turkish-backed umbrella network), and the third with the Guardians of the Religion Organization (an Al-Qaeda-affiliated organization operating as part of the “Awaken the Believers” operations room) (Enab Baladi, May 24, 2020).
Northeastern Syria

ISIS’s intensive activity in the Euphrates Valley continued this week, mainly in the form of IEDs against SDF vehicles and targeted killings.

The area of Al-Mayadeen and Albukamal
  • On May 23, 2020, ISIS operatives took an SDF fighter prisoner about 70 km north of Deir ez-Zor. He was shot to death (Telegram, May 24, 2020).
  • On May 22, 2020, an IED was activated against an SDF vehicle about 20 km north of Al-Mayadeen. Two fighters were wounded (Telegram, May 23, 2020).
  • On May 22, 2020, an IED was activated against an SDF vehicle on the road leading to the Al-Omar oil field, about 10 km north of Al-Mayadeen. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, ISIS operatives took an SDF “agent” prisoner about 5 km northeast of Al-Mayadeen. He was interrogated and then executed (Telegram, May 21, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, an IED was activated against an SDF vehicle about 10 km north of Al-Mayadeen. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 21, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, an SDF vehicle was targeted by machine gun fire about 10 km northeast of Deir ez-Zor. Two fighters were killed (Telegram, May 21, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, an IED was activated against an SDF vehicle about 25 km north of Albukamal. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 21, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, an SDF intelligence operative was targeted by machine gun fire about 10 km north of Al-Mayadeen. He was wounded (Telegram, May 20, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, ISIS operatives took an SDF intelligence operative prisoner about 10 km north of Al-Mayadeen. He was interrogated and then executed (Telegram, May 20, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, an SDF fighter was targeted by machine gun fire about 10 km north of Al-Mayadeen. He was killed (Telegram, May 20, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, ISIS operatives took an SDF fighter prisoner about 5 km northeast of Al-Mayadeen. He was interrogated and then executed (Telegram, May 20, 2020).
The Al-Raqqah area
  • On May 21, 2020, an SDF vehicle was targeted by machine gun fire about 20 km southwest of Al-Raqqah. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 21, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, an IED was activated against an SDF vehicle about 70 km northwest of Al-Raqqah. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 20, 2020).
The Al-Hasakah area
  • On May 20, 2020, an IED was activated against an SDF vehicle. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 21, 2020).
Eastern Syria (Al-Sukhnah-Palmyra region)
  • On May 21, 2020, a Syrian soldier riding a motorcycle was targeted by machine gun fire northwest of Al-Sukhnah. He was wounded (Telegram, May 21, 2020).

The Syrian soldier’s motorcycle seized by ISIS (Telegram, May 22, 2020)
The Syrian soldier’s motorcycle seized by ISIS
(Telegram, May 22, 2020)

The Iraqi arena
ISIS’s Iraq Province taking the lead in ISIS’s activity
  • On May 21, 2020, ISIS released an infographic entitled “The Harvest of the Fighters,” summing up its activity in the various provinces between May 14 and May 20, 2020. A total of 158 attacks were carried out around the world: 84 of them (about 53%) in Iraq, 39 in Syria, 13 in the West Africa Province, 9 in the Sinai Province, 4 in the Central Africa Province, and the rest in other provinces (Telegram, May 21, 2020).

In addition, ISIS released an infographic summing up the military activity in it various provinces in Iraq between April 24, 2020 and May 20, 2020. During this time, ISIS operatives carried out 226 attacks throughout Iraq, killing or wounding 426 people. A total of 97 attacks were carried out in the Diyala Province. Following them are the provinces of Kirkuk (41), North Baghdad (19), Al-Anbar (16), Salah al-Din (15), and Al-Janub (Babel Province) (15). Sporadic attacks were also carried out in other provinces. Most of the attacks were carried out in the form of detonating IEDs and sniper fire (Telegram, May 21, 2020).

Highlights of ISIS’s activity during the past week
Diyala Province
  • On May 21, 2020, an Iraqi police patrol was targeted by machine gun fire about 20 km northeast of Baqubah. Two policemen were wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, an IED was activated against an Iraqi army vehicle about 20 km northeast of Baqubah. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, an Iraqi soldier was targeted by sniper fire about 20 km southwest of Khanaqin. He was wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, an IED was activated against two members of the oil facility security police about 10 km northwest of Baqubah. One policeman was killed and the other was wounded (Telegram, May 20, 2020).
Salah al-Din Province
  • On May 23, 2020, an IED was activated against an Iraqi army vehicle about 30 km north of Baghdad. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 24, 2020).
  • On May 22, 2020, two Iraqi policemen were targeted by sniper fire in the Samarra area. About five policemen were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 24, 2020).
  • On May 22, 2020, an Iraqi soldier was targeted by machine gun fire about 30 km north of Baghdad. He was wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
Kirkuk Province
  • On May 23, 2020, an IED was activated against an Iraqi police vehicle about 40 km southwest of Kirkuk. The passengers were wounded (Telegram, May 25, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, a compound of the oil facility security police was targeted by machine gun fire about 40 km northwest of Kirkuk. Three policemen were killed and another was wounded (Telegram, May 23, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, an IED was activated against a Tribal Mobilization vehicle about 45 km west of Kirkuk. Two fighters were killed. When another force arrived at the scene to provide assistance, an IED was activated against it. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 23, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, a sticky bomb was activated against a Kurdish Peshmerga vehicle in central Kirkuk. An officer and three fighters were wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, a vehicle of the oil field security police was targeted by machine gun fire on the Baiji-Kirkuk highway. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 21, 2020).
Al-Anbar Province
  • On May 24, 2020, ISIS operatives fired at an Iraqi army helicopter near Al-Rutba. The helicopter was hit. The crew and passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 25, 2020). However, Iraqi “security sources” reported that an Iraqi Air Force aircraft providing support to anti-ISIS ground activity was targeted by gunfire. The aircraft was slightly damaged but returned safely to its base (Al-Sumaria, May 25, 2020).
  • On May 22, 2020, ISIS operatives attacked an Iraqi army headquarters about 25 km west of Al-Rutba. Four soldiers were killed or wounded. In addition, a vehicle was destroyed and the headquarters sustained damage (Telegram, May 23, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, ISIS operatives attacked a Popular Mobilization headquarters northeast of Fallujah. One commander and two fighters were killed (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
  • On May 21, 2020, an IED was activated against an Iraqi army vehicle northeast of Fallujah. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
  • On May 20, 2020, ISIS operatives attacked an Iraqi army headquarters near the Arar border crossing between Iraq and Saudi Arabia. An officer and about eight soldiers were killed or wounded. The headquarters was damaged. An Iraqi army force sent to the scene was tricked by the ISIS operatives into entering a minefield. Six additional soldiers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 21, 2020).

Babel Province

  • On May 22, 2020, a Popular Mobilization vehicle was targeted by machine gun fire about 40 km south of Baghdad. The passengers were killed or wounded (Telegram, May 22, 2020).
Counterterrorist activities by the Iraqi security forces
Senior ISIS official captured
  • On May 20, 2020, the Iraqi National Intelligence service announced that it had captured Abd al-Nasser Qardash, a senior ISIS official who was one of the candidates to succeed Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.[3] According to the statement, Abd al-Nasser Qardash was caught based on accurate intelligence (Al-Sumaria, May 20, 2020). Qardash, who was born in Mosul, held a series of military positions in ISIS. He was in charge of a number of operations in Syria and Iraq and was known for his close relationship with ISIS’s Arab command. He started his activity in Al-Qaeda in Iraq, which later became ISIS. He was very close to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. In an interview after he was apprehended, Qardash noted that the current ISIS leader, Abdallah Qardash, is not as resolute in his decisions as Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi. According to Iraqi “intelligence sources,” in his interrogation, Qardash revealed that there were severe differences of opinion between ISIS’s Arab and foreign operatives (Al-Hadath Channel, May 20, 2020).

Abd al-Nasser Qardash, captured by the Iraqi National Intelligence, during an interview (Al-Hadath Channel, May 20, 2020)
Abd al-Nasser Qardash, captured by the Iraqi National Intelligence, during an interview
(Al-Hadath Channel, May 20, 2020)

Additional activity by the Iraqi security forces
  • On May 23, 2020, an Iraqi Interior Ministry Intelligence force captured five ISIS operatives in various parts of the Salah al-Din Province (Al-Sumaria, May 23, 2020).
  • On May 23, 2020, Iraqi police captured two ISIS operatives in the Kirkuk Province (Al-Sumaria, May 23, 2020).
  • On May 22, 2020, force of the Intelligence and Counterterrorism Directorate of the Al-Anbar Province captured six terrorist operatives (i.e., ISIS operatives) in various parts of the Al-Anbar Province. In addition, a stockpile of explosives used by ISIS was found in the area of Fallujah (Al-Sumaria, May 22, 2020).

IEDs made of barrels and gas canisters filled with explosives found in the area of Fallujah (al-hashed, May 23, 2020)
IEDs made of barrels and gas canisters filled with explosives found in the area of Fallujah
(al-hashed, May 23, 2020)

  • On May 23, 2020, an Iraqi military intelligence force captured two “terrorist operatives” (i.e., ISIS operatives) in the area of Al-Qaim, near the border between Iraq and Syria. The two underwent training at one of ISIS’s camps in Albukamal and took part in the fighting in Deir ez-Zor (Al-Sumaria, May 23, 2020).

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