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ISIS Might Have One Last Escape Route: Pakistan

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ISIS Might Have One Last Escape Route: Pakistan

The fall of its de facto Syrian capital Raqqa last month signaled the death of the Islamic State (ISIS) in the Middle East. On Friday, Syrian troops retook Deir ez-Zor, the last major city with an ISIS presence, just as Iraqi forces took over the crossing in al-Qaim, near the group’s final urban stronghold.

As the group flees the Middle East, it has two obvious destinations: Central and South Asia. Central Asia has accounted for upwards of 5,000 ISIS troops, and South Asia has 40 percent of the global Muslim population – and indeed an entire dedicated ISIS faction – making the region the natural destination for fleeing militants.

The greatest lifeline for ISIS might come from the jihadists that form the large chunk of ISIS Khorasan: the leaderless factions of the Pakistani Taliban.
On October 19, a statement attributed to the Jamaat-ul-Ahrar (JA), a Taliban faction that has pledged allegiance to ISIS, said that the group’s Umar Khalid Khorasani has succumbed to injuries following a U.S. drone strike. A day later the group’s Telegram account denied the claims. Since there weren’t any images, audio or video footage in the denial, this appears to be a classic Taliban tactic of denying a leader’s demise long after they’ve been killed.

This is how Mullah Omar was “kept alive” for over two years and how Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Fazlullah might still be posthumously leading his group – another Taliban faction only confirmed their leader’s death from last year after news broke of Khorasani being killed.

Therefore, there’s more than a fair chance that both the TTP and JA might be leaderless – and aimless – as things stand, and perhaps as desperate for some breathing space as their fellow jihadists in the Levant.

JA in particular has collaborated with ISIS – at least on paper – on many terror attacks over the past two and a half years. This year’s deadliest attack in Pakistan, when a Sufi shrine was bombed in Sehwan leading 88 dead, was jointly claimed by ISIS and Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, with the Khorasan faction taking responsibility for August’s attack on the military truck in Quetta.

From ISIS Khorasan’s formal announcement in January 2015, which had been preceded by ISIS graffiti and literature popping up across Pakistan, jihadist factions as diverse as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) – which is dedicated primarily to the extermination of the Shia – and Jamaat-ud-Dawa – which claims to focus on Kashmir jihad – have overlapped with ISIS in Pakistan.

Furthermore, considering that the Pakistan is now formalizing the mainstreaming of many of these jihadists by making them bona fide political players in the country, and the fact that the state continues to encourage jihad among sections of the population, the lure of the ISIS caliphate alone can sustain the group in the country, even with limited operational presence.

The UN Humanitarian Response Plan Mid-Year Review reports the doubling of “attacks attributable to the Islamic State of Khorasan (from 128 to 237)” in Afghanistan, with the group expanding its presence to seven provinces in the first half of this year. This rise has corresponded with the group’s depletion of resources in Iraq and Syria.

Even so, while Islamic State’s functional presence remains mostly in Afghanistan, where they are rivaled for supremacy by the Afghan Taliban – despite recent ISIS ascendancy – it is Pakistan where a bulging vacuum for a jihadist umbrella remains.

What the Pakistani state will do if and when ISIS and the Taliban regroup in unison, with some of their allies perhaps sitting in the Parliament, remains to be seen.
https://thediplomat.com/2017/11/isis-might-have-one-last-escape-route-pakistan/
 
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Quite possible if ISIS can wage jihad for implementation of sharia in Pakistan
 
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What the Pakistani state will do if and when ISIS and the Taliban regroup in unison, with some of their allies perhaps sitting in the Parliament, remains to be seen.

As long as the Pak Army is there, all such groups can be dealt with effectively.
 
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Rubbish. Read the article before.

The writer fails to take into account the vigilance of the military and paramilitary forces as well as the growing anti terrorist sentiments rising in Pakistan for the last few years which have peaked recently.

ISIS may find fertile ground but it is not Pakistan but in Afghanistan. A warning I delivered multiple of times here that after operation zarb e azb the american and the Afghan forces didn't hunt the TTP in Afghanistan. On the contrary the NDS provided them sanctuary and safety and the weakened group looking for funds and support joined up with the emboldened and rising ISIS which resulted in ISIS growing in jalalabad and nangahar and launching devastating attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan all thanks to the inept and foolish proxy game the NDS wished to play.


We have uprooted their structure and dealt crucial blow before they could even form.

I would suggest that India also possesses some fertile lands for these miscreants especially those returning from Syria.
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I am sorry but the article is rubbish and as much as Indian trolls wish for the days of 2009 to return when everyday explosions were happening and death was rising and they were enjoying deep inside, those days will not return. Best to make peace with that.
 
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Correction "Afghanistan." Why has the US not started bombing tora bora yet? Quit bombing civilian houses and entire villages. Maybe then you'll see a difference.
 
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pak is the worst place for any terrorist organization these days. however, they can find their place in india . in india a terrorist party is the ruling party. PM is a known terrorist. so daesh may find a good place in indian parliament.
 
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"the diplomat" "title of article". Ignored; not worth reading and wasting time.
 
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...The writer fails to take into account the vigilance of the military and paramilitary forces...ISIS may find fertile ground but it is not Pakistan but in Afghanistan.
I'm not convinced by the author's arguments that Pakistan is the more likely haven for ISIS. I don't see what Mullah Omar's fate has to do with it. I'm not even sure whether the author is talking about current ISIS personnel fleeing Mesopotamia or if he's talking about ISIS' ideological appeal.
 
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isis will be transported to afghanistan from syria, Just like the weapons handed to Iraqi army by their occupiers were used by isis to invade syria. But isis will be brought to commit genocide against the Pashtun majority population of afghanistan. As they form the Taliban.
 
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Bullshit, they'd have better chances overthrowing the EU & taking over the world :omghaha:
 
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