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ISIS Might Have One Last Escape Route: Pakistan

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isis its amazing that illiterate isis has the ability to appear anywhere with their passports or not, with money or not, with guns, and where do they get unlimited ammo including food does it just fall out of the sky, who is training them to use all kinds of weapon and gear. They seem to know all strategic places to bomb which cough usa, saudi israel cough would like to take over.
 
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Plot twist; ISIS are ninjas and will use teleportation jutsu from Naruto to come into Pakistan. Directed by M. Night Shyamalan :rofl:
 
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ISIS will not hold any ground here, or gain much support as Dae'sh is to Arab in nature to accept any Non Arabs from the South Asia .. Of course they will get some support from the renounce terrorist outfits, Criminal minded and Socially isolated extremists people in our society .. but other than that, they wont muster a large force to Challenge Army in open battle field like TTP did in Swat and FATA .
 
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Bhartis and their stunted brains

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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ISIS maybe anything but stupid, they can see what Pakistan army does to supah pawah and their proxies.
 
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Like there are no criminals hiding in any big US cities?

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.


But you can hide anybody in Karachi, right?
 
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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/

Does that mean that the US is preparing to wage its next war against ISIS on the Pak Afghan border? It is no secret that the US has moved its assets to Afghanistan.

The author of this article is renowned for harboring anti-Pakistan sentiments. It is no surprise that the OP has left his name out whilst posting this. This opinion piece belongs in the dustbin. It only serves one purpose. Spread lies and fantasies.

ISIS will not hold any ground here, or gain much support as Dae'sh is to Arab in nature to accept any Non Arabs from the South Asia .. Of course they will get some support from the renounce terrorist outfits, Criminal minded and Socially isolated extremists people in our society .. but other than that, they wont muster a large force to Challenge Army in open battle field like TTP did in Swat and FATA .

The Indians are very keen to lump ISIS with Pakistan, but this wish of has been decimated time and again.

As you say, ISIS holds no relevance with the Subcontinent as a whole. Any person with a single brain cell knows how ISIS came into being. ISIS has no place other than the Middle East.
 
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Oppressed Muslim in India leaning towards fast on the path of ISIS so it is safe to say next heaven for ISIS is in India not in Pakistan.

But Pakistan is in the way.

Unless you think they are going to come by sea?

If you ask me, I believe we might soon be in a situation where Pakistan might need to team up with India to defeat the scourge from your soil.

Cheers, Doc
 
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But Pakistan is in the way.

Unless you think they are going to come by sea?

If you ask me, I believe we might soon be in a situation where Pakistan might need to team up with India to defeat the scourge from your soil.

Cheers, Doc
ISIS don't send persons they send ideology which already make the way into India.

If you ask me, I believe we might soon be in a situation where Pakistan might need to team up with India to defeat the scourge from your soil.
In your dreams only.
 
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