WASHINGTON –
The U.S.-led multinational coalition is making progress in
Iraq and Syria against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and against its
networks and affiliates, but an unprecedented terrorist challenge remains for
nations everywhere, the presidential envoy for the global coalition to counter
ISIL said June 28.
State Department official Brett McGurk testified before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, noting that the global campaign plan being
carried out by 66 coalition partner nations focuses on three areas for
defeating ISIL.
“We analyze ISIL in three dimensions,” he told the panel.
“The core in Iraq and Syria; the networks that feed its strength -- foreign
fighter networks, propaganda networks and financial networks; and the global
affiliates … eight in all, that seek to expand its reach, with Libya and Sinai
being the most significant.”
McGurk said that of the indicators used to track ISIL --
morale, territory, combat-ready fighters, access to revenue, access to borders,
capable and confident leadership, social media and global branches -- many are
trending in the right direction.
Dismantling ISIL
The number of foreign fighters joining ISIL is down, he
said, and “more countries than ever before are sharing information to identify
those who are still traveling. Outside financing has been severed and internal
financing has taken a significant hit through painstaking intelligence work and
precision targeting by military forces in Iraq and Syria.”
ISIL's propaganda is being challenged 24/7 through a global
network of countries, civil society organizations, private companies and
individuals, McGurk added, and ISIL leaders are being killed at a rate of one
every three days, including ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's main deputies, Haji
Imam and Abu Sayyaf, killed by U.S. military forces.
ISIL's territory is shrinking, he said, and the terrorist
army has lost nearly 50 percent of territory it once controlled in Iraq and 20
percent in Syria over the past 18 months.
What makes ISIL different from other terrorist organizations
is its attempt to hold territory and establish a self-proclaimed state-like
entity in Iraq and Syria that McGurk called a “phony caliphate.”
Taking ISIL Territory
The notion of a caliphate, he added, “has been a primary
driver in recruitment for the tens of thousands of foreign fighters that have
joined ISIL in Syria and Iraq. The territory it controls also allows ISIL to
extract vast resources, and most importantly for us, plan and launch highly
sophisticated external attacks.”
McGurk said the attacks in Brussels and Paris, for example,
stem from ISIL's external plotting network based in Raqqa and that ISIL has
sent operatives from Syria to Europe through an area called the Manbij pocket.
“That is why we must take the territory away from ISIL,” he
said. “And, just as important, stabilize areas after ISIL is [ejected].”
As local fighters take back important territory, McGurk
added, coalition forces are collecting information about the foreign fighter
network, about how it's put together and who leads it.
“That helps us really root it out,” he said, “not only in
Iraq and Syria but in the branches and little networks that exist in France and
other places.”
Retreating to the Shadows
Two years ago around this time, McGurk said in his written
testimony, “I was in Iraq when Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi pronounced the
establishment of a caliphate from the largest mosque in Mosul.”
It was Ramadan, he added, and the announcement, despite
being denounced by thousands of Muslim leaders and scholars around the world,
spiked ISIL recruiting and its adherents’ confidence as a historic movement on
the march. Throughout 2014, Baghdadi and other leaders appeared in the open,
speaking and recruiting.
“I just returned from another trip to Iraq. It is Ramadan
once again yet we have not heard from the so-called caliph in more than six
months,” McGurk said. “This Ramadan is being celebrated not by Baghdadi but by
millions of Iraqis taking the streets each night as ISIL and its leaders have
retreated to the shadows.”
But ISIL still inspires new recruits and lone-wolf attacks
around the world, he added.
“This is extraordinarily difficult to stop. We have to
remain vigilant. That's why we have a global coalition, not just for Iraq and
Syria but to make sure we are attacking the foreign fighter networks and
sharing information [and] working with Interpol so, as these people try to
travel, they can be picked up,” McGurk said.
“This is something we haven't seen before,” he added, “and
[when] you add to it social media and the speed of international travel … it is
an unprecedented challenge and it's going to be with us for years.”
Defeating ISIL in Cyberspace
McGurk said ISIL’s social media recruiting efforts are being
countered by coalition efforts led by the United Kingdom, the United Arab
Emirates and Malaysia, providing counter-ISIL content with localized focus for
different regions of the world.
“I have visited the Sawab Center in [the United Arab
Emirates], which is led by smart and energetic young people determined to
defeat ISIL in cyberspace,” he said in written testimony, “and they are
succeeding with innovative media campaigns focused on ISIL defectors and the
truth behind what ISIL promises versus what it delivers on the ground --
especially for women.”
In the United States, the State Department’s Global
Engagement Center coordinates, integrates and synchronizes government wide
communications activities to counter ISIL messaging, McGurk said.
“The GEC also provides assistance with content-development platforms
and amplifying effective voices against the perverse ISIL narrative,” he added.
Countering ISIL Messages
McGurk said Twitter recently announced that it has
eliminated nearly 125,000 ISIL-related or -affiliated “handles,” and that
number is growing, and Facebook and YouTube are similarly removing ISIL-related
content from their platforms.
“Within the coalition, we have widely publicized how anyone
can report ISIL content online so platforms can remove it if the content
violates a platform’s terms of service, which it often does,” he said.
Such efforts are having an impact, McGurk noted, adding that
two years ago ISIL had nearly free reign in cyberspace and today there are
reportedly six people opposing ISIL’s message online for each person who supports
it.
“We need these numbers to increase,” he said, “and recognize
that the most effective voices are not governments but individuals, with their
own first-hand accounts of the horror under ISIL rule. As these stories
increase, ISIL’s message is on defense and it is our job to help keep it that
way.”