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  • In early 2014, the Islamic State was quickly gaining power and infamy.

  • Some US officials labeled the terror group as the country’s greatest security threat,

  • and according to a number of national polls, most of Americans agreed.

  • Today, ISIS is struggling financially and has lost much of its territory in Iraq and

  • Syria.

  • So, what happened?

  • Is the Islamic State losing the war?

  • Well the short answer is, yes.

  • The Islamic State’s goal is to secure a global caliphate, which they hope to achieve

  • by waging war, overthrowing foreign governments and erasing existing borders.

  • With land as their number one objective, the group began taking over major cities and territories

  • in Iraq and Syria in mid 2014.

  • They took in million of dollars by looting bank vaults, taxing and extorting residents

  • and selling stolen oil on the black market.

  • Over the course of that year, ISIS extended its caliphate across more than 35,000 square

  • miles.

  • Combined, that’s roughly the size of the US state of Maine.

  • But in the years since, ISIS has somewhat fallen off.

  • According to US government estimates, ISIS has lost nearly half of its holdings in Iraq

  • and 20 percent in Syria.

  • Theyve also lost major cities like Fallujah, Kobani and Palmyra, and millions of dollars

  • in the process, even cutting its soldiers salaries in half.

  • So what happened?

  • Well in August and September of 2014, a US-led coalition began arming rebel groups and carrying

  • out airstrikes on ISIS strongholds.

  • They also partnered with Kurdish and Iraqi armies on the ground to uproot the terror

  • group from civilian areas.

  • As a result of these efforts, the Islamic State has lost an estimated 45,000 fighters,

  • as well as some of their highest ranking officials, including their minister of war, chemical

  • weapons specialist, and most recently, their minister of information.

  • As the Islamic State’s caliphate shrinks, so does its revenue.

  • With less territory, the group has less taxes to collect, people to extort, banks to rob,

  • and women to enslave and sell.

  • What’s more, a large portion of the group’s oil infrastructure and cash depots have been

  • bombed, slashing one of their biggest sources of funding by more than one-third.

  • Additionally, the United States has slapped sanctions some of the Islamic State’s top

  • donor and fundraisers, and new laws by the Iraqi government have made it almost impossible

  • for the group to receive international funds from banks in their controlled territory.

  • Nevertheless, the Islamic State continues to operate, mostly relying on tax income from

  • the territories they do still control - one of which is Mosul, Iraq’s second largest

  • city and a major source of oil.

  • In September 2016, the Iraqi military launched an ambitious plan to retake this city, which

  • some are calling ISIS’s last major stronghold in Iraq.

  • If they succeed, we could see the beginning of

  • the end for

  • the Islamic State’s reign of terror.

In early 2014, the Islamic State was quickly gaining power and infamy.

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ISISはイラクとシリアの戦争にすでに敗北しているのか? (Has ISIS Already Lost The War In Iraq And Syria?)

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    BH に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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