An international think tank says Daesh lost control over a quarter of the territory which it held in Iraq and Syria last year amid major operations in both countries to drive out the foreign-backed terrorists.
According to a report published by the London-based IHS Conflict Monitor on Wednesday, Daesh-controlled terrain shrank by 23 percent from 78,000 square kilometers in early January 2016 to 60,400 square kilometers by the end of the year.
The figure compares to a loss of 14 percent in the preceding year, when the Takfiri extremists’ area contracted from 90,800 square kilometers to 78,000 square kilometers.
Columb Strack, senior analyst and head of the IHS Conflict Monitor, said Daesh “suffered unprecedented territorial losses in 2016, including key areas vital for the group’s governance project.”
The report further disclosed that disagreement is increasing within Daesh ranks over the militant group’s strategy in the face of territorial losses and, more significantly, its authority on theological grounds.
Daesh “is internally divided into two opposing doctrinal trends: the mainstream view drawn from Turki al-Bin’ali, and the more extreme interpretation following the ideas of Ahmed al-Hazimi,” Ludovico Carlino, a senior analyst with IHS Conflict Monitor, said.
Carlino further warned that the theological dispute has increased the risk of defections from Daesh to rival extremist groups in Syria, or even potential internal break-up.
The IHS Conflict Monitor report also expected Iraqi army soldiers, supported by fighters from Hashd al-Sha’abi and Kurdish forces, to retake Mosul from Daesh terrorists before the second half of the current year. Iraqi launched the joint liberation operation on October 17, 2016.
“After Mosul, the Iraqi government will probably focus its attention on the remaining pocket of resistance around Hawija, which the extremists are using as a base for their campaign of sustained terrorist attacks in Baghdad,” Strack said.
The report went on to deem the recapture of the northern Syrian city of Raqqah, which serves as the Daesh's de facto capital in Syria, as much more problematic than the liberation of Mosul, given the complex political and military considerations involved.