{ #1 We Interrupt this Lesson…... { ISIS is a shorthand name for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, and it has made news in the past few months…. Islamic.

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Presentation transcript:

{ #1 We Interrupt this Lesson…..

{ ISIS is a shorthand name for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, and it has made news in the past few months…. Islamic State in Iraq and SyriaIslamic State in Iraq and Syria ….for its dramatic military conquest of Iraqi territory ….its ruthless treatment of Iraqi minorities such as the Yazidis, ….and a string of videotaped beheadings of Western hostages What is ISIS? What do you know about ISIS?

 The situation in Iraq and Syria is complex, to say the least.  It presents a continuing humanitarian crisis, with millions of people fleeing for their lives, and hundreds of thousands being killed. millions of people fleeinghundreds of thousandsmillions of people fleeinghundreds of thousands

 It presents a threat to Middle East stability, with ISIS promising to create an Islamic caliphate, or state, erasing modern borders and imposing its own version of fundamentalist law. Islamic caliphateIslamic caliphate  Furthermore, ISIS presents an unknown threat to the larger world with the militant group beheading international hostages and recruiting jihadists from across the globe. unknown threatacross the globe unknown threatacross the globe   middle-east middle-east

1. ISIS used to be called al-Qaeda in Iraq  It's essentially a rebooted version of al-Qaeda in Iraq, the Islamist group that rose to power after the American invasion.  US troops and allied Sunni militias defeated AQI during the post-2006 "surge," but it didn't demolish them.  In 2011, the group rebooted. ISIS successfully freed a number of prisoners held by the Iraqi government and, slowly but surely, began rebuilding their strength.  The chaos today is a direct result of the Iraqi government's failure to stop them. (8) facts that explain the escalating crisis in Iraq Updated by Zack Beauchamp on June 13, 2014, 9:49 a.m. ET Zack BeauchampZack Beauchamp

 Their goal since being founded in 2004 has been remarkably consistent: found a Sunni Islamic state.  "They want complete failure of the government  "They want complete failure of the government in Iraq. They want to in Iraq. They want to establish a caliphate in Iraq." establish a caliphate in Iraq."  Even after ISIS split with al-Qaeda in February 2014 (in large part because ISIS was too brutal even for al-Qaeda), ISIS' goal remained the same. ISIS was too brutal even for al-QaedaISIS was too brutal even for al-Qaeda  crisis-explained/74607CBE C02-A289- ABA34FEAB516.html crisis-explained/74607CBE C02-A289- ABA34FEAB516.html crisis-explained/74607CBE C02-A289- ABA34FEAB516.html 2. ISIS wants to create an Islamic state in Iraq and Syria Syria Iraq Area controlled by ISIS

 Perhaps the single most important factor in ISIS' recent resurgence is the conflict between Iraqi Shias and Iraqi Sunnis  These are the two major denominations of ISLAM  ISIS fighters are Sunnis, and the tension between the two groups is a powerful recruiting tool for ISIS.  Shias run the govt and Sunnis don’t feel they are fairly represented and have been treated poorly 3. ISIS thrives on tension between Iraq's two largest religious groups s/magazine

 Police have killed peaceful Sunni protestors and used anti- terrorism laws to mass-arrest Sunni civilians. killedmass-arrestkilledmass-arrest  ISIS cannily exploited that brutality to recruit new fighters. 4. The Iraqi government has made this tension worse by persecuting Sunnis and through other missteps 5. ISIS raises money like a government 5. ISIS raises money like a government  In Syria, they've built up something like a mini-state: collecting the equivalent of taxes and selling electricity to fund its militant activities.  Some reports suggest they've restarted oil fields in eastern Syria.

 Kurds are mostly Sunnis, but they're ethnically distinct from Iraqi Arabs.  There's somewhere between 80,000 and 240,000 Kurdish peshmerga (militias)  They're well equipped and trained, and represent a serious military threat to ISIS.  They have started to fight back as ISIS has attacked them 6. Iraq has another major ethno-religious group, the Kurds, who could matter in this fight

 Mosul is the second-largest city in Iraq  It’s fairly close to major oilfields.  It’s close to the Mosul Dam which is important in the country’s water supply 7. Mosul, the big city ISIS recently conquered, is really important — and ISIS has spread out from there

8. The Iraqi Army is much larger than ISIS, but also a total mess  ISIS has a bit more than 7,000 combat troops  The Iraqi army has 250,000 troops, plus armed police.  That Iraqi military also has tanks, airplanes, and helicopters.  But the Iraqi army is also a total mess, which explains why ISIS has had the success it's had despite being outnumbered.  Take ISIS' victory in Mosul: 30,000 Iraqi troops ran from 800 ISIS fighters  Those are 40:1 odds! Yet Iraqi troops ran because they simply didn't want to fight and die for this government. There had been hundreds of desertions per month for months prior to the events of June 10th. The escalation with ISIS is, of course, making it worse. 

{ ISIS ATROCITES - Are the airstrikes working? videos/?iref=obinsite videos/?iref=obinsite - News report on 4 th beheading slavery/index.html slavery/index.html - treatment of women time-girls-abducted-sex-slaves-children-used-soldiers-UN-report- confirms-ISIS-s-atrocities-Iraq.htmlhttp:// 500-time-girls-abducted-sex-slaves-children-used-soldiers-UN-report- confirms-ISIS-s-atrocities-Iraq.html -----scroll down for video time-girls-abducted-sex-slaves-children-used-soldiers-UN-report- confirms-ISIS-s-atrocities-Iraq.html - Execution of Iraqi soldiers

 ISIS is the most well-armed, well-funded, deadly threat to global security in years. If the U.S. military does not act quickly and boldly, ISIS will consolidate its territory and secure a state from which it can plot deadly attacks against the West and potentially carry out genocide. To ignore the ISIS threat would mean a disastrous abdication of U.S. influence in the Middle East. Supporting Increased Military Intervention

 As proven by the disastrous U.S. presence in Iraq, little long-term progress can come from U.S. military intervention in the Middle East and Persian Gulf. U.S. interference— particularly ill-planned, short-term operations—aggravates sectarian tensions without compelling local powers to assume responsibility for stabilizing and securing their own territory. Even limited military action in Iraq and Syria is likely to lead to broader U.S. involvement and another unproductive ground war. Opposing Increased Military Intervention