Updated November 2015
A paper by Richard Barrett, Senior Vice President of the Soufan Group looks at the flow of foreign fighters into Syria, fighting for the rebel side of the conflict, and the consequences of their return once hostilities in Syria come to an end.
A paper by Richard Barrett, Senior Vice President of the Soufan Group looks at the flow of foreign fighters into Syria, fighting for the rebel side of the conflict, and the consequences of their return once hostilities in Syria come to an end.
Syria's civil war began
in the spring of 2011, a result of the region's Arab Spring protests.
Opposition to President Bashar al-Assad's iron grip on Syria began with
nationwide protests that were met with violent responses from Assad's forces.
As the conflict/civil war has proceeded, Syria's government has lost control of
significant portions of the country and, as shown on this map from Strategic Needs Analysis
Project, currently controls a very small part of the nation:
The analysis by Richard
Barrett estimates that over the first three years of the conflict, 12,000
foreign fighters/jihadists have migrated to Syria from at least 81 nations
around the world with 3000 of those being from Western nations as shown on this
map with the darker brown coloured nations supplying more foreign fighters:
Here are the nations that
have supplied the most fighters to ISIS:
Tunisia - about 3000
Saudi Arabia - about 2500
Morocco - about 1500
Russian Federation - over
800
France - over 700
Turkey - about 400
United Kingdom - about
400
Australia - about 250
Belgium - about 250
Algeria - about 200
In addition, about 30
fighters have come from Canada and 70 plus fighters have come from the United
States. In most cases, numbers of fighters which are supplied by
government authorities are imprecise, however, commanders in the Free Syrian
Army report that they have representatives from many different nations fighting
with them, many of them being converts to Islam.
Most of the foreign
fighters are joining extremist groups since they are better able to absorb
foreigners who don't speak Arabic and have no formal military training, rather
than the Free Syrian Army which is focused solely on what is happening in
Syria. While there are foreign fighters on the Government side of the
conflict, most of them come from three nations; Iraq, Lebanon and Iran.
Estimates suggest that at least 3000 to 4000 fighters on the Government
side have been contributed by Hezbollah.
A typical foreign fighter
is between the ages of 18 and 29, however, their are some volunteers as young
as 15 years of age as well as fighters in their thirties. Most fighters
are male, although there are some women who have travelled with their husbands
or who have joined friends who are fighting in the conflict. Most fighters have no military training but
there is a core group of older fighters who have fought in other conflicts
including Russians who fought in the Caucasus as well as around 500 Saudi nationals
who have been active in Iraq for a number of years.
Here is an interesting
recruitment photo, reassuring potential recruits that life as a fighter in
Syria is a positive and gentle experience:
According to French
authorities, many of the jihadist volunteers are disaffected, aimless young men
who are lacking a sense of identity and belonging. The need to join the
conflict in Syria is part of the obligation to help a Muslim community that is
under attack. The recruits wish to join a holy war that was prophesied in
the Quran and die as a martyr, thus receiving their reward in the afterlife.
The report concludes by
looking at the potential threat that these foreign recruits present to their
home nations once the conflict in Syria comes to a conclusion. The author
notes that the Syrian war is likely becoming an incubator for another
generation of terrorists. This is particularly worrisome, largely because
the three groups that have attracted the most foreign fighters, Ahrar al-Sham,
Jabhat al-Nusra and ISIS, were formed by people that were originally members of
al-Qaeda, a terrorist group which has a mandate of mounting attacks in Western nations. Once
the conflict in Syria is over, the indoctrinated foreign fighters may find
themselves shifting their emphasis from a local enemy to a broader enemy, the
apostate Western nations from which they came, as part of their agenda to build
a world-wide Muslim caliphate. This eventuality suggests that the decade-long War on Terror has been a colossal failure.
The snap map is missing the territory of Jabhat al-Nusra the green blob in the North West of the country is really their main piece of land. So yes they are in opposition to Al Assad but they not part of the "Western backed opposition". Any way you cannot win a war against an idea, that is stupid. The other thing the West fails to realize is that these Islamic fighters are fighting a permeant war that will only end in one of two ways, all convert to their beliefs or all of them are dead. They are fighting a 1st century war in which the victor kills off the entire conquered peoples. We are trying to fight a 21st century war where civilians are spared and minimal damage is done. Either way I don’t see all of them as dead anytime soon because as long as Islam is around there will be those that interpret the Koran in a way that justifies the use of force to convert others. So this fight will be going on for a very very very long time.
ReplyDeleteTo a certain extent the western presence still acts ans an irritant in the World of Islam. When you look at the political map, the divisions are those drawn by western 'protectors' in France and England after WW1. The traditional old Ottoman provinces were only approximated - but they to some extent recognized religious boundaries, or at least discouraged outright sectarian warfare. The west, right now, is promoting it. And the face off is between the warlike Sunnis backed by Saudi Arabia, and the more nuanced Shiites backed by Iran. Stuck in the middle are the few 'non-sectarian' state - Syria being the most under the gun as the 'war' is there - Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, Libya, Pakistan, being others .
ReplyDeleteAnd then there is the new phenomenon of a Moslem world diaspora. After the second war the Moslem populations of Europe could have been tallied in thousands - to-day that's millions. And to-day, as well, there is hardly a medium-sized city in North America without a mosque or Islamic center. Unlike the post war DP's these populations haven had the chance to assimilate - to lose their 'foreignness' .... or their religion. New arrivals from war from war zones are a constant reminder, to them, that the governments of their new homelands are massive players in the destruction of their old homelands - this is portrayed as a war upon their religion. And of course western security chalks-up poorly defined Moslem 'extremists' as their 'greatest national threat', while doing a very poor job clarifying with what exactly it is at war. And doing a worse job separating targets from innocents.
Should it be surprising that the same populations having all the traditional problems of any new immigrant group, slough-off a number of discontented young willing to participate in the troubles of the past? The trouble is that - not handled correctly (round em all up and ship em all back where they came from.) - and it hasn't been (viz the recent free speech comic competition) - we're going to see their jihad on 'mainstreet' as we've feared all along. Only the enemy won't be invading, he'll be over here. He already is.
Which leaves us to look to some massive restrictions on weapons and explosives, and some very expensive surveillance and intelligence gathering. Hey we've already started and now its the only game we've got.
We just have to hope we can hold the fort until the young grow up to love Mickey and the Mall. By that time their folks will have put on weight and mellowed out?
We've made a big, fat mess.