By Adnan Khan
In a video released by the pro-ISIS Aamaq News Agency on Friday 30 January 2015, ISIS acknowledged that its fighters have been defeated in the Syrian northern town of Kobani.[1] The battle for Kobani which began in late 2014, received much global media attention as over 200,000 Kurds from the town crossed the border into Turkey leading to the call for all Kurds to come to the rescue. Comparisons were made with the Nazi defeat in Stalingrad, which was the beginning of the end of the Third Reich. Since the ISIS declaration of the Caliphate back in June 2014, ISIS expanded its control and entered into many battles with rebel groups, al-Assad’s’ forces and the US air force. Analysing the loss of Kobani reveals ISIS is now on the defensive, but not defeated.
US airstrikes made the strategic difference in the defeat of ISIS in Kobani. In admitting defeat, ISIS fighters confirmed in Arabic: “the warplanes were bombarding us night and day. They bombarded everything, even motorcycles, we had to withdraw and the rats advanced.”[5] The US-led air assault began in Syria on September 23 2014, with Kobani the target of about a half-dozen airstrikes on average each day. More than 80% of all coalition airstrikes in Syria have been in or around the town. At one point in October 2014, the US air dropped bundles of weapons and medical supplies for Kurdish fighters — a first in the Syrian conflict.[6] Kobani is a small town on the border with Turkey and in the expectation of US air strikes ISIS did not conduct concentrated attacks, which would be ideal targets for US air strikes. But the pictures emerging from Kobani show a town flattened, with buildings laying derelict. This would indicate the town was bombed heavily from the air and in all likelihood indiscriminately. It was this aspect of the battle that appears to have broken the back of ISIS which led to the death of many of its commanders.
The ISIS onslaught of Kobani unified the various Kurds into a spirited defence of the town. Kurdish People’s Protection units (YPG) and Free Syrian Army fighters organised the defence of the town and numbered in the thousands. The massacres conducted by ISIS turned Kobani into the Kurdish ‘Stalingrad,’ becoming a symbol of Kurdish defiance. As a result the Kurds poured resources into the city to resist and repel ISIS. In October 2014 the arrival of heavily armed Kurdish peshmerga fighters from Iraq, neutralised ISIS’ artillery advantage, bringing key areas of Kobani under Kurdish control. The defeat in Kobani raises a strategic issue, how was ISIS able to defeat more heavily armed Iraqi force units in Iraq, repel a force 15 times its size in Mosul, but ultimately face defeat in Kobani by a much less capable force. At RO we have long questioned US military strikes in Iraq and in Mosul many commanders have confirmed they were ordered to leave Mosul rather than repel ISIS. The Kobani defeat shows ISIS is not as capable as it has propagated and its other high profile victories are questionable.
ISIS is currently on the defensive facing challenges in both iraq and Syria. ISIS is increasingly beleaguered as it faces multiple difficult fronts against rebels, Kurdish fighters and loyalists. Events in Iraq and Kobani has distracted ISIS in Deir el-Zour, allowing government forces to widen their perimeter and attempt to seize the city. The evolving situation in Iraq is also increasing the demand on ISIS’s limited fighters and resources, further spreading the group thin. Coalition air power has repeatedly struck the oil infrastructure controlled by ISIS, impacting its ability to finance its efforts. Also considerable number of reports point to dissent within the ranks and from the citizens forced to live under ISIS rule.[8] For the moment ISIS is on the retreat but it is not defeated, despite the loss of Kobani.
[2] http://www.cbsnews.com/news/latest-isis-video-showing-british-hostage-a-departure-from-others/[3] http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/555380/Kobani-Battle-Islamic-State-Jihadists
[4] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/kurdish-forces-take-back-kobani-from-islamic-state-10003604.html
[5] http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jan/31/isis-kobani-islamic-state-syria
[6] http://time.com/3691108/isis-syria-kobani-defeat/
[7] http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/kobani-ensnares-islamic-state#axzz3H18vJDFo
[8] http://aranews.net/2015/02/islamic-state-executes-prominent-members-planned-coup/





