BAGHDAD -- After months of losing ground in Iraq and Syria, the Islamic State group is showing signs of wear and tear, and opponents say they have seen an increase in desertions among the extremists.
But the jihadis appear to be lashing back with more terrorist and chemical attacks.
Under a stepped-up campaign of U.S.-led and Russian airstrikes, as well as ground assaults by forces in each country, the jihadis are estimated to have lost about 40 percent of their territory in Iraq and more than 20 percent in Syria.
At their highest point in the summer of 2014, the group had overrun nearly a third of each country, declaring a "caliphate" from northwestern Syria to the outskirts of Baghdad.
At that time, the extremists were riding high, known for their courage, experience, readiness to die and brutality. Those battling them on the ground now say they appear to be flagging.
"What we are witnessing is that Daesh are not as determined as they used to be," Lt. Col. Fares al-Bayoush, commander of a Syrian rebel faction, said, using an Arabic acronym to refer to IS. His 1,300-strong Fursan al-Haq Brigade has been fighting against IS and Syrian government forces for more than a year.
"Now there are members who surrender; there are some who defect. In the past, they used to come blow themselves up," he said.
A Palestinian-American member of IS recently gave himself up to Kurdish forces in northern Iraq, but so far, the reports of desertions are mostly anecdotal. Brett McGurk, President Barack Obama's envoy to the U.S.-led coalition fighting IS, said last week at a conference in northern Iraq that IS desertions have increased recently, and more are expected, but he did not provide figures.
Clint Watts, a fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, said IS is experiencing a phenomenon he's seen in other extremist groups that begin to lose territory.
"You've seen more and more reports of defectors just broadly, and you've also seen more reports of internal killings of so-called spies," Watts said. "As they lose ground and retract, you start to see these fractures emerge in the organization."
The IS setbacks began over a year ago, when the fighters were forced out of the northern Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani by Kurdish forces backed by U.S.-led airstrikes.
In December, the predominantly Kurdish U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF, under cover of coalition airstrikes, seized the Tishrin Dam that supplies much of northern Syria with electricity. In the weeks that followed, the forces gained control of more areas.
In all of 2015, the jihadis lost 14 percent of their territory in Syria, according to IHS, an analysis group that monitors the conflict. In the past three months, they lost another 8 percent, a sign the erosion is accelerating.
The IHS figure roughly matches an estimate of a 20 percent loss given this week by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.
In February, the SDF said it captured 927 square miles consisting of 315 villages including the IS stronghold of Shaddadeh, on the main road linking the Iraqi city of Mosul and the Syrian city of Raqqa, the de facto capital of the "caliphate." SDF spokesman Col. Talal Sillo said the command soon will meet to plan for another offensive in northern Syria.
In Iraq, IS territorial losses have been more gradual.
Coalition airstrikes had cleared the way for ground forces to reclaim towns and cities from Sinjar in the country's north to Ramadi in the west. The coalition estimates that between the launch of the air campaign in August 2014 and January 2016, IS has lost 8,100 to 9,200 square miles, about 40 percent of the Iraqi territory it once held.
Calls for a stepped-up campaign intensified after IS claimed responsibility for the Nov. 13 Paris attacks that left 130 dead and the Oct. 31 downing of a Russian jetliner from the Egyptian beach resort of Sharm el-Sheikh that killed all 224 on board.
Deadly attacks in Turkey by IS that killed scores of people also spurred Ankara to tighten its closing of the border, making it difficult for the extremists to cross into Syria.
In an effort to squeeze the group's finances, coalition and Russian warplanes in Syria began targeting IS oil assets in November. IS has had to cut salaries and benefits for fighters.
Last week, Iraqi, Syrian U.S. officials confirmed prominent IS military leader Omar al-Shishani died of his wounds from a U.S. airstrike in northeast Syria earlier this month. U.S. special forces recently captured the head of the IS unit researching chemical weapons in Iraq.
"As bad things start to happen, the less motivated, less disciplined, less radical elements of the force break and run," U.S. Army Col. Steve Warren said. "We're going to keep seeing this."
The United States estimates that as of last month, IS fields 19,000 to 25,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria -- down from an estimated 20,000 to 31,500 -- a number that was based on intelligence reports from May to August 2014. A U.S. official said the decrease reflects the combined effects of battlefield deaths, desertions, internal disciplinary actions, recruiting shortfalls and difficulties that foreign fighters face traveling to Syria.
Still, these developments do not necessarily make IS less of a threat.
In both Syria and Iraq, IS has launched some of its deadliest suicide attacks in recent weeks as well as a number of chemical weapons attacks. On Feb. 22, a triple suicide bombing in a Shiite suburb of the Syrian capital killed at least 83 people and wounded more than a hundred. In neighboring Iraq, a suicide truck bombing south of Baghdad killed 61 and wounded 95. In the northern Iraqi town of Taza, an IS chemical weapons attack last week killed one person and wounded more than 600.
IS also launched a coordinated assault on the northern Syrian border town of Tal Abyad and nearby villages. In days of fighting, 47 SDF fighters and 140 militants were killed, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition activist group that tracks all sides of the conflict.
Watts said that if IS can't use battlefield victories to rally its supporters, it will turn to terrorist attacks.
"In terms of being a conventional army that can take territory, they are less dangerous," Watts said. "But if your worry is regional and international terrorism they're going to be more dangerous."
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