http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/09/16/world/middleeast/how-isis-works.html?_r=0
The jihadist group has oil revenues, arms and organization, controls vast stretches of Syria and Iraq and aspires to statehood. UPDATED September 16, 2014
Organization
The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has a detailed structure that encompasses many functions and jurisdictions, according to ISIS documents seized by Iraqi forces and seen by American officials and Hashim Alhashimi, an Iraqi researcher. Many of its leaders are former officers from Saddam Hussein’s long-disbanded army who augmented their military training with terrorist techniques during years of fighting American troops. RELATED ARTICLE »
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the self-proclaimed caliph of ISIS, has two deputies. One is responsible for Syria and the other for Iraq.
Leadership council
Mr. Baghdadi relies on a number of advisers with direct access to him. Members of this council help handle religious differences, order executions and ensure that policies conform to ISIS doctrine.
Cabinet
Managers oversee departments like finance, security, media, prisoners and recruitment.
Local leaders
At least a dozen deputies across Iraq and Syria report to the deputy of each country. Many of these officials were military officers during Saddam Hussein’s rule.
Sources: Jasmine Opperman, Terrorism Research & Analysis Consortium; Hisham Alhashimi. Photograph by The Associated Press.
Territory
ISIS has rapidly expanded its control over Iraq and Syria by seizing towns and cities near major supply routes, critical infrastructure and border crossings.
AnaFallujaMosulMosul
Organization
The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has a detailed structure that encompasses many functions and jurisdictions, according to ISIS documents seized by Iraqi forces and seen by American officials and Hashim Alhashimi, an Iraqi researcher. Many of its leaders are former officers from Saddam Hussein’s long-disbanded army who augmented their military training with terrorist techniques during years of fighting American troops. RELATED ARTICLE »
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the self-proclaimed caliph of ISIS, has two deputies. One is responsible for Syria and the other for Iraq.
Leadership council
Mr. Baghdadi relies on a number of advisers with direct access to him. Members of this council help handle religious differences, order executions and ensure that policies conform to ISIS doctrine.
Cabinet
Managers oversee departments like finance, security, media, prisoners and recruitment.
Local leaders
At least a dozen deputies across Iraq and Syria report to the deputy of each country. Many of these officials were military officers during Saddam Hussein’s rule.
Sources: Jasmine Opperman, Terrorism Research & Analysis Consortium; Hisham Alhashimi. Photograph by The Associated Press.
Territory
ISIS has rapidly expanded its control over Iraq and Syria by seizing towns and cities near major supply routes, critical infrastructure and border crossings.
AnaFallujaMosulMosul
DamQaimRaqqaRutbaSinjarBaijiBaqubaHadithaKirkukTikritIRAQSYRIAJORDANTURKEYIRANKUWAITDamascusBaghdadAleppoHamaHomsErbilBasraKarbalaNajaf
ISIS-controlled places
Areas under full control
Areas of recurring attacks
Sparsely populated areas
Sources: Caerus Associates; IHS Jane’s; Institute for the Study of War; Soufan Group; (control areas as of Sept. 9)
Over the summer, the group pressed deeper into Syria, regaining some territory it had lost to other rebel groups and capturing several government military bases. It is still trying to consolidate its control along the border between Iraq and Syria.
ISIS fighters experienced some setbacks in Iraq, where American airstrikes helped Iraqi and Kurdish forces reclaim the Mosul Dam and the Turkmen city of Amerli.
Financing
Millions of dollars in oil revenue have made ISIS one of the wealthiest terror groups in history. Experts estimate the value of the output from the dozen or so oil fields and refineries under its control in Iraq and Syria at $1 million to $2 million a day. RELATED ARTICLE »
Oil fields Oil fields controlled by ISIS
TURKEY
100 miles
IRAQI
KURDISTAN
IRAN
Mosul
Erbil
Raqqa
Aleppo
Iraq-Turkey
pipeline
Omar
oil field
Kirkuk
IRAQ
Baniyas
Tartus
Baiji oil
refinery
Euphrates
Homs
Tigris
SYRIA
LEBANON
Damascus
Baghdad
Falluja
Rutba
Sources: Brookings Doha Center; Caerus Associates; Energy Information Administration; International Energy Agency; Iraq Oil Report; Platts
The group controls many of Syria’s eastern oil fields. In July, ISIS fighters took control of the country's largest oil field, Omar, which was producing about 30,000 barrels a day when it was fully functioning. Recently it was producing about a third of that or less.
ISIS expanded its attacks into Iraq’s oil-producing areas in June, and an August sweep into the Kurdish region gave it access to more of the country’s oil assets. Experts estimate that the Iraqi oil fields under ISIS control may produce 25,000 to 40,000 barrels of oil a day — worth a minimum of $1.2 million in the underground market.
Governing
When it seizes a city, ISIS keeps select services operating while using brute force to impose its vision of a fundamentalist Islamic state. Religious police make sure that shops close during Muslim prayers and that women cover their hair and faces in public. Public spaces are walled off with heavy metal fences topped with the black flags of ISIS. People accused of disobeying the law are punished by public executions or amputations. At the same time, ISIS keeps markets, bakeries and gas stations functioning.
ISIS-controlled places
Areas under full control
Areas of recurring attacks
Sparsely populated areas
Sources: Caerus Associates; IHS Jane’s; Institute for the Study of War; Soufan Group; (control areas as of Sept. 9)
Over the summer, the group pressed deeper into Syria, regaining some territory it had lost to other rebel groups and capturing several government military bases. It is still trying to consolidate its control along the border between Iraq and Syria.
ISIS fighters experienced some setbacks in Iraq, where American airstrikes helped Iraqi and Kurdish forces reclaim the Mosul Dam and the Turkmen city of Amerli.
Financing
Millions of dollars in oil revenue have made ISIS one of the wealthiest terror groups in history. Experts estimate the value of the output from the dozen or so oil fields and refineries under its control in Iraq and Syria at $1 million to $2 million a day. RELATED ARTICLE »
Oil fields Oil fields controlled by ISIS
TURKEY
100 miles
IRAQI
KURDISTAN
IRAN
Mosul
Erbil
Raqqa
Aleppo
Iraq-Turkey
pipeline
Omar
oil field
Kirkuk
IRAQ
Baniyas
Tartus
Baiji oil
refinery
Euphrates
Homs
Tigris
SYRIA
LEBANON
Damascus
Baghdad
Falluja
Rutba
Sources: Brookings Doha Center; Caerus Associates; Energy Information Administration; International Energy Agency; Iraq Oil Report; Platts
The group controls many of Syria’s eastern oil fields. In July, ISIS fighters took control of the country's largest oil field, Omar, which was producing about 30,000 barrels a day when it was fully functioning. Recently it was producing about a third of that or less.
ISIS expanded its attacks into Iraq’s oil-producing areas in June, and an August sweep into the Kurdish region gave it access to more of the country’s oil assets. Experts estimate that the Iraqi oil fields under ISIS control may produce 25,000 to 40,000 barrels of oil a day — worth a minimum of $1.2 million in the underground market.
Governing
When it seizes a city, ISIS keeps select services operating while using brute force to impose its vision of a fundamentalist Islamic state. Religious police make sure that shops close during Muslim prayers and that women cover their hair and faces in public. Public spaces are walled off with heavy metal fences topped with the black flags of ISIS. People accused of disobeying the law are punished by public executions or amputations. At the same time, ISIS keeps markets, bakeries and gas stations functioning.
Food distribution near Aleppo.
Distribution of cooking gas in Deir al-Zour.
Destruction of an unapproved religious site.
A member of the ISIS religious police.
Source: ISIS videos posted online
Military
The Central Intelligence Agency believes that ISIS has between 20,000 and 31,500 fighters in Iraq and Syria and estimates that 15,000 of the jihadists are foreign recruits.
The origins of ISIS’s foreign recruits
Sweden
Russia
Britain
Canada
Germany
Ukraine
Kazakhstan
France
United
States
Turkey
Syria
China
Afghanistan
Tunisia
Iraq
Pakistan
Libya
Morocco
Egypt
Saudi
Arabia
Sudan
Somalia
KEY
Indonesia
50
100
500
1,500 fighters
Australia
Dotted lines represent the low end of a range.
Sources: C.I.A.; Peter Neumann, King's College London; the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence; Soufan Group
The largest blocs of foreign fighters come from nearby Muslim countries, like Tunisia and Saudi Arabia. Smaller contingents come from countries as far away and disparate as Belgium, China, Russia and the United States.
Weapons
ISIS has stolen hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of weapons and equipment from Iraqi and Syrian military installations. It has also intercepted supplies en route to Syrian rebel groups from foreign governments. Conflict Armament Research, a private firm that investigates arms trafficking, has tracked small arms and rockets used by ISIS that appear to have been provided to other combatants by Saudi Arabia and the United States.
Among the weapons that Conflict Armament Research examined were M16 and M4 rifles stamped “Property of U.S. Govt.” Such weapons are also in the hands of irregular Shiite forces in Iraq, where the United States provided hundreds of thousands of small arms to supportive forces during its long occupation.
Conflict Armament Research found M79 antitank rockets from the former Yugoslavia that were identical to M79 rockets provided by Saudi Arabia to rebels in Syria.
Sources: Conflict Armament Research; IHS Jane's
Reporting from Iraq and Jordan by TIM ARANGO, SUADAD AL-SALHY, C.J. CHIVERS, BEN HUBBARD, ROD NORDLAND and ALISSA RUBIN
By Gregor Aisch, Joe Burgess, C. J. Chivers, Alicia Parlapiano, Sergio Peçanha, Archie Tse, Derek Watkins and Karen Yourish
Distribution of cooking gas in Deir al-Zour.
Destruction of an unapproved religious site.
A member of the ISIS religious police.
Source: ISIS videos posted online
Military
The Central Intelligence Agency believes that ISIS has between 20,000 and 31,500 fighters in Iraq and Syria and estimates that 15,000 of the jihadists are foreign recruits.
The origins of ISIS’s foreign recruits
Sweden
Russia
Britain
Canada
Germany
Ukraine
Kazakhstan
France
United
States
Turkey
Syria
China
Afghanistan
Tunisia
Iraq
Pakistan
Libya
Morocco
Egypt
Saudi
Arabia
Sudan
Somalia
KEY
Indonesia
50
100
500
1,500 fighters
Australia
Dotted lines represent the low end of a range.
Sources: C.I.A.; Peter Neumann, King's College London; the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence; Soufan Group
The largest blocs of foreign fighters come from nearby Muslim countries, like Tunisia and Saudi Arabia. Smaller contingents come from countries as far away and disparate as Belgium, China, Russia and the United States.
Weapons
ISIS has stolen hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of weapons and equipment from Iraqi and Syrian military installations. It has also intercepted supplies en route to Syrian rebel groups from foreign governments. Conflict Armament Research, a private firm that investigates arms trafficking, has tracked small arms and rockets used by ISIS that appear to have been provided to other combatants by Saudi Arabia and the United States.
Among the weapons that Conflict Armament Research examined were M16 and M4 rifles stamped “Property of U.S. Govt.” Such weapons are also in the hands of irregular Shiite forces in Iraq, where the United States provided hundreds of thousands of small arms to supportive forces during its long occupation.
Conflict Armament Research found M79 antitank rockets from the former Yugoslavia that were identical to M79 rockets provided by Saudi Arabia to rebels in Syria.
Sources: Conflict Armament Research; IHS Jane's
Reporting from Iraq and Jordan by TIM ARANGO, SUADAD AL-SALHY, C.J. CHIVERS, BEN HUBBARD, ROD NORDLAND and ALISSA RUBIN
By Gregor Aisch, Joe Burgess, C. J. Chivers, Alicia Parlapiano, Sergio Peçanha, Archie Tse, Derek Watkins and Karen Yourish
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