Öz
From 2013 until the winter of 2016, ISIS has been in confrontation with
Iraqi, Syrian, and Turkish security forces, rival Free Syrian Army, Kurdish
Peshmerga fighters, as well as Russian, Iranian and United States led
Coalition forces. The group’s skill was confirmed by the seizure of crucial
provinces in Syria and the quick collapse of Iraqi forces in Mosul and
elsewhere in northern Iraq, under the determined assault of outnumbered
fighters in the years 2014 and the beginning of 2015. ISIS’s clearance of
the Sunni areas of the central Iraq to the west and north of Baghdad and
the threat to the Kurdish regional areas alarmed the governments across
the whole Middle East and the Western powers, particularly in 2015, and
during that period, it is generally feared that Saudi Arabia and Jordan might
be the next ISIS targets. However, in the year 2016, the strong position of
ISIS has declined in both Syria and Iraq particularly immediately after the
intervention of Turkish Armed Forces to the Syrian territory against ISIS
and the re-organization of the Iraqi Army under the consultancy of United
States advisors.
In Middle East, ISIS marks a new threat to the regional security order, at
a time of Arab Spring uprisings within the Arab societies and creeping
sectarianism fueled mainly by the geostrategic rivalry between Shia and
Sunni states of the region. ISIS not only threatens the survival of the people
from autocratic regimes, but also the stability of neighboring countries. For
military events on the ground to go beyond progress in resolving conflicts
and addressing problems of which ISIS is a symptom would not form a
development as far as international security is concerned. To the extent
that events in Syria and Iraq do have something to do with a threat of
terrorism in the West, that threat will depend not so much on how quickly
ISIS expires but rather on what is left after its expiration. Adapting to the
new peaceful environment and solving Iraq and Syria problems by mutual
understanding will empower the regional countries to limit the spread of
this condition. Failure to do so will not only result in a durable threat from
ISIS to the region as well as the western counties, but also flowing threats
that rise because of continuing challenges to state structures in the Middle
East and human security to the democracies in the West.