Remnants of the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) militant group are exploiting a massive security gap created by a lack of coordination between federal Iraqi forces and the semiautonomous Kurdistan region’s Peshmerga.
Leaders in Baghdad and Erbil had been working to create joint operations rooms, in negotiations that were encouraged and facilitated in part by the U.S. military, but those efforts have stalled in the aftermath of the American assassination of Iranian Quds Force commander Qassim Soleimani and Iraqi paramilitary leader Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis in January.
To make matters worse, gangs of criminals are also adopting some tactics of IS insurgents to extort locals living in poorly secured towns and villages in the disputed territories, a belt of land claimed by both the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and federal Iraq.
In an interview inside the KRG Ministry of Peshmerga, where he runs day-to-day business as the Secretary General, Jabar Yawar said that, in order to fight both insurgents and criminal gangs, security forces on all sides first need to develop a coherent, shared understanding of how they will fill the vacuum.
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