Two Years after Losing Baghouz, ISIS Regroups in Deserts, Caves

Smoke rises in the village of Baghouz in northeastern Syria, after an airstrike staged by the US-led International Coalition on March 3, 2019. (AFP)
Smoke rises in the village of Baghouz in northeastern Syria, after an airstrike staged by the US-led International Coalition on March 3, 2019. (AFP)
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Two Years after Losing Baghouz, ISIS Regroups in Deserts, Caves

Smoke rises in the village of Baghouz in northeastern Syria, after an airstrike staged by the US-led International Coalition on March 3, 2019. (AFP)
Smoke rises in the village of Baghouz in northeastern Syria, after an airstrike staged by the US-led International Coalition on March 3, 2019. (AFP)

It was around this time in 2019 that ISIS lost its final holdout in Syria. The terror group fought fiercely but was ultimately defeated and driven out of the eastern village of Baghouz, the last sliver of territory left of a violent “caliphate” that once was the size of the UK.

Two years later, concerns of an ISIS resurgence are increasing. Was the terrorist organization truly defeated? What is the status of its leader, branches and lone wolf recruits?

After crushing ISIS in Baghouz, then US President Donald Trump declared that the organization was “100 percent” defeated.

Trump's claim sparked wide speculation. Many questioned that he might have been quick to boast about the end of ISIS just like President George W. Bush had rushed in 2003 to declare “mission accomplished” in Iraq with the downfall of Saddam Hussein.

Even though Saddam was taken out of the picture, the US found itself sucked into an Iraqi quagmire that cost it the lives of thousands of its soldiers.

The power vacuum left behind by Saddam’s defeat was seized by anti-US armed groups like Iran-linked Shiite militias and Sunni factions dominated by Al-Qaeda.

US withdrawal from Iraq in 2011 enabled Al-Qaeda, through its “Islamic State in Iraq” offshoot, to regain momentum.

The terror group quickly expanded across Iraqi cities and spilled over into neighboring Syria, where chaos that followed the revolution against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad presented a unique opportunity for strategic land grabs.

It is still early to judge if Trump’s declaration of ISIS’ defeat was rushed, especially since the group had officially lost its “caliphate” and was chased into deserts and mountains.

Today, operations staged by ISIS in Syria and Iraq suggest that the group is in the process of reorganizing its ranks in caves and desert stretches, but also go to show that it still hasn’t reached the capacity for leaving its hideouts and overrunning cities.

Although UN estimates place the number of remaining ISIS fighters in Syria and Iraq at about 10,000, it is clear that the organization has not yet decided to move to the stage of trying to launch attacks on cities and large towns.

Instead, ISIS is limiting its activity to hit-and-run attacks, bombings and assassinations.

It seems that the terrorist organization is aware that attacking cities and towns is more of a suicide mission than an expansion effort. Russian and US air forces in the region would swiftly eliminate any of its assaulting or retreating units.

While it appears that ISIS in Syria and Iraq is currently still in the process of regrouping, the image of the organization's branches around the world appears somewhat muddled. Some are successful and expanding, while others are incurring heavy losses.

In Libya, ISIS suffered a severe setback in 2017, after it lost the thousands of fighters it had gathered in the city of Sirte, its capital on the coast of the Mediterranean. It fought for seven months but was eventually defeated.

Since then, ISIS's presence has been confined to tiny outposts deep in the southern deserts of the North African nation. Despite managing to stage a series of offensives, these outposts have been weakened greatly.

In Tunisia, ISIS failed in its venture to establish an “emirate” in the southern Ben Gardane region. The group’s activity is currently limited to mountainous areas near borders with Algeria.

In Algeria, security forces managed to eradicate the local ISIS branch, branded “Caliphate Soldiers” in 2014.

In the Sinai Peninsula, ISIS offshoots were faced by a large-scale military campaign by the Egyptian army that targeted the organization’s hideouts. Despite the apparent weakening of ISIS in Sinai, the terrorist group still announces from time to time the killing of people suspected of collaborating with the security forces.



Deaf Palestinian Uses Social Media to Highlight Gaza’s Struggles Through Sign Language 

Hearing-impaired Palestinian influencer Basem Al-Habel, who turned to social media to document the war in Gaza through sign language, reaching a wide range of followers from both inside and outside of the enclave, films himself in Gaza City August 5, 2025.(Reuters)
Hearing-impaired Palestinian influencer Basem Al-Habel, who turned to social media to document the war in Gaza through sign language, reaching a wide range of followers from both inside and outside of the enclave, films himself in Gaza City August 5, 2025.(Reuters)
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Deaf Palestinian Uses Social Media to Highlight Gaza’s Struggles Through Sign Language 

Hearing-impaired Palestinian influencer Basem Al-Habel, who turned to social media to document the war in Gaza through sign language, reaching a wide range of followers from both inside and outside of the enclave, films himself in Gaza City August 5, 2025.(Reuters)
Hearing-impaired Palestinian influencer Basem Al-Habel, who turned to social media to document the war in Gaza through sign language, reaching a wide range of followers from both inside and outside of the enclave, films himself in Gaza City August 5, 2025.(Reuters)

Basem Al-Habel stood amongst the ruins of Gaza, with people flat on the floor all around him as bullets flew, and filmed himself using sign language to explain the dangers of the war to fellow deaf Palestinians and his followers on social media.

Al-Habel, 30, who describes himself as a "deaf journalist in Gaza" on his Instagram account, says he wants to raise more awareness of the conflict -- from devastating Israeli air strikes to the starvation now affecting most of the population -- by informing Palestinians and people abroad with special needs.

Bombarded by Israel for nearly two years, many Gazans complain the world does not hear their voices despite mass suffering with a death toll that exceeds 60,000 people, according to Gaza health authorities in the demolished enclave.

"I wished to get my voice out to the world and the voices of the deaf people who cannot speak or hear, to get their voice out there, so that someone can help us," he said through his friend and interpreter Mohammed Moshtaha, who he met during the war.

"I tried to help, to film and do a video from here and there, and publish them so that we can make our voices heard in the world."

Al-Habel has an Instagram following of 141,000. His page, which shows him in a flak jacket and helmet, features images of starving, emaciated children and other suffering.

He films a video then returns to a tent to edit -- one of the many where Palestinians have sought shelter and safety during the war, which erupted when Hamas-led fighters attacked Israel in October 2023, drawing massive retaliation.

Al-Habel produced images of people collecting flour from the ground while he used sign language to explain the plight of Gazans, reinforcing the view of a global hunger monitor that has warned a famine scenario is unfolding.

"As you can see, people are collecting flour mixed with sand," he communicated.

Al-Habel and his family were displaced when the war started. They stayed in a school with tents.

"There was no space for a person to even rest a little. I stayed in that school for a year and a half," he explained.

Al-Habel is likely to be busy for some time. There are no signs of a ceasefire on the horizon despite mediation efforts.

Israel's political security cabinet approved a plan early on Friday to take control of Gaza City, as the country expands its military operations despite intensifying criticism at home and abroad over the war.

"We want this situation to be resolved so that we can all be happy, so I can feed my children, and life can be beautiful," said Al-Habel.