ISIS just lost 'its most important back door'
"This is a devastating blow to ISIS' operations," Jonathan Schanzer, vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told Business Insider. "ISIS lost its most important back door to Turkey."
An unnamed US official told the Wall Street Journal something similar.
"[ISIS] was focusing so much on Ramadi and Beiji [in Iraq] they lost sight of the back door," the official said. "It is a pretty significant victory."
The relaxed border policies Turkey adopted between 2011-2014 enabled extremists who wished to travel to Syria and join the rebels in their fight against the regime of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.
Turkey officially ended its open border policy last year, but not before its southern frontier became a transit point for cheap oil, weapons, foreign fighters, and pillaged antiquities. Smuggling networks all along the nation's 565-mile border with Syria managed to emerge and flourish while the policy was in place, with the Islamic State (aka ISIS, ISIL, Daesh) being the main beneficiary recently.
"Syrian Kurds now control a contiguous 245-mile stretch of territory from Kobani east on the Syrian-Turkish border," WSJ reports.
Pipes, ammonium nitrate, and other bomb-making materials were being transported across Turkey's border into Tal Abyad by agents of ISIS while Turkish border guards looked the other way, Jamie Dettmer of The Daily Beast reported.
Schanzer noted that the fall of Tal Abyad was a sharp blow to ISIS operations, but it was by no means fatal, as ISIS has multiple "back doors" to Turkey and will likely try to open new supply lines in the coming weeks and months.
The US has tried to cut off ISIS' main sources of revenue with little success in the past: ISIS is one of the most well-funded terrorist organizations in history thanks to the tax base it has managed to establish in its vast swaths of conquered territory in Iraq and Syria - territory conquered, in part, using the weapons and fighters flowing across the Turkish border.
"The Turks have been less than cooperative," Schanzer noted. "The border between Turkey and Syria has remained incredibly loose."
Still, "should anti-ISIL forces continue to hold the city, there is the potential for a significant disruption of ISIL's flow of foreign fighters, illicit goods, and other illegal activity from Turkey into northern Syria and Iraq," Edgar Vasquez, a spokesperson for the U.S. State Department's Near Eastern Affairs Bureau, told WSJ.
This is especially true given ISIS' financial dependence on the resources it steals from conquered territories. Without fighters and weapons, ISIS cannot expand, and without expanding, it cannot make money.
In this way, one of ISIS greatest assets - its ability to plunder resources - might also be its weakness.
"The weakness of ISIS' strategy is that in order for it to continue to bring in additional resources, it needs to continue to expand," Schanzer added. "But the further they stray from their core logistical bases, the less able they will be to defend them."
Michael B. Kelley contributed to this report.