The US Department of Defense announced the final ISIS stronghold in Iraq has collapsed as more than 1,000 starving fighters surrender to US-backed Iraqi troops.
The ISIS militants, who swore to “fight or die,” offered weak resistance as US and Iraqi forces entered Hawijah. “The speed at which the enemy gave up surprised me,” Lieutenant General Paul Funk told USA Today. “They’re coming out with their hands up, putting their weapons down – full scale surrender. It’s a growing trend.”
“What we are hearing (from those who surrendered) is, ‘Our leaders have abandoned us, we haven’t been fed, we haven’t been paid,’” Funk said.
Kurdish officials told the New York Times that the terrorists “put up no fight at all, other than planting bombs and booby traps.” According to the Times, some ISIS commanders encouraged their subordinates to surrender to Kurds as opposed to other opponents who would treat them harshly.
The surrender comes just days after ISIS made questionable claims that the Las Vegas shooter was one of their followers. The US Defense Department believes this claim to be a desperate attempt to appear powerful as the terrorist organization continues to unravel.
Capt. Ali Muhammed Syan, a chief interrogator in Dibis, said he can’t explain why such a large force suddenly surrendered en masse. “Maybe it’s some deal,” he said to the Times. “Maybe it’s just bad morale, I don’t know.”
After the fall of Hawijah, ISIS controls little more than a thin strip of land along Syria’s border. While the ranks of ISIS fighters grow thin, Funk believes the war isn’t over yet. “It won’t be easy and won’t be quick,” he said.