ISIS is turning US Humvees into Iraq's worst nightmare
In an ironic twist of fate, more than two thirds of the Humvees that the US government supplied to Iraq to fight terrorists has ended up in the hands of ISIS.
And the militant group has not wasted any time in converting those vehicles into one of its most deadly and nightmarish tools, Sean D. Naylor reports for Foreign Policy.
According to Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, ISIS has in its control approximately 2,300 armored US Humvees. The majority of those vehicles were seized after ISIS overran Mosul in June 2014.
These vehicles were then sent back over the border to Syria to help ISIS solidify its foothold there, as well as being used in further attacks against Iraqi forces. The Kurds are now concerned that the same will happen to them.
More US made Humvees captured by ISIS in #Mosul. They're working fine. Already transferred 2 ISIS territory in Syria pic.twitter.com/TpZsnYmqdN
- Jenan Moussa (@jenanmoussa) June 10, 2014
The presence of armored Humvees in the hands of ISIS is ample cause for concern: The Humvees were specifically created by the US to be able to carry high amounts of weight and sustain small arms fire - qualities that ISIS has found makes the vehicles perfect for suicide bombings.
ISIS has used these bomb-laden Humvees in waves of suicide bombings across both Syria and Iraq, targeting strategic locations varying from Syrian military bases to the Iraqi provincial capital of Ramadi, which fell to the militants at the end of May.
According to The Soufan Group, ISIS used upward of 30 car bombs in its Ramadi offensive. Many of these were the uparmored US Humvees and at least some of those bombs were large enough to level an entire city block.
Reuters
These Humvee suicide bombs are large and powerful enough to plow through static Iraqi defensive positions before detonating. Attacks such as these drastically lower the moral of Iraqi troops and make defensive positions almost impossible to hold without specialized anti-tank weaponry.
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