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Hamr332 (bh3z2ztg@naver.com )   (¿¬¶ôó : bh44zz2j.com )      12¿ù 23ÀÏ 17½Ã 54ºÐ  Á¶È¸¼ö: 116
At his base in Sulaimaniya ¼öÁ¤ »èÁ¦
At his base in Sulaimaniya, nestled in the hills of the Kurdistan region of Northern Iraq, he painted a picture of an organisation that has spent the past 12 months rebuilding from the ruins of the caliphate.

















"We see the ·¹Çø®Ä«½Ã°è=·¹Çø®Ä«½Ã°è
activities are increasing now, and we think the rebuilding phase is over," said Mr Talabany, who heads the Zanyari Agency, one of two intelligence agencies in Iraqi Kurdistan.

A different kind of IS has emerged, he ½½¸²½ºÅĵå³Ã¿ÂÁ¤¼ö±â·»Å»=¿õÁøÄÚ¿þÀÌ ½½¸² ½ºÅÄµå ³Ã¿ÂÁ¤¼ö±â·»Å» ¿Â¼ö±â°â¿ë / CHP-5710L°¡¼ººñ
says, which no longer wants to control any territory to avoid being a target. Instead - like their predecessors in al-Qaeda before them - the extremists have gone underground, in Iraq's Hamrin Mountains.

"This is the hub for ISIS [Islamic Å©·ÒÇÏÃ÷¿©ÀÚÁö°©=Å©·ÒÇÏÃ÷¿©ÀÚÁö°©
State group] right now," said Mr Talabany. "It's a long range of mountains, and very difficult for the Iraqi army to control. There are a lot of hide-outs and caves."

He warned that IS would be ´ä·Ê¶±
nourished by the current unrest in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, and would exploit the sense of alienation among their fellow Sunni Muslims - a minority community. In Iraq, this is a familiar and bloody pattern.

"If we have political unrest," he said, "this is Heaven or Christmas come early for ISIS."

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