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The Caliphate has been crushed, but ISIS is by no means dead. Here’s the latest.

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(Jerusalem, Israel) — Tonight, I fly back to the U.S. to prepared to launch my new political thriller, The Kremlin Conspiracy. But before I pivot to Russia, I wanted to update you on the fight against the Islamic State. 

After all, my last three novels — The Third Target, The First Hostage and Without Warning — all dealt with the threat of ISIS capturing chemical weapons in Syria and plotting genocidal attacks against the U.S., Israel, Jordan, the Palestinians and Egypt.

What’s more, a year ago I asked McLaughlin & Associates, a respected U.S. polling first whose clients included the Trump campaign, to conduct a survey to understand how Americans were viewing the war against ISIS. What we found was sobering:

How much has changed in just twelve months.

The new administration — working closely with its Arab and Kurdish allies — has:

The Caliphate in Iraq and Syria is, effectively, no more. That’s the good news.

The bad news is that the war against ISIS is far from over.

“Brett McGurk, the special envoy to the coalition fighting the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, told reporters at the State Department just before Christmas that the U.S. had made significant progress against the extremist network in 2017, but there is still work to do,” reported U.S. News & World Report.

“Nobody who works on these problems would tell you we’re popping champagne corks or anything,” said McGurk, who began his position during the Obama administration and has continued under Trump. “This is not over, there is a long way to go.”

Bottom line: the West — and Washington — dare not become complacent. Much progress has been made in the battle to crush the Caliphate. But ISIS is not dead. We must stay on the offense, lest these jihadists blindside us, without warning.

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