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These maps show what ISIS has achieved in the last year

This week's advances by the Islamic State (aka ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh) in Iraq and Syria are some of the most successful campaigns for the extremist group since it rampaged into Iraq last summer.

A year ago, violent ISIS militants were attempting to expand their caliphate in Iraq and Syria and preparing to overtake Iraq's second-largest city of Mosul.

Within the last week, ISIS gained significant territory in Anbar, Iraq's largest province, including the provincial capital of Ramadi. The group also took the ancient city of Palmyra in Syria.

Here's how Syria looks compared to last year:

isis map syria 1 year
isis map syria 1 year

(Courtesy of Emmanuel Pene)

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And this map shows the logistical significance of Palmyra:

Iraq isn't looking any better

ISIS just captured the last border crossing between Syria and Iraq, opening up more possibilities for the mobile militants.

"This is a very big threat to Baghdad. If [ISIS] controls Ramadi and Anbar, it gives them a big morale boost," Iraqi General Najim Abed al-Jabouri told The Daily Beast. "The road between Syria and Ramadi is open, so they can always send more fighters to Ramadi."

"It looks like in Anbar it’s open season," Jonathan Schanzer, vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told Business Insider.

Here's what Iraq and Syria together look like now:

ISIS Islamic State Iraq Syria map
ISIS Islamic State Iraq Syria map

(Reuters)

"Simply put, the Islamic State is, or is on the verge of becoming, what it claims to be, a state," wrote David Kilcullen, former senior advisor to General David Petraeus.

Two troubling victories

The fall of Ramadi has been followed by a stream of analysis saying the US strategy in Iraq, and its now 11-month-old military campaign against ISIS, is failing.

Ramadi is a little more than fifty miles away from Baghdad, and its capture grants ISIS a clear route to transport supplies and militants toward the heart of Iraq.

ramadi baghdad
ramadi baghdad

(Google Maps)

Shortly after the capture of Ramadi, the historic Syrian city of Palmyra fell to ISIS — along with its UNESCO World Heritage Site and many valuable artifacts.

Palmyra
Palmyra

(SANA via AP) This photo released on May 17, 2015, by the Syrian official news agency SANA shows ancient Roman city of Palmyra, northeast of Damascus.

Schanzer said that ISIS will make a significant amount of its money looting historical sites and selling antiquities on the black market.

"[Syrian forces] wanted to defend this area ... they even tried to. But if that's the best that they can do when they try, then the country is lost," a government official who fled Palmyra for Damascus told The Guardian.

Meanwhile, Obama met with top national-security advisers earlier this week to review the US strategy in the Middle East. All signs point to it being unlikely that he'll make any big changes or commit ground troops to the fight.

Pamela Engel and Jeremy Bender contributed to this report.

NOW WATCH: This air base in Qatar carries out American airstrikes in Iraq and Syria



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