US-backed Kurdish fighters have been effective against ISIS but could cause ethnic tensions
With the backing of US airstrikes, the Kurdish YPG militia has made significant gains against ISIS and has seized more than 10 villages.

The Kurds are gaining momentum against ISIS in the Islamic State's stronghold in northern Syria.
With the backing of US airstrikes, the Kurdish YPG militia has made significant gains against the militant group. The YPG has seized more than 10 villages from ISIS along the Turkish border and north of the militant group's de facto capital of Raqqa, according to Reuters.
ISIS has struck back at the Kurds. The jihadists carried out a brutal assault on the border city of Kobane and reclaimed the town of Ain Issa from the Kurds 30 miles north of Raqqa.
But the YPG's rapid advance has still thrown the extremists into a panic.
Following the YPG's gains, ISIS forces began digging defensive trenches around Raqqa, Reuters reports. ISIS spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani directly addressed the losses in a Ramadan audio broadcast stating that "God never gave the mujahideen a promise of victory every time."
Although the YPG has been effective in fighting ISIS, there's an important catch. A Kurdish surge could dislodge ISIS from certain areas while raising ethnic tensions in the region.
The YPG is first and foremost a left-wing Kurdish organization that has little interest in common with the predominantly conservative Arab and Turkmen societies that it is liberating from ISIS. The ISIS-controlled areas are also outside of the militia group's typical base of operations.
The YPG push has led to increased ethnic and religious tensions that could feed back into ISIS' recruiting methods, absent a clear endgame on the part of the Kurds and their supporters, including the US.
"I'm secular and I am an apostate, but if I have to, I will carry a weapon and join ISIS. I will not allow the demography of this area to change."
Concerns over ethnic cleansing and the settlement of Kurds in historically Turkmen and Arab areas, whether warranted or not, has also raised tensions within villages that the YPG has liberated. The Kurds do not have Sunni Arab partners that trust them. And the US has shown little evidence that it has a plan for the region as the YPG liberates non-Kurdish ISIS-held areas.
Some experts question whether the US has any idea of who or what should fill the region's formerly ISIS-ruled power vacuums.
"That Sunni alternative simply doesn't exist yet," Shadi Hamid, a fellow at the Brookings Institution's Center for Middle East Policy, told the Washington Post. "This is where the focus on quick wins becomes problematic. The US isn't thinking about what happens after ISIS is pushed out of an area."
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