What's in a name? Pentagon drops 'ISIL' for 'ISIS'

What's in a name? Pentagon drops 'ISIL' for 'ISIS'
The US Department of Defence has changed the terminology referring to Islamic State group from 'ISIL' to 'ISIS' to be consistent with Donald Trump's language in the January 28 directive.
2 min read
25 February, 2017
The change will make the Pentagon consistent with Trump's January 28 directive [Getty]

The US Department of Defence has produced a change of terminology in the war against the Islamic State group. 

The name preferred by the Obama administration – the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) – has been dropped. 

But the name favoured by President Donald Trump – the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has now been adopted by the Pentagon.

A memo dated February 13 from the office of Defence Secretary Jim Mattis says the switch to "ISIS" make the Pentagon "consistent with" Trump's language in the January 28 directive, in which he called for a new plan to defeat the militant group. 

When the Islamic State group swept east from Syria to grab large swaths of Iraqi territory in 2014, the world was divided over how to refer to the extremist group, which traces its roots to al-Qaeda in Iraq, which declared an Islamic State of Iraq in 2006.

In 2013 the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, renamed it the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham.

Al-Sham is an archaic word for a vaguely defined territory that includes what is now Syria, Lebanon, Israel, the Palestinian territories and Jordan.

The New Arab refers to it as the Islamic State group - to distinguish it from an internationally recognised state - or IS for short.

It is most often translated as either Syria - in the sense of a greater Syria that no longer exists - or as the Levant, the closest English term for the territory it describes and the term preferred by the Obama administration.

Al-Baghdadi later shortened the name to Islamic State, declaring that the territory under his control would be a caliphate, or Islamic state.

In English, the group's name was most commonly translated as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) or the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

In Iraq and other Arab states the militant group is usually called Daesh, an Arabic acronym corresponding to ISIS. The term has a mocking tone and is insulting to the militant group because it diminishes its claim to have revived the Islamic caliphate. 

It is also close to the words "dahesh" and "da'es," meaning "one who tramples," making it fodder for puns.

The New Arab refers to it as the Islamic State group - to distinguish it from an internationally recognised state - or IS for short.

Agencies contributed to this report.