EXCLUSIVE: The Reference publishes excerpts from ‘Baghdadi… The Caliph of Terror’
A new book by journalist and author Sofia Amara, entitled ‘Baghdadi… The
Caliph of Terror”, which focuses on Daesh leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,
will be released on Oct. 3.
The book includes a series of interview with former terrorists who used
to have links with the terrorist organization, in addition to statements by
some members of Iraq’s military special forces and press reports.
In her book, Sofia shed the light on Baghdadi’s background and early
life.
Baghdadi, or Ibrahim Awad Ibrahim al-Badri, was born near Samarra, Iraq,
in 1971 as the third of four sons in
a poor Sunni family.
His high-school grades did not allow him to study law, he decided to join
the Iraqi army, moreover, a few months later, he was deemed unfit for military
service by the Iraqi military due to his nearsightedness.
As Baghdadi got accepted to receive education in Quranic Studies at the
Baghdad University, he met with many colleagues who later became members in
armed groups to fight the U.S. invasion in Iraq. According to Amara, Baghdadi
was not affected by his constant failures.
Ibrahim Awad learned the art of giving speeches and elocution as he
worked as a keeper at a mosque near his family house.
Being a young man, Ibrahim gathered a soccer team of people who used to
pray at this mosque, and instated himself captain of the team. He played good
soccer, but soon he would rage over missing an easy goal, therefore his friends
called him “Maradona”.
Politically, Baghdadi was loyal to Saddam Hussein, and defended him
during the Iraq War, this led him to spend some time in the Abu Ghraib prison
and Camp Bucca.
During his time as inmate, he was a disciplined and cooperative prisoner, even
as he played soccer before guards who were amazed by “Bucca’s Maradona”.
During that time, Baghdadi was planning
the strategy of building an Islamic State, according to one of his fellow
inmates, called Abi Ahmad, a former Daesh leader.
Anne Speckhard, a clinical psychologist and director of International
Center for the Study of Violent Extremism (ICSVE), who was assigned to set a
program to deter extremism at the camp, said she encountered prisoners who were
imprisoned just for being in a fire exchange scene.
Speckhard also added how security footages caught extremists teaching
inmates how to make bombs by drawing on the sand, not to mention many speeches
and writings that promoted terrorism. “And despite of the decision to separate
Qaeda leaders and dangerous extremists in separate cells, night Islamic trails
would be held to punish informants and U.S. supporters,… Camp Bucca was a real
school for terrorists.”
Another former terrorist, Abu Omar, a former IS member who was held
three years at Camp Bucca, said the camp served as the safest place to promote
extremism, describing it as the best service that the U.S. ever provided to
terrorists.
“Not only we were safe, we were also just a few hundred meters away from
Al Qaeda leaders, it really was the perfect environment to do this,” Abu Omar
added.
In 2017, an international coalition, led by the United States, initiated
an attack against Daesh to retake
the city of Mosul. It is believed that Daesh sacrificed 17 of its militias in suicide car bombings
to open a small passage for Baghdadi to escape.
In March 2015, Baghdadi received a spinal injury after a U.S. strike
that claimed the lives of three of his men. Iraqi Military Gen. Fader
Al-Barawry suggests that Baghdadi is hiding underground near Mosul and has
changed his features so that he could not be identified.
The Guardian reported that Baghdadi was located at least three time,
however, he remained out of reach.
The book, which reveals many aspects in Baghdadi’s life, gives us a detailed
image of Baghdadi who remains an unknown mystery to the world. The question is,
however, will terrorism end by the death of this terrorist?