ISIS confirms death of its leader, names new one
The Islamic State on
Thursday announced that it has a new leader, but provided little information on
the true identity or background of the man who will now oversee the global
terrorist organization.
The new leader, Abu
al-Hasan al-Hashimi al-Qurashi, was unveiled in an audio message released on
Islamic State social media accounts that also confirmed the death of the
group’s previous leader, who American officials say blew himself up during a
U.S. commando raid on his hide-out in northwestern Syria last month.
Mr. al-Qurashi takes the
reins of a terrorist group that is a shadow of its former self in terms of
members and power, but still causes havoc in poorly governed areas in Syria, Iraq,
parts of Africa and elsewhere.
In January, Islamic
State fighters carried out a daring attack on a prison run by a U.S.-backed
Kurdish militia in northeastern Syria with the aim of liberating their detained
comrades. Hundreds of attackers, prisoners and Kurdish militiamen were killed
in more than a week of fighting before the prison was brought back under
Kurdish control. It is still unclear how many prisoners managed to escape
during the violence.
A few days after the
prison battle ended, American commandos carried out a raid on a farmhouse in
northwestern Syria, far from the Islamic State’s traditional redoubt, aimed at
killing or capturing the man who then served as the group’s leader, Abu Ibrahim
al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi.
Mr. al-Qurayshi
detonated some explosives during the raid, U.S. officials said, killing himself
and others in the house.
The Islamic State did
not immediately comment on the raid and only confirmed the death of the former
leader in the audio message.
The message said that he
had designated his successor before he died, but otherwise offered scant
information about the new leader, providing neither his real name nor an image
of him, and making it hard to draw conclusions about his outlook or how he might
lead the group.
Withholding that
information will most likely diminish the chances that the new leader can be
hunted down and killed. Both of his predecessors were killed by U.S. commandos
in northwestern Syria, where they had been trying to live off the grid and
communicate with underlings only via trusted courier to avoid detection.
In recent years, the
Islamic State has gone from running a proto-state the size of Britain in Iraq
and Syria, to operating as a diffuse organization that carries out mostly unsophisticated
attacks in isolated parts of Iraq and Syria.
Though the group appears
to be at its lowest ebb in Iraq in years, terrorism experts caution that
governments have written ISIS off before, only to see it come roaring back when
conditions gave it an opening.