What we know about ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the shadowy leader of the
Islamic State group who presided over its global jihad and became arguably the
world’s most wanted man, is believed dead after being targeted by a U.S.
military raid in Syria.
A U.S. official told The Associated Press late
Saturday that al-Baghdadi was targeted in Syria’s northwestern Idlib province.
The official said confirmation that the IS chief was killed in an explosion is
pending. No other details were available. The official was not authorized to
discuss the strike and spoke on condition of anonymity.
President Donald Trump teased a major announcement,
tweeting Saturday night that “Something very big has just happened!” A White
House spokesman, Hogan Gidley, would say only that the president would be
making a “major statement” at 9 a.m. ET Sunday.
If confirmed, the operation’s success could prove a
major boost for Trump. The recent pullback of U.S. troops he ordered from
northeastern Syria raised a storm of bipartisan criticism in Washington that
the militant group could regain strength, after it had lost vast stretches of
territory it had once controlled.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Syria war
monitor, reported an attack carried out by a squadron of eight helicopters
accompanied by a warplane belonging to the international coalition on positions
of the Hurras al-Deen, an al-Qaida-linked group, in the Barisha area north of
Idlib city, after midnight on Saturday. IS operatives are believed to be hiding
in the area, it said.
It said the helicopters targeted IS positions with
heavy strikes for about 120 minutes, during which jihadists fired at the
aircraft with heavy weapons. The Britain-based Observatory, which operates
through a network of activists on the ground, documented the death of 9 people
as a result of the coalition helicopter attack. It is not yet known whether
al-Baghdadi is one of them, it said, adding that the death toll is likely to
rise due to the large number of wounded.
Al-Baghdadi’s presence in the village, which is a
few kilometers away from the Turkish border, would come as a surprise, even if
some IS leaders are believed to have fled to Idlib after losing their last
territories in Syria to U.S.-allied Kurdish forces in March. The surrounding
areas are largely controlled by a rival of the Islamic State group — the
al-Qaida-linked Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS — although other jihadi groups
sympathetic to IS operate there. Unverified video circulated online by Syrian
groups appeared to support the Observatory claim that the operation occurred in
Barisha.
Al-Baghdadi has led IS for the last five years,
presiding over its ascendancy as it cultivated a reputation for beheadings and
attracted hundreds of thousands of followers to a sprawling and self-styled
caliphate in Iraq and Syria. He remained among the few IS commanders still at
large despite multiple claims in recent years about his death and even as his
so-called caliphate dramatically shrank, with many supporters who joined the
cause either imprisoned or jailed.
His exhortations were instrumental in inspiring
terrorist attacks in the heart of Europe and in the United States. Shifting
away from the airline hijackings and other mass-casualty attacks that came to
define al-Qaida, al-Baghdadi and other IS leaders supported smaller-scale acts
of violence that would be harder for law enforcement to prepare for and
prevent.
They encouraged jihadists who could not travel to
the caliphate to kill where they were, with whatever weapon they had at their
disposal. In the U.S., multiple extremists have pledged their allegiance to
al-Baghdadi on social media, including a woman who along with her husband
committed a 2015 massacre at a holiday party in San Bernardino, California.
With a $25 million U.S. bounty on his head, al-Baghdadi
has been far less visible in recent years, releasing only sporadic audio
recordings, including one just last month in which he called on members of the
extremist group to do all they could to free IS detainees and women held in
jails and camps.
The purported audio was his first public statement
since last April, when he appeared in a video for the first time in five years.
In 2014, he was a black-robed figure delivering a
sermon from the pulpit of Mosul’s Great Mosque of al-Nuri, his only known public
appearance. He urged Muslims around the world to swear allegiance to the
caliphate and obey him as its leader.
“It is a burden to accept this responsibility to be
in charge of you,” he said in the video. “I am not better than you or more
virtuous than you. If you see me on the right path, help me. If you see me on
the wrong path, advise me and halt me. And obey me as far as I obey God.”
Though at minimum a symbolic victory for Western
counterterrorism efforts, his death would have unknown practical impact on
possible future attacks. He had been largely regarded as a symbolic figurehead
of the global terror network, and was described as “irrelevant for a long time”
by a coalition spokesman in 2017.
Al-Baghdadi was born Ibrahim Awwad Ibrahim Ali
al-Badri al-Samarrai in 1971 in Samarra, Iraq, and adopted his nom de guerre
early on. Because of anti-U.S. militant activity, he was detained by U.S.
forces in Iraq and sent to Bucca prison in February 2004, according to
IS-affiliated websites.
He was released 10 months later, after which he
joined the al-Qaida branch in Iraq of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. He later assumed
control of the group, known at the time as the Islamic State of Iraq.
After Syria’s civil war erupted in 2011, al-Baghdadi
set about pursuing a plan for a medieval-style Islamic State, or caliphate. He
merged a group known as the Nusra Front, which initially welcomed moderate
Sunni rebels who were part of the uprising against Syrian President Bashar
Assad, with a new one known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
Al-Qaida’s central leadership refused to accept the takeover and broke with
al-Baghdadi.
Al-Baghdadi’s fighters captured a contiguous stretch
of territory across Iraq and Syria, including key cities, and in June 2014, it
announced its own state — or caliphate. Al-Baghdadi became the declared caliph
of the newly renamed Islamic State group. Under his leadership, the group
became known for macabre massacres and beheadings —often posted online on
militant websites — and a strict adherence to an extreme interpretation of
Islamic law.
Over the years, he has been reported multiple times
to have been killed, but none has been confirmed. In 2017, Russian officials
said there was a “high probability” he had been killed in a Russian airstrike on
the outskirts of Raqqa, but U.S. officials later said they believed he was
still alive.