The key moments in the rise and fall of the ISIS organization
The ISIS group erupted from the chaos of Syria and
Iraq’s conflicts and swiftly did what no Islamic militant group had done
before, conquering a giant stretch of territory and declaring itself a
“caliphate.”
Its territorial rule, which at its height in 2014
stretched across nearly a third of both Syria and Iraq, ended with a last stand
by several hundred of its militants at a tiny Syrian village on the banks of
the Euphrates near the border with Syria.
Here are the key moments in
the rise and fall of the ISIS group:
Oct. 26 al-Baghdadi
is believed dead after being targeted by a U.S. military raid in Syria.
April 2013 — Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of
al-Qaida’s branch in Iraq, announces the merger of his group with al-Qaida’s
franchise in Syria, forming the ISISin Iraq and the Levant and expanding his
reach into neighboring Syria.
2014
January — Al-Baghdadi’s forces overrun the city of
Fallujah in Iraq’s western Anbar province and parts of the nearby provincial
capital of Ramadi. In Syria, they seize sole control of the city of Raqqa after
driving out rival Syrian rebel factions, and it becomes their de facto capital.
February — Al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri disavows
al-Baghdadi after the Iraqi militant ignores his demands that IS leave Syria.
June — IS captures Mosul, Iraqi’s second-largest
city, and pushes south as Iraqi forces crumble, eventually capturing Saddam
Hussein’s hometown of Tikrit and reaching the outskirts of Baghdad. When they
threaten Shiite holy sites, Iraq’s top Shiite cleric issues a call to arms, and
masses of volunteers, largely backed and armed by Iran, join militias.
June 29 — The group renames itself the ISIS and
declares the establishment of a self-styled “caliphate,” a traditional model of
Islamic rule, in its territories in Iraq and Syria. Al-Baghdadi is declared the
caliph.
July 4 — Al-Baghdadi makes his first public
appearance, delivering a Friday sermon in Mosul’s historic al-Nuri Mosque. He
urges Muslims around the world to swear allegiance to the caliphate and obey
him as its leader.
August — IS captures the town of Sinjar west of
Mosul and begins a systematic slaughter of the tiny Yazidi religious community.
Women and girls are kidnapped as sex slaves; hundreds remain missing to this
day.
Aug. 8 — The U.S. launches its campaign of
airstrikes against IS in Iraq.
Sept. 22 - The U.S.-led coalition begins an aerial
campaign against IS in Syria.
2015
January — Iraqi Kurdish fighters, backed by U.S.-led
airstrikes, drive IS out of several towns north of Mosul. In Syria, Kurdish
fighters backed by U.S. airstrikes repel an IS onslaught on the town of Kobani
on the border with Turkey, the first significant defeat for IS.
April 1 — U.S.-backed Iraqi forces retake Tikrit,
their first major victory against IS.
May 20 — IS captures the ancient Syrian town of
Palmyra, where the extremists later destroy archaeological treasures.
2016
Feb. 9 — Iraqi forces recapture Ramadi after months
of fighting and at enormous cost, with thousands of buildings destroyed. Almost
the entire population fled the city.
June 26 — Fallujah is declared liberated by Iraqi
forces after a five-week battle.
July 3 — IS sets off a gigantic suicide truck bomb
outside a Baghdad shopping mall, killing almost 300 people, the deadliest
attack in Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.
Oct. 17 — Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi
announces the start of the operation to liberate Mosul.
Oct. 21 — IS militants and sleeper cells stage a
wave of attacks with suicide blasts in the central Iraqi city of Kirkuk,
killing at least 80 people in an attempt to divert attention from Mosul.
Nov. 5 — The U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian
Democratic Forces launch Operation Euphrates Wrath, the first of five
operations aiming to retake Raqqa, starting with an encircling of the city.
2017
Jan. 24 — Al-Abadi announces eastern Mosul has been
“fully liberated.”
Feb. 19 — Iraqi forces begin the assault on western
Mosul, taking the city’s airport and nearby military base within four days.
May 10 — SDF captures the strategic Tabqa dam after
weeks of battles and a major airlift operation that brought SDF fighters and
their U.S. advisers to the area. The fall of the dam facilitated the push on
Raqqa, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) away.
June 6 — SDF fighters begin an attack on Raqqa from
three sides, backed by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes.
June 18 — Iraqi forces launch battle for Mosul’s Old
City, the last IS stronghold there.
June 21 — IS destroys Mosul’s iconic al-Nuri Mosque
and its 12th century leaning minaret as Iraqi forces close in, according to
Iraqi and coalition officials.
July 10 — Iraqi prime minister declares victory over
IS in Mosul and end of the extremists’ caliphate in Iraq.
Oct. 17 — SDF takes full control of Raqqa after
months of heavy bombardment that devastates the city.
September-December —Syrian government forces, backed
by Russian air power and Iranian forces, recapture IS territory on the western
bank of the Euphrates River, seizing the cities of Deir el-Zour, Mayadin and
Boukamal on the border with Iraq.
2018
Aug. 23 — IS leader al-Baghdadi resurfaces in his
first purported audio recording in almost a year; he urges followers to
“persevere” and continue fighting.
Sept. 10 — SDF launches a ground offensive, backed
by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes, to take the last territory held by IS in
Syria’s eastern province of Deir el-Zour.
2019
February-March — SDF besiege IS in the village of
Baghouz, the last scrap of land the group holds. The advance stalls as some
30,000 civilians, mostly families of IS members, are evacuated from the pocket
over the course of weeks.
March 23 — SDF declares the complete capture of
Baghouz and the end of the ISIS group’s territorial “caliphate.”