Nowhere left to run: how the US finally caught up with Isis leader Baghdadi
Cornered in a dead-end tunnel, with a robot creeping
towards him, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had nowhere left to run. Dogs barked in the
darkness, a US soldier called out … and then came the thundering explosion that
killed the world’s most wanted man – together with three terrified children he
was using as human shields.
The US military finally caught up with the Islamic
State leader in a remote hamlet of northwestern Syria, but not before he
detonated a suicide vest strapped to his body as special forces troops
disgorged from helicopters and crouched near the frugal stone house in which he
was hiding.
Forensic specialists stood by, carrying samples of
Baghdadi’s DNA and the means to compare it with remains at the scene. They
quickly matched what they had with what soldiers retrieved from the underground
blast. Two hours into the raid, the attackers were able to confirm that they
had indeed found their man. Some soldiers secured what remained of Baghdadi in
sealed bags, another group ushered 10 children to the home of a bewildered
neighbour, and yet more carried bits and pieces from the home they had
destroyed to eight waiting attack helicopters.
Just before 3.30am Syrian time, the fleet of
choppers took off for the return journey to Erbil, a 70-minute flight over the
badlands of Syria, where the organisation that Baghdadi had led for more than
six years still cast its shadow. Crossing briefly into Turkey, then into
northeastern Syria, where the vanquished US Kurdish partners were this month
forced into retreat, and then to the Kurdish north of Iraq, from where much of
the long hunt for Baghdadi had been run, the troops unloaded their booty –
delivering Donald Trump a prize he sorely needed after a miserable month for
the US across the Middle East.
Baghdadi was a prize that had previously eluded all
his pursuers, as well as the best technology the world’s intelligence agencies
could muster; the terror tsar had long understood the perils of being a
fugitive in a digital age. But the hunt for him began and ended using the more
old-fashioned ways of spycraft: another person carrying a secret.
Iraqi officials say that in mid-September they
identified a Syrian man who had been used to smuggle the wives of two of
Baghdadi’s brothers, Ahmad and Jumah, to Idlib province via Turkey. The same
smuggler had earlier helped move Baghdadi’s children from Iraq. Iraqi
intelligence officers say they were able to co-opt the man and a woman believed
to be his wife, as well as one of Baghdadi’s nephews, into providing
information about the route he used and the destination of the people
travelling with him. It was a break like no other, and was soon passed to the CIA.
By mid-October, a plan to catch or kill Baghdadi was
in full swing. The operation was given the name Kayla Mueller, US national
security adviser Robert O’Brien revealed on Sunday, in honour of the Arizona
aid worker enslaved by Baghdadi and who later died in Raqqa.
Iraqi officials say they provided updated real-time
information to Washington as Baghdadi moved about in Idlib. Paranoid, slowed
down by war wounds and stricken with diabetes, the 48-year-old was nevertheless
used to changing locations. He had done so regularly throughout his life on the
run, shifting between eastern Syria and western Iraq before settling in a small
pocket of Idlib province, according to the Iraqi National Intelligence Service.
It was a long way from home for a man who trusted
few outside Iraq and no one outside his inner circle. And it was an unlikely
place to end up, according to European intelligence officials who had last
tracked him to the eastern Syrian town of Baghuz in January.
By early last week, US and Iraqi officials were
growing more confident that Baghdadi was indeed in Idlib province, moving
between homes in a hamlet named Barisha, not far from the Turkish border. At
this point, the formidable reach of Washington’s technical capabilities took
over, establishing who he was with and where he was staying. One man was Abu
Mohammed al-Halabi, the leader of a rival Salafi jihadi group, Hurras al-Dein,
and an unlikely bedfellow for the leader of Isis; only weeks before, Hurras
al-Dein members had been rounding up and executing people they had suspected of
being Isis sympathisers.
According to regional officials, the house al-Halabi
was staying in was built early last year above a tunnel complex. It was an
ideal hideout for a fugitive and it would require a formidable force to assault
it.
“By Thursday afternoon, the president and I were
informed there was a high probability he would be at the compound in Idlib
province,” the US vice-president, Mike Pence, told CBS news programme Face the
Nation on Sunday.
In a press conference to announce Baghdadi’s death,
Donald Trump said he had given the order to go ahead with the raid on Saturday
in Washington. Shortly afterwards, special forces based in Erbil were given
orders to leave for Idlib. It was their biggest and most dangerous operation in
the war against Isis. Russia, which controls the airspace over Idlib was given
notice, so too Turkey with which the US has been at odds in recent weeks.
Syrian Kurds in the north-east of the country were also briefed.
The attack force arrived just after 1am and faced a
barrage of gunfire from the ground. In the fierce clashes that followed, at
least nine members of Isis were killed in addition to Baghdadi, many of them
family members. The landlord al-Halabi was among those to die, as were two of
Baghdadi’s wives, who were both believed to have detonated suicide vests. The
cornered Isis leader is believed to have dropped through a hatch into a tunnel
network. Trump said the attack planners knew exactly where it was and how to
breach its walls.
“The only ones remaining were Baghdadi in the tunnel
and he had dragged three of his young children with him,” he said. “They were
led to a certain death. He reached the end of the tunnel as our dogs chased him
down.
“[Baghdadi] ignited his vest, killing himself and
the three children. Test results gave certain immediate and totally positive
identification, it was him.”
It was an end as murderous as his six-year reign,
and no less gruesome.