ISIS leader Baghdadi is alive but he is trapped on desert ‘island’

ISIS leader Baghdadi is alive but he is trapped on desert ‘island’

The elusive head of the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) has survived an airstrike and is believed to be hiding out in a shrinking bastion of jihadi control in a mostly desert stretch of eastern Syria known as Al-Jazeera, or “the Island,” according to U.S. and Iraq officials.

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the hardline Sunni Muslim cleric who expanded his Al-Qaeda offshoot from Iraq across Syria, has only made one known public appearance and, as his group suffered widespread losses in recent years, unconfirmed reports of his whereabouts and fate have been numerous. In the latest potential development, a senior Iraqi official said Monday that one of the world’s most wanted men has been left incapacitated and is clinging to life by air raids in Iraq, forcing him to give up the helm of his militant network that claimed followers and supporters across the globe.

“We have irrefutable information and documents from our sources infiltrating the terrorist entity, stating that the criminal Baghdadi is still present today with the help of his collaborators in the Syrian region of Al-Jazeera,” Abu Ali al-Basri, director of intelligence and counterterrorism at the Iraqi Interior Ministry and head of the elite Falcons Intelligence Cell, told state-run newspaper Al-Sabah.

Basri said that Baghdadi has been forced to cede control of the group due to his severe “physical and psychological deterioration” and said that the jihadi leader was also likely suffering from diabetes.

Unnamed U.S. officials cited by CNN also said Monday that Baghdadi was injured by an airstrike that left him unable to lead ISIS, but stated that the attack had occurred near what was once ISIS’s de facto capital of Raqqa, northern Syria, sometime in May, and had likely been conducted by a U.S.-led coalition or Russian air power. While one official accused Moscow of “making stuff up,” according to CNN, the timeline coincided with earlier claims made by Russia.

In June, the Russian Defense Ministry first announced that it had received information about Baghdadi’s potential demise after Russian warplanes bombarded ISIS positions in the province of Raqqa on May 28. As the investigation continued, Russia said it was increasingly convinced that it had killed the jihadi warlord, but the U.S. said it could not verify if or how Baghdadi died. Ali Shirazi, a member of the elite expeditionary Quds Force of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said in June that “terrorist Baghdadi is definitely dead.”

Two pro-Syrian opposition monitoring groups, the U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) and Syria-based Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently (RIBSS), also weighed in last summer. SOHR told Newsweek in July that Baghdadi had in fact been killed, but that he died under unknown circumstances in the eastern, then-ISIS-held city of Deir Ezzor. RIBSS tweeted that same day that rumors of Baghdadi’s death were “not true.”

ISIS maintained silence about Baghdadi until it released an audio tape in September purported to be a recent recording of the militants’ leader-at-large. In the roughly 45-minute recording, a man identified as Baghdadi discussed his group’s loss of territory to local forces backed by international campaigns, staging attacks against civilians in the so-called “crusader” countries abroad and the nuclear threat posed by North Korea.

Baghdadi was born Ibrahim Awad Ibrahim al-Badri, reportedly in Samarra, Iraq. He became active in Islamist militant circles after the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003. The following year, he was arrested by U.S. forces and detained at Abu Ghraib and Camp Bucca, two detention centers that have since become notorious for having fostered radicalism among the members of Iraq’s already disaffected Sunni Muslim minority that were held there after the overthrow of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

After his release, Baghdadi went on to join Al-Qaeda in Iraq, which became the Islamic State of Iraq in 2006, and ascended to its leadership after the death of his predecessor in 2010. The group launched a wave of bloody, sectarian violence against Shiite Muslims, as well as regular attacks on U.S. forces. In 2013, Baghdadi renamed the group the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (the Levant), or Syria, and again retitled it in his infamous 2014 speech in Mosul, simply referring to the group as the Islamic State during his first and only known public appearance.

The group took advantage of civil war and sectarian divides in neighboring Syria to spread there as well in 2014 and overcame most of the majority-Arab Sunni Muslim opposition to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, an ally of Russia and Iran. ISIS seized vast swathes of eastern Syria and marched through Kurdish parts of the north as well before creeping further toward parts of the west.

As the U.S. began cutting support to Syrian rebel groups, it formed an international coalition to defeat the jihadis and assisted Kurdish and Arab forces in ground offensives in both Iraq and Syria. Iran also provided substantial support to the anti-ISIS campaign via mostly Shiite Muslim militias that helped defeat the jihadis in both countries.

Source: Newsweek