Special Report: Under siege in Mosul,
Islamic State turns to executions and paranoia
Send a link to a friend
[November 16, 2016]
By Samia Nakhoul and Michael Georgy
ERBIL, Iraq (Reuters) - A few weeks ago, a
person inside Mosul began to send text messages to Iraqi military
intelligence in Baghdad.
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of Islamic State, "has become
intemperate," said the early November message, written by an informant
inside the city who has contact with the group but is not a member of
it.
"He has cut down on his movements and neglects his appearance," the
message read. "He lives underground and has tunnels that stretch to
different areas. He doesn't sleep without his suicide bomber vest so he
can set it off if he's captured."
The text message, which Reuters has seen, was one of many describing
what was happening inside Islamic State as Iraqi, Kurdish and American
troops began their campaign to retake the group's northern Iraqi
stronghold of Mosul.
The texts, along with interviews with senior Kurdish officials and
recently captured Islamic State fighters, offer an unusually detailed
picture of the extremist group and its leader's state of mind as they
make what may be their last stand in Iraq. The messages describe a group
and its leader that remain lethal, but that are also seized by growing
suspicion and paranoia.
Defectors or informants were being regularly executed, the person
texted. Baghdadi, who declared himself the caliph of a huge swathe of
Iraq and Syria two years ago, had become especially suspicious of people
close to him. "Sometimes he used to joke around," one text said. "But
now he no longer does."
While Reuters has verified the identity of the informant who has been
texting Iraqi military intelligence, the news agency couldn't
independently confirm the information in the messages. But the picture
that emerges fits with intelligence cited by two Kurdish officials –
Masrour Barzani, head of the Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG)
Security Council, and Lahur Talabany, who is chief of counter-terrorism
and director of the KRG intelligence agency.
Talabany and other intelligence chiefs said the military coalition is
making slow but steady progress against Islamic State. The coalition has
formidable assets inside Mosul, they said, including trained informers
and residents who provide more basic surveillance by texting or phoning
from the city's outskirts. Some of the informants have families in
Kurdistan whom the KRG pays.
The Kurds believe that the military assault on Mosul, which began on
October 17, is fueling Islamic State's sense of fear and mistrust. In
the short term, they said, the group's obsession with rooting out anyone
who might betray it may help rally fighters to defend Mosul. But the
obsession also means the group has turned inwards right as it faces the
most serious threat to its existence in Iraq since seizing around a
third of the country's territory in the summer of 2014.
The number of executions is a clear sign Islamic State is beginning to
hurt, said Karim Sinjari, interior minister and acting defense minister
with the KRG, which controls the Kurdish area in northern Iraq.
As well, he said, many of the group's local Iraqi fighters lack the
"strong belief in martyrdom that the jihadis have."
"Most of the die-hard Islamists who are fighting to the death are
foreign fighters, but their numbers at the frontline are less than
before because they are getting killed in battle and in suicide
attacks," he said.
Barzani said the growing paranoia has pushed Baghdadi and his top
lieutenants to move around a lot, further hurting the group's ability to
defend the city. Baghdadi, Barzani said, "is using all the different
tactics to hide and protect himself: changing positions, using different
ways of traveling, living in different locations, using different
communications."
If the military coalition does push Islamic State from Mosul, the
Kurdish officials said, the group is likely to flee to Syria, from where
it will pose a nagging threat to Iraq through regular suicide attacks
and other guerilla tactics.
DANGERS OF A SIM CARD
Islamic State has always been paranoid. Its rule in Syria and Iraq has
relied in large part on a vast intelligence network that uses everyone
from children to battle-hardened former Baathists to spy on both
subjects and its own officials. [Link to:
http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/mideast-crisis-iraq-islamicstate/]
That paranoia appears to have reached new levels as Islamic State's
enemies advance. Suspicion grew in the weeks before government troops
began to encircle Mosul in mid October.
Early last month, Islamic State leaders uncovered an internal plot
against Baghdadi, according to Mosul residents and Iraqi security
officials. Hatched by a leading Islamic State commander, the plot was
foiled when an Islamic State security official found a telephone SIM
card that contained the names of the plotters and showed their links to
U.S. and Kurdish intelligence officers.
Retribution was brutal. Islamic State killed 58 suspected plotters by
placing them in cages and drowning them, according to residents and
Iraqi officials.
Since then, Islamic State has executed another 42 people from local
tribes, Iraqi intelligence officers said. Those people were also caught
with SIM cards.
Possession of SIMs or any form of electronic communication now amounts
to an automatic death sentence, according to residents in Islamic State
areas. The group has set up checkpoints where its militants search
people, and regularly mount raids on areas hit by U.S. air strikes
because Islamic State officials assume locals have helped to identify
targets.
The informant texting from Mosul is aware of the dangers. "I am talking
to you from the rooftop," began one recent message. "The planes are in
the skies. Before I go back down I will delete the messages and hide the
SIM card."
"THE CUBS OF THE CALIPHATE"
Islamic State relies on a network of child informers, the so called
ashbal al khilafa or "cubs of the caliphate."
"These young boys eavesdrop and find out information from other kids
about their fathers, brothers, and their activities", said Hisham
al-Hashemi, an Iraq government adviser and Islamic State expert. "In
every street there are one or two ashbal al khilafa who spy on the
adults."
[to top of second column] |
An Iraqi soldier stands next to a detained man accused of being an
Islamic State fighter, at a check point in Qayyara, south of Mosul,
Iraq October 27, 2016. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic/File Photo
The huge network of informants also hurts Islamic State, according
to Lahur Talabany, chief of counter-terrorism for the KRG.
Overwhelmed by information, the group is devoting a lot of its
energy to its own people rather than its enemies. That fuels further
paranoia.
"There are regular (internal) plots against Baghdadi" Talabany told
Reuters. "We see incidents like that on a weekly basis, and they
take out their own guys."
Until a few months ago, Talabany said, he had a mole inside
Baghdadi's inner circle: an Islamic State commander who had once
belonged to al-Qaeda.
"He was a Kurd born in Hawija", the Kurdish spy chief said,
declining to name the man. "He was one of my detainees. I released
him a year before Daesh (Islamic State) arrived."
After Islamic State seized Mosul, the commander-turned-agent
infiltrated the group and was made a military officer. From that
position, he began feeding the Kurds "valuable daily information."
The agent told Talabany that Baghdadi consulted closely with top
aides, including Saudis who he said were experts on Sharia law.
Saudi Arabia has said that there are Saudi nationals in Islamic
State.
"He told me Baghdadi has got charisma, and has connections, but that
he is a front. And that the committees around him take the main
decisions, even on the military side," Talabany said.
The agent told Talabany he had met Baghdadi a few times and was
plotting to kill the Islamic State leader. But before the commander
could act, Islamic State discovered he was working as an agent. A
few months ago, Talabany said, Islamic State publicly executed him.
CUTTING THROATS
The group's brutal methods were recounted in a rare interview with
two captured Islamic State fighters last week. Reuters met the
fighters at a Kurdish counter-terrorism compound in the town of
Sulaimaniya. A Kurdish intelligence official and an interrogator sat
in on the interviews but did not interfere.
Ali Kahtan, 21, was captured after he killed five Kurdish fighters
at a police station seized by Islamic State in the northern town of
Hawija.
Kahtan's path to militancy began at the age of 13, he said. He
became a member of al Qaeda and then joined Islamic State when a
friend took him for religious lessons and military training at a
Hawija mosque. The training, he said, involved learning how to use a
machine gun and pistol. Trainees were also shown how to cut
someone's throat with the bayonet from an AK-47.
Kahtan said that a year ago, a local emir ordered him to cut the
throats of five Kurdish fighters. The emir stood over him while he
did it, he said.
"One after the other with a knife, a Kalashnikov blade, I did it.
Really, I felt nothing." Afterwards, he said, he returned home. "I
cleaned up and sat down to have dinner with my parents."
Kahtan said Islamic State fighters no longer talk about taking over
Baghdad, but focus solely on Mosul, and how to recruit more fighters
to protect it.
A second detainee, Bakr Salah Bakr, 21, who was caught as he
prepared to carry out a suicide attack in Kurdistan, said Islamic
State initially tried to recruit him through Facebook to join the
fight in Mosul. They are desperate for Iraqi fighters, he indicated,
because the influx of foreign fighters dried up after Turkey slowly
closed its borders a year ago.
THE BATTLE
Iraqi intelligence officials say they believe Baghdadi is not in
Mosul but in al-Ba'aj district, a bedouin town on the edge of
Nineveh province, which borders Syria. Ba'aj has a population of
about 20,000 and is dominated by extremists loyal to Islamic State.
The area is heavily fortified, with long tunnels that were built
after the fall of Saddam when the town became a staging post for
smuggling weapons and volunteers from Syria into Iraq.
Even if Mosul and Baghdadi fall, said Kurdish counter-terrorism
chief Talabany, Islamic State is likely to persist. "They will go
back to more asymmetric warfare, and we will be seeing suicide
attacks inside KRG, inside Iraqi cities and elsewhere."
Security chief Barzani agreed. "The fight against IS is going to be
a long fight," he said. "Not only militarily, but also economically,
ideologically."
Barzani, who is the son of veteran Kurdish leader and KRG President
Masoud Barzani, estimated there are around 10,000 Islamic State
suicide bombers in Iraq and Syria. He said Islamic State had
prepared waves of fighters it was now deploying to defend Mosul.
"You see the first group come to the frontline and they know they're
going to be killed by the planes overhead, but they still come. And
then the second group come to the same place where the others were
hit," he said. "They see the limbs and the bodies all over and they
know they will die, but they still do it. They see victory in dying
for their own cause."
(Edited by Simon Robinson)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|