Special Report: In Mosul's fall,
informers played vital role against Islamic State
Send a link to a friend
[October 04, 2017]
By Michael Georgy, Ahmed Rasheed and Raya Jalabi
MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - One informer said
he hid the sim card from his mobile phone in a water filter to avoid
detection by Islamic State. Another concealed his in a sack of rice and
made calls to his Iraqi handlers from a basement.
They were among several hundred Mosul residents who provided information
on Islamic State targets during the victorious nine-month battle for
Iraq's second biggest city, Iraqi military and Kurdish intelligence
officials said.
They included taxi drivers, Iraqi soldiers and defectors from Islamic
State. Without their help, officials say, the fighting would have
dragged on longer, snared in Mosul's narrow alleys.
"I was really afraid the whole time. Because you paid with blood, you
paid with your life if you were caught," said one of the informers,
30-year-old former army sergeant Alaa Abdullah, who remained in Mosul
after its capture by Islamic State in 2014.
"My mother used to say, you're still young. But I'd tell her, every time
I see a Daesh fighter, I get a grey hair," he said, using the Arabic
acronym for Islamic State. "And you can see all my greys now. From all
that hatred and fear."
The city, which was home to about two million people before the war, was
liberated in July. Islamic State's reversal seemed improbable in June
2014 when its fighters swept into Mosul. The militants were welcomed by
many fellow Sunnis, the majority of the city's population, who
complained of injustices at the hands of Iraq's Shi'ite led government.
The Iraqi army capitulated and fled, leaving its weapons behind.
Mosul was Islamic State's most significant conquest in Iraq, part of
what it called a "caliphate" that stretched into neighboring Syria. In
Mosul's Great Mosque, Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared
himself the head of the world's Muslims in July 2014.
Yet by the time Iraqi forces launched a massive ground assault to retake
Mosul in October 2016, backed by Kurdish fighters, Shi'ite militias and
U.S. air power, many residents had turned against the group, which
exerted brutal control. Its opponents were beheaded or shot. Acts such
as smoking a cigarette were punishable by 40 lashes, residents said.
In interviews with Reuters, nine Iraqi and Kurdish military officials,
informers and their relatives detailed how their battle for Mosul
unfolded. As Iraqi army commanders and U.S. advisers were preparing the
ground offensive, intelligence officers were recruiting informers,
building alliances with the region's Sunni tribes and infiltrating
Baghdadi's inner circle. Iraqi intelligence had tested using informers
in the successful operation to retake another Islamic State stronghold,
Falluja, in June 2016. Now it was time to apply the tactic on a bigger
scale in Mosul.
Reuters couldn't independently confirm every detail of the informers'
accounts. But key elements supplied by these sources, who mostly didn't
know each other, were consistent.
"We were working hard to penetrate networks and establish connections
that would be beneficial once the military phase began, and it paid
off," a senior Kurdish counter-terrorism official, Lahur Talabany, told
Reuters. "We were able to connect to people close enough to aid us in
our efforts."
Many people became informers because "they truly believed in the cause
of eradicating Islamic State," Talabany said. A few were motivated by
money to put food on the table. Islamic State fighters defected from the
militant group when they saw its downfall was "inevitable and imminent."
Mosul residents interviewed by Reuters pointed to challenges ahead. The
people of the city may have rejected Islamic State, but that doesn't
mean they accept Baghdad's rule, they said. Distrust of the Shi'ite-led
government, headed by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, runs deep among
Mosul's Sunnis. Some are enviously watching moves by Kurds in northern
Iraq toward declaring an independent state.
SADDAM'S MEN
From early 2016, Iraqi military intelligence began reaching out to
possible informants and allies through intermediaries, Iraqi officials
said.
Intelligence officers first turned to the Sunni tribes that had been
instrumental in driving out Islamic State's precursor, Al Qaeda, in
2006-2007. But fear of Islamic State was holding the tribes back, said
Lieutenant Colonel Salah al-Kinani, an army intelligence officer. One
tribesman, for instance, wanted a guarantee that Islamic State would not
burn him alive if he was caught.
Then, in August 2016, there was a breakthrough.
Kinani and his men made contact with a close aide to Baghdadi, Ali
al-Jabouri, also known as Abu Omar al-Jabouri, a former officer in
Saddam Hussein's Republican Guard who had joined Islamic State when it
overran Mosul in 2014.
Saddam-era officers had been a powerful factor in the rise of Islamic
State, often motivated by a shared hatred of the Shi'ite-led government
in Baghdad. But some of these officers, Jabouri among them, had since
grown disillusioned with Islamic State's brutal methods and the growing
influence of foreign fighters who had flocked to Mosul.
An Iraqi intelligence officer began negotiating with Jabouri through
members of his Jabouri tribe, Kinani said. After initially hesitating,
Jabouri agreed to lead 60 men in a revolt against Islamic State to
coincide with the start of the army's ground assault in October 2016.
The Iraqi military would supply Jabouri with arms and ammunition. It
gave Jabouri and his men assurances that they would not be prosecuted
for past crimes.
But the plot failed. Islamic State became suspicious of a fighter loyal
to Jabouri, according to Kinani, and seized his mobile phone, which
revealed details of the plan to deliver arms and ammunition to houses
inside Mosul. Under torture, the fighter told all.
"Daesh succeeded in infiltrating Jabouri's ring and executed him and
almost all his men only a couple of months later," said Kinani. Islamic
State often tortured captives for weeks or months to extract
information, officials said. Its "courts" handed down death penalties.
LICENSE PLATES AND BOMB FACTORIES
While Iraqi intelligence officials were talking to Jabouri, they also
began seeking out civilians in Mosul whose relatives had been killed by
militants. They calculated that desire for revenge might make them
willing recruits.
Mahmoud, a cab driver, was one such informer. He told Reuters that
Islamic State had jailed his brother and cousin in July 2014 for giving
the Iraqi army information on its movements in Mosul. He never saw them
again, he said.
"After they took my brother away I wanted to get back at them," said
Mahmoud, who asked that Reuters withhold his full name.
He eavesdropped on militants' conversations in his cab. Dialing in from
the basement of his home to an Iraqi security officer, he provided
intelligence on buildings occupied by the militants, the location of car
bombs and explosives factories.
"I used to take the sim card from my phone and hide it in the sugar jar
or a sack of rice," Mahmoud said.
The army sergeant turned informer, Alaa Abdullah, said he went into
hiding when Islamic State took control of Mosul in 2014, rarely sleeping
in the same place twice. As a former translator for U.S. troops during
the U.S. occupation, he believed he was a target for the militants. He
had also spent time training cadets in the Shi'ite south and feared the
Sunni hardliners would brand him an infidel.
Abdullah hid his telephone in a water filter. His brother, like Mahmoud,
drove a taxi to make a living and was a rich source of information.
"Daesh fighters would ride in his cab and he would tell me what he
heard," said Abdullah.
[to top of second column] |
A fighter of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) holds
an ISIL flag and a weapon on a street in the city of Mosul, Iraq,
June 23, 2014. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
Abdullah worked with a police intelligence officer, Ayad Jassim, to
put together a network of 30 informants in towns and villages near
Mosul. Jassim, who was based in the town of Qayara, south of Mosul,
confirmed the account. He said the informants provided details about
militants' movements, their vehicle license plates and where they
met. As a result, Jassim said, airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition
killed as many as 50 militants in some weeks.
"The success of the informers created an atmosphere of mistrust in
Daesh. Militants were suspicious of each other," added Jassim, who
said he lost 27 members of his family to Islamic State.
A U.S official said Islamic State was "better at making enemies than
they were at grabbing territory."
Recognising the threat from informers, Islamic State made an example
of captured spies.
When the group caught Ibrahim and Idrees Nasir breaking a ban on
using cellphones, they discovered the men were in contact with Iraqi
security forces by dialing the last number they had called, their
cousin Nawfal Youssef said. They were killed with a bullet to the
head.
"They hung them by telephone polls on a main street for 10 days.
They stuck paper signs on their chests which said: ‘This man is a
traitor. You will suffer the same fate if you cooperate with the
infidel Iraqi security forces'," Youssef said.
ADVANCES BRING DEFECTIONS
The conquest of Falluja, an Islamic State stronghold 60 km (40
miles) west of Baghdad, in June 2016 was decisive in the war against
the militants, Iraqi officials said. Falluja had been the first city
to fall to Islamic State, in January 2014. With its recapture,
Iraqis increasingly believed the group could be defeated. The battle
followed a pattern that would become familiar in the months ahead:
Iraq's counter-terrorism service, trained by the U.S. military,
spearheaded the assault. Airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition
supported the advance. Shi'ite militias played an important role.
The Iraqi army's progress on the battlefield through 2016 encouraged
increasing numbers of Islamic State militants to betray their
leaders, a top commander in the Mosul campaign, General Najm
al-Jabouri, told Reuters. The capture of Qayara airbase and town
about 60 km (40 miles) south of Mosul in July 2016 was an important
moment.
A militant who handled Islamic State's communications contacted the
army through an intermediary to offer his services, said his
handler, Major Sahab al-Jabouri. Given the codename Eagle 1, he was
taught how to evade capture. Eagle 1 texted Major al-Jabouri with
details about Islamic State leaders and telephone numbers used by
the militants. Intelligence he supplied helped the army take several
towns and led them to a mass grave in the town of Tal Afar, west of
Mosul, Major al-Jabouri said.
The opening of a new front northwest of Mosul in May 2017 triggered
more defections, according to Iraqi military officials. Militants
offered information in exchange for clemency. The arrangement
provided vital intelligence about Islamic State leaders,
communications and ammunitions stores.
"It accelerated the battle," said General al-Jabouri, the senior
commander in the Mosul campaign. "They told us where the car bombs
were and we would strike them before they hit our forces. Their
information helped us a lot, especially in identifying where their
leaders were."
Once inside Mosul, U.S.-trained counter-terrorism troops cleared
militants from the narrow streets. U.S. airpower picked out targets
from above.
UNCERTAIN VICTORY
Some Iraqi officials concede questions remain over the long-term
ability of the main Iraqi army to retain control of territory it has
gained with the help of U.S. airpower, Shi'ite militias, and Kurdish
fighters. Compared with U.S.-trained soldiers in Iraq's highly
capable counter-terrorism service, the bulk of the army is
ill-equipped and lacks discipline.
Counter-terrorism troops had "the most updated American weapons and
gear costing up to $16,000," said Kinani, the army intelligence
officer. "For ordinary soldiers, we give them a suit and vest that
cost only $100."
Despite its victory, Baghdad's Shi'ite led government cannot count
on the loyalty of Mosul's predominantly Sunni population, said a
leader of a powerful Sunni tribe that contributed fighters and
intelligence to the battle against Islamic State. Mosul's Sunnis
want more autonomy, said Sheikh Talib al-Shammari of the Shammar
tribe.
"Mosul residents should have a say in how to administrate their own
city without being treated as second class citizens. We will have
zero tolerance for any attempt from Baghdad to return Mosul to being
governed by armed force; we will resist and find a million ways to
ask for our own autonomy," Shammari warned.
Zuhair al-Chalabi, a government adviser, said talk of autonomy was
"the language of losers. Mosul is proud of its genuine Iraqi
identity and no one will accept this language."
Mosul is not alone in challenging Baghdad's authority.
In the north of the country, Iraq's Kurds are intent on building an
independent state. They voted overwhelmingly for independence in a
referendum on Sept 25. Baghdad says such moves are unconstitutional.
Prime Minister Abadi's government insists its focus is on ending
sectarian strife.
The United States is afraid a fragmentation of Iraq could further
destabilize the Middle East. Shi'ite Iran worries a breakup would
diminish its influence. Iran holds sway over the Baghdad government
and Iraq's Shi'ite militias.
For some people in Mosul, Iraq's wrecked economy and rampant
corruption are the most pressing problems. Transparency
International ranked Iraq 166 out of 176 in its 2016 Corruption
Perceptions Index.
Standing near a bridge between east and west Mosul, a student
informer, codename Salah al-Iraqi, doubted prosperity would return
to his city.
"If we got rid of our leaders and political parties, Iraq would be
much better off," he said. "The whole system needs to be
overhauled."
Abu Hassan, a former soldier and informant, is also frustrated. He
used his work as a cab driver to gather intelligence for the Iraqi
military. He says his handlers promised that he could have his old
army job and $1,000 a month salary back when Mosul was freed. But
when he went to Baghdad to reclaim his job, he was sent packing, he
said.
These days, Abu Hassan is bitter. He's barely making $7 a day
driving his cab. Iraq's defense ministry dismissed his complaints.
"He should have done this to help his country and not for a job.
This is the difference between real soldiers and mercenaries," said
Lieutenant Colonel Mahdi Ameer.
(Additional reporting by Isabel Coles and Goran Tomasevic in Mosul,
and John Walcott in Washington. Editing by Janet McBride and Richard
Woods)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|