Islamic State likely to pick battle-hardened Iraqi as next leader -
officials, analysts
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[February 09, 2022]
By Ahmed Rasheed and John Davison
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - The next leader of
Islamic State is likely to be from a close circle of battle-hardened
Iraqi jihadists who emerged in the aftermath of the 2003 U.S. invasion,
two Iraqi security officials and three independent analysts said.
The group of potential successors to Abu Ibrahim al-Quraishi, who blew
himself up during a U.S. operation to capture him in Syria last week,
includes one commander whom Washington and Baghdad declared killed last
year, the Iraqi officials said.
The death of Quraishi, 45, was another crushing blow to IS two years
after the violent Sunni Muslim group lost longtime leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi in a similar raid in 2019.
Quraishi, an Iraqi, never publicly addressed his fighters or followers,
avoided electronic communications and oversaw a move to fighting in
small devolved units in response to intense pressure from Iraqi and
U.S.-led forces.
But those following Islamic State closely expect it to name a successor
in coming weeks, as the group which imposed brutal rule over vast
swathes of Iraq and Syria from 2014 to 2017 continues a stubborn and
deadly insurgency INSIGHT-Islamic State hits back, aided by power vacuum
in Iraq and Syria in the Middle East.
Fadhil Abu Rgheef, an Iraqi expert who advises its security services,
said there were at least four possible successors.
"These include ... Abu Khadija, whose last known role was Iraq leader
for Islamic State, Abu Muslim, its leader for Anbar province, and
another called Abu Salih, of whom there's very little information but
who was close to Baghdadi and Quraishi," he said.
"There's also Abu Yassir al-Issawi, who is suspected to be still alive.
He's valuable to the group as he has long military experience."
Issawi's death in an air strike in January 2021 was reported at the time
by both Iraqi forces as well as the U.S.-led military coalition fighting
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
But an Iraqi security official confirmed there were strong suspicions
Issawi is still alive. "If he's not dead he'd be a candidate, he's tried
and tested in planning military attacks and has thousands of
supporters," the official said.
SECURITY SWEEP
The official added that Islamic State was likely carrying out a security
sweep for potential leaks that led to the death of Quraishi before
convening to choose or announce a successor.
Hassan Hassan, editor of New Lines magazine which has published research
on Quraishi, said the new leader would be a veteran Iraqi jihadist.
"If they choose one in the coming weeks they'll have to choose someone
from among the same circle ... the group that was part of the Anbari
group which operated under (the name) ISIS since the early days," he
said.
Islamic State emerged from the militants that waged an increasingly
Sunni Islamist, sectarian-driven insurgency against U.S. troops and
Iraqi forces after 2003.
The Islamic State of Iraq, also known as al Qaeda in Iraq, was an
offshoot of the global al Qaeda organisation of Osama Bin Laden and the
precursor to ISIS, which took shape in the chaos of Syria's civil war
across the border.
Baghdadi and Quraishi, both members of al Qaeda in Iraq from the start,
did time in U.S. detention in the mid-2000s. In contrast, none of the
four potential successors to Quraishi had been captured by U.S. forces,
one security official and one army colonel told Reuters.
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Smoke rises after an air strike during fighting between members of
the Syrian Democratic Forces and Islamic State militants in Raqqa,
Syria, August 15, 2017. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra/File Photo
Officials and analysts in various
countries agree Islamic State is under more pressure than it's ever
been and will never restore its self-styled caliphate. But they are
divided on how significant a setback Quraishi's death is for the
group.
Some say the fight against ISIS will suck in the
United States and its allies for years to come as it develops into a
permanent insurgency with new leaders ready to take the reins.
"In Syria, Islamic State units work as a devolved network of
individual groups in order to avoid them being targeted. We don't
therefore believe that Quraishi's death will have an enormous
impact," one of the Iraqi security officials said.
"It's also become more difficult to follow them because they've long
stopped using mobile phones for communication."
Since their territorial defeat in Iraq in 2017 and Syria in 2019,
Islamic State leaders have found it increasingly easy to move
between the two countries, helped by a gap in areas of control
between different armed forces, some officials say.
Security and military officials said the 600 km (372 mile)long
border with Syria made it a very hard for Iraqi forces to prevent
militants infiltrating via underground tunnels.
NEW LEADERSHIP STYLE
Lahur Talabany, former counter-terrorism chief for Iraq's autonomous
Kurdistan region, said some IS leaders can travel on a route across
the full expanse of Iraq.
"When you see attacks increasing in a particular area I wouldn't be
surprised if somebody important has been through that region," he
told Reuters. "The caliphate was defeated but ISIS was never
eradicated. I don't believe we managed to finish the job."
Islamic State’s possession of land in Iraq and Syria set it apart
from other like-minded groups such as al Qaeda and became central to
its mission when it declared a caliphate in 2014, claiming
sovereignty over all Muslim lands and peoples.
Fiercely anti-Western, the group also draws on Sunni-Shi’ite
tensions, saying Shi’ites were infidels who deserve to be killed.
Abu Rgheef said the new leader could have stronger military
credentials than Quraishi, who Iraqi officials say was seen by
followers as more of an Islamic legal mind than a military man.
"Attacks and operations will change in character depending on the
style of the new leader. The new one might believe in big and
intensive attacks, bombs or suicide bombers," he said.
Despite Quraishi's low profile and operational secrecy, his killing
is likely to affect the group's fighters, analysts say.
Hassan said Quraishi's removal would reduce morale. "ISIS is also
locked into personalities and who's most trusted," he said.
Aaron Zelin, senior fellow at the Washington Institute, said a
figurehead is very important to ISIS.
"Whenever a leader of the group is killed, your oath is to the
(next) leader, the individual themselves, and not to the group."
(Ahmed Rasheed reported from Baghdad, John Davison reported from
Baghdad, Sulaimaniya and Geneva; additional reporting by Dominic
Evans in Istanbul; Writing by John Davison, Editing by William
Maclean)
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