ISIS fighters pray at the Syrian military's Tabqa air base, which the militants captured on Sunday.
ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, aka Caliph Ibrahim, addressing Muslim worshippers at a mosque in the militant-held northern Iraqi city of Mosul.
The pedigree of its leadership, outlined by an Iraqi expert and U.S. intelligence officials who have seen documents seized from Islamic State by the Iraqi military, helps explain its battlefield successes: Its leaders augmented traditional military skill with terrorist techniques refined though years of fighting U.S. troops, while also having deep local knowledge and contacts.
Islamic State is in effect a hybrid of terrorists and an army.
“These are the academies that these men graduated from to become what they are today,” said the expert, an Iraqi researcher named Hisham Alhashimi.
Islamic State burst into global consciousness in June when its fighters seized Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, after moving into Iraq from their base in Syria. The Iraqi army melted away, and Al-Baghdadi declared a caliphate, or Islamic state, that erased borders and imposed Taliban-like rule over a large swath of territory.
Not everyone was surprised by the group’s success.
“These guys know the terrorism business inside and out, and they are the ones who survived aggressive counterterrorism campaigns during the surge,” said one U.S. intelligence official, referring to the increase in U.S. troops in Iraq in 2007. “They didn’t survive by being incompetent.” The official spoke on condition of anonymity, because of the delicate nature of the information.
After the Islamic State stormed into Mosul, one official recalled a startling phone call from a former major general in one of Saddam’s elite forces. The former general had appealed months earlier to rejoin the Iraqi army, but the official had refused. Now the general was fighting for Islamic State and threatened revenge.
“We will reach you soon, and I will chop you into pieces,” he said, according to the official, Bikhtiyar Al-Qadi, of the commission that bars some former members of Saddam’s Baath Party from government posts.
Islamic State’s success has alarmed regional security officials, who say it fights more like an army than most insurgent groups, holding territory and coordinating operations across large areas.
The group has also received support from other armed Sunni groups and former members of the Baath Party — which was founded as a secular movement — angry over their loss of status.
“In the terrorism game, these guys are at the centre of a near perfect storm of factors,” the U.S. official said.
Al-Baghdadi’s deputies include 12 walis, or local rulers; a three-man war Cabinet; and eight others who manage portfolios like finance, prisoners and recruitment.
Its operations are carried out by a network of regional commanders who have their own subordinates and a degree of autonomy, but they have set “drop times” when they open a shared network to coordinate.
For example, the Islamic State responded to U.S. airstrikes on its positions in Iraq by distributing a professionally produced video last week of the beheading of U.S. journalist James Foley more than 320 kilometres away.
Islamic State is the current incarnation of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, the insurgent group that battled U.S. forces under the leadership of Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi before his death in 2006. Much of what is known about the group’s current structure comes from documents captured by Iraqi security services.
According to a map of the group developed by Alhashimi, the Iraqi expert, Al-Baghdadi has 25 deputies across Iraq and Syria. About one-third were military officers during Saddam’s rule, and nearly all were imprisoned by U.S. forces.
The last two leaders of Islamic State’s military council were former Iraqi military officers: a colonel and a captain. Both have been killed – and followed by a former lieutenant colonel, Adnan al-Sweidawi, who is about 50 years old.
Ahmed Al-Dulaimi, the governor of Anbar province, which is now largely controlled by Islamic State, said that all three men had graduated from the same military academy.
Al-Dulaimi said he had taught one of them, Adnan Nijim, who graduated in 1993 to become an infantry officer.
“It was never clear that he would turn out like that,” al-Dulaimi said. “He was from a simple family, with high morals, but all his brothers went in that direction,” becoming jihadists.
After the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, Nijim joined Al-Qaeda in Iraq and was detained by U.S. forces in 2005, Al-Dulaimi said.
“All of these guys got religious after 2003,” Al-Dulaimi said. “Surely, ISIS benefits from their experience,” he added, using an acronym for the Islamic State.
Other former military brass have also fought for the Islamic State.
Al-Baghdadi’s top deputy in Syria, Samir al-Khlifawi, was a colonel. He was killed in Syria by other insurgents.
Derek Harvey, a former Army intelligence officer and specialist on Iraq who now directs the University of South Florida’s Global Initiative for Civil Society and Conflict, said that former officers also had professional, personal and tribal relationships that had strengthened the Islamic State’s coalition.
The group’s campaign to free hundreds of militants from Iraqi prisons was executed with former Baath Party loyalists. These included intelligence officers and soldiers in Saddam’s Republican Guard.
Hassan Abu Hanieh, a Jordanian expert on Islamist groups, said that while Al-Baghdadi had relied mostly on Iraqis, he had left areas like religious guidance, recruitment and media production to foreigners.
Many of them, like the head of Islamic State’s media department, are Saudis. This is at least partly to make the group appear “globalized,” Abu Hanieh said. “They want to appeal to international jihadists so that they come and join the battle.”
Some non-Iraqis have risen to prominence. Al-Baghdadi’s chief spokesman is Syrian. And one group of foreign fighters is led by an ethnic Chechen who goes by the name Omar Al-Shishani.
Michael Knights, an Iraq analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said it was no surprise that so many officers from Saddam’s era had joined the Islamic State. Discontent in the military was widespread near the end of his rule, and underground Islamist movements were gaining strength, even inside the military, he said.
Political changes after the U.S. invasion accelerated their rise. Members of Saddam’s Baath Party were barred from government positions, and the political dominance of Iraq’s Shiite majority made many Sunnis feel disenfranchised.
“After 2003, what did these guys have to do but get more radical?” Knights said.
For those who had served in Saddam’s staunchly secular army, that transformation was complete by the time they joined the Islamic State. “There is no one in Baghdadi’s state who is not a believer,” Alhashimi said.
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