Islamic State’s self-styled Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has
been killed in a United States Special Ops overnight raid Saturday involving
helicopters, warplanes and a ground clash on the Turkey-Syria border while
fleeing Syria’s northwestern Idlib Governorate, Reuters and Newsweek are
reporting, and President Trump is set to make the major announcement of the
biggest symbolic victory of his administration in the war against terrorism
soon.
What’s worth noting in the news reports about the killing of
al-Baghdadi is the fact that although the mainstream media had been trumpeting
for the last several years that the Islamic State chief had been hiding
somewhere on the Iraq-Syria border in the east, he was found hiding in the
northwestern Idlib Governorate, under the control of Turkey’s militant proxies
and al-Nusra Front, and was killed while trying to flee to Turkey in Brisha
village on the Syria border.
Reuters
reports [1]: “Two Iraqi security sources and two Iranian officials said
they had received confirmation from inside Syria that Baghdadi had been killed.
‘Our sources from inside Syria have confirmed to the Iraqi intelligence team
tasked with pursuing Baghdadi that he has been killed alongside his personal
bodyguard in Idlib after his hiding place was discovered when he tried to get
his family out of Idlib toward the Turkish border,’ one of the Iraqi officials
said.”
The reason why the mainstream media scrupulously avoided
mentioning Idlib as al-Baghdadi’s most likely hideout in Syria was to cover up
the collusion between the militant proxies of Turkey and the jihadists al-Nusra
Front and the Islamic State. At its peak in 2014, when the Islamic State
declared its “caliphate” in Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria, the Islamic State
reportedly had more than 70,000 jihadists.
The divisions within the rank and file of the terrorist
organization seem to be growing as it has lost all of its territory, and thousands
of Islamic State’s jihadists have been killed in airstrikes conducted by the
US-led coalition against the Islamic State and the ground offensives by the
Iraqi armed forces and allied militias in Iraq and the Kurdish-led Syrian
Democratic Forces in Syria.
Furthermore, due to frequent desertions and detention of
hundreds of hardcore militants alongside thousands of innocent Arab villagers
held captive by the Kurds in northeastern Syria, the number of fighters within
the Islamic State’s ranks has evidently dwindled. But a question would
naturally arise in the minds of perceptive observers of the war against the
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria that where did the remaining tens of thousands
of Islamic State’s jihadists vanish?
The riddle can be easily solved, though, if we bear in mind
the fact that although Idlib Governorate in Syria’s northwest has firmly been
under the control of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) led by al-Nusra Front since
2015, its territory was equally divided between Turkey-backed rebels and
al-Nusra Front.
In a brazen offensive in January, however, al-Nusra Front’s
jihadists completely routed Turkey-backed militants, even though the latter
were supported by a professionally trained and highly organized military of a
NATO member, Turkey. And al-Nusra Front now reportedly controls more than 70%
territory in the Idlib Governorate.
The reason why al-Nusra Front has been easily able to defeat
Turkey-backed militants appears to be that the ranks of al-Nusra Front have now
been swelled by highly motivated and battle-hardened jihadist deserters from
the Islamic State after the fall of the latter’s “caliphate” in Mosul in Iraq
and Raqqa in Syria.
The merger of al-Nusra Front and Islamic State in Idlib
doesn’t come as a surprise, though, since the Islamic State and al-Nusra Front
used to be a single organization before a split occurred between the two
militant groups in April 2013 over a leadership dispute. In fact, al-Nusra
Front’s chief Abu Mohammad al-Jolani was reportedly appointed [2] as the emir of
al-Nusra Front by Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, the leader of Islamic State, in January
2012.
Regarding the nexus between Islamic jihadists and so-called “moderate
rebels” in Syria, while the representatives of Free Syria Army (FSA) were in
Washington in January last year, soliciting the Trump administration to restore
the CIA’s “train and equip” program for the Syrian militants that was shuttered
in July 2017, hundreds of Islamic State’s jihadists joined the moderate
militants in Idlib in their battle against the advancing Syrian government
troops backed by Russian airstrikes to capture the strategically important Abu
Duhur airbase, according to a January last year’s AFP
report [3] authored by Maya Gebeily.
The Islamic State already had a foothold in neighboring Hama
province and its foray into Idlib was an extension of its outreach. The Islamic
State reportedly captured several villages and claimed to have killed two dozen
Syrian soldiers and taken twenty hostages. And on January 12 last year, the
Islamic State officially declared Idlib one of its “Islamic emirates,”
according to the aforementioned AFP report.
In all likelihood, some of the Islamic State’s jihadists who
joined the battle in Idlib in January last year were part of the same
contingent of thousands of Islamic State militants that fled Raqqa in October
2017 under a deal
brokered [4] by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
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