Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Islamic. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Islamic. Mostrar todas las entradas

Israel’s prime minister on Sunday congratulated President Joe Biden for last week’s deadly raid in Syria that killed the leader of the Islamic State group, the Israeli premier’s office announced.

In a phone call with the president, Naftali Bennett told Biden that “the world is now a safer place thanks to the courageous operation of the U.S. forces,” his office said.

Bennett and Biden also discussed Iranian military activity across the Middle East and efforts to block Iran’s nuclear program, it said.

Israel and Iran are arch-enemies, and Israel has raised vocal concerns about U.S.-led efforts to revive the 2015 international nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

The deal unraveled after President Donald Trump withdrew from it in 2018. Israel objected to the initial deal and believes any attempts to restore it will not include sufficient safeguards to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapons capability. Israel also says any deal should address Iranian military activity across the region as well as its development of long-range missiles capable of striking Israel.

Earlier Sunday, Bennett said Israel is closely watching world powers’ negotiations with Iran in Vienna, but reiterated his position that Israel is not bound by any agreement reached by them. Israel has repeatedly threatened to strike Iran if it believes it is necessary to halt the country’s nuclear program. Iran says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.

“Anyone who thinks such an agreement will increase stability is wrong,” Bennett told his Cabinet early Sunday. “Israel reserves its right to act in any case, with or without an agreement.

Top U.S. officials are hopeful that a risky nighttime raid, months in the making, will deal one of the world’s most resilient terror groups a long-lasting setback and blunt its efforts to strike at the United States and its Western allies.

U.S. President Joe Biden announced the death of reclusive Islamic State leader Amir Muhammad Sa’id Abdal-Rahman al-Mawla early Thursday, hours after U.S. special forces left his hideout and his body in northwest Syria’s Idlib province.

Al-Mawla “oversaw the spread of ISIS-affiliated terrorist groups around the world,” Biden told reporters gathered at the White House, using an acronym for the terror group, which is also called IS or Daesh.

“After savaging communities and murdering innocents, [al-Mawla] was responsible for the recent brutal attack on a prison in northeast Syria holding ISIS fighters,” the president said. “This operation is testament to America’s reach and capability to take out terrorist threats no matter where they try to hide. … We will come after you and find you.”

Al-Mawla

Al-Mawla, known by multiple aliases, including Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi and Hajji ‘Abdallah, was born in Iraq in 1976 and became a religious scholar who rose through the terror group’s ranks, becoming a top aide to former IS leader and self-declared caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

By the time Baghdadi died in a U.S. raid on his hideout in northwestern Syria in October 2019, al-Mawla had become the heir apparent, having overseen IS’s slaughter of the Yazidi religious minority and some of the terror group’s global operations.

As leader, al-Mawla was even more reclusive than Baghdadi, who made occasional speeches to rally supporters, leading some analysts to wonder how much control he retained as IS affiliates outside Syria and Iraq gained in power and prominence.

U.S. officials, however, said al-Mawla was finding ways to be effective in building and expanding the bureaucracy that underpinned the terror group’s networks.

“While Baghdadi was iconic and a philosopher figure in ISIS, this guy was actually far more of an operational planner and a director of operations,” General Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie, the commander of U.S. Central Command, told a virtual conference late Thursday.

Disrupting IS operations

Al-Mawla “was every bit as evil and every bit as committed to attacks on the United States and our partners,” McKenzie said, adding that al-Mawla’s death could see IS leaders in Syria and Iraq cede power to regional affiliates.

But the affiliates could also suffer with al-Mawla out of the way.

“When you don’t have a central core that can disperse money and share money among competing franchises, it makes it harder for them to be resourced,” McKenzie said. “I think it’s going to be a significant blow.”

U.S. officials are also hoping the way in which al-Mawla died will further demoralize the terror group and its force of 8,000 to 16,000 fighters spread across Syria and Iraq.

“In a final act of cowardice and disregard for human life, [al-Mawla] detonated a blast, a significant blast, killing himself and several others, including his wife and children,” a senior administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the U.S. operation told reporters.

“The blast was so large on the third floor that it blew bodies outside of the house and into the surrounding areas,” the official added.

The raid

U.S. defense officials said al-Mawla set off the explosion shortly after U.S. forces arrived at his hideout, a nondescript building in a residential section of Atmeh, a town in Syria’s Idlib province, not far from the border with Turkey.

Using a megaphone, the U.S. forces asked for al-Mawla and one of his senior deputies to allow noncombatants to leave, and to give themselves up.

Officials said a family of six living on the first floor got out, with the explosion shaking the building not long after.

“Let me be very clear, [al-Mawla] did not fight,” McKenzie said. “He killed himself and his immediate family without fighting, even as we attempted to call for his surrender and offered him a path to survive.”

Al-Mawla’s deputy and his wife then barricaded themselves on the second floor, dying after engaging in a firefight with U.S. forces.

One child on the second floor was also killed, though four others were rescued by U.S. troops.

Children among the dead

Initial reports from groups such as the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 13 people had been killed, including three women and four children.

Save the Children, an international humanitarian organization, said late Thursday that at least six children had been killed, calling the deaths “deeply alarming and unacceptable.”

U.S. officials insisted they had taken all possible precautions, blaming the deaths on the IS leader himself.

“We had a good sense of who was in the building … and had taken numerous safeguards throughout the rehearsals and planning to protect those individuals,” a second senior administration official said.

He added that military planners even opted for a raid, with U.S. forces scheduled to be on the ground for two hours, instead of an airstrike, to minimize harm to noncombatants.

Complications

U.S. military officials said despite the success of the initial operation, there were some complications.

One of the helicopters used to get troops to al-Mawla’s hideout experienced mechanical difficulties and had to be abandoned and destroyed shortly after leaving the site.

U.S. forces also briefly came under attack from fighters with the al-Qaida-affiliated Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, killing two of them in the ensuing firefight.

The presence of al-Qaida-linked fighters, however, was not unexpected given that northwestern Syria doubles as a hub for al-Qaida, IS’s main rival, and, according to U.N. member state intelligence agencies, “a strategic location for [IS] fighters and family members, in particular as a gateway to Turkey.”

US partners

The U.S. operation quickly earned praise from key partners, including the coalition-backed Syrian Democratic Forces.

“This is a strategic gain,” SDF spokesman Farhad Shami told VOA on Thursday, calling al-Mawla’s death “significant.”

SDF officials, still feeling the sting of the nearly weeklong IS attack and uprising at al-Sina’a prison in Hasaka, have warned the incident was part of a larger plot by the terror group to take and hold territory.

They have also said that much of the planning for the attack, which killed more than 100 soldiers, guards and prison staff, had come from IS leaders, including al-Mawla, something U.S. officials confirmed Thursday.

“We consider this operation of eliminating [the] ISIS leader as revenge for their attack on Hasaka,” Shami told VOA, adding that SDF forces had provided resources and intelligence to the U.S. forces who carried out the raid.

Iraqi officials Thursday also celebrated al-Mawla’s demise and tweeted that Iraqi intelligence had contributed information leading to his location.

IS reaction

IS followers have also started to react to al-Mawla’s death, though initial posts on social media platforms reflected a strong sense of disbelief.

“What is the truth in the news of the Caliph’s martyrdom?” one supporter wrote in a post captured by Jihadoscope, a company that monitors online activity by Islamist extremists.

“Impure media are spreading rumors everywhere,” the follower added.

Another decried the initial report as “fake news,” accusing the U.S. of fabricating events to boost its own morale.

But Jihadoscope co-founder Raphael Gluck told VOA that as the hours passed, more IS followers began to accept that al-Mawla had indeed been killed and began focusing their anger at the U.S. and al-Qaida, accusing the terror group’s affiliates of collaboration.

What’s next for IS

U.S. officials say they are watching closely, with IS expected to name a successor. But those plans may have been complicated by recent developments in Iraq.

In October, Iraqi forces arrested Sami Jasim Muhammad al-Jaburi, also known as Hajji Hamid, described by the Pentagon as “one of ISIS’s most senior leaders.”

One Western counterterrorism official, speaking to VOA on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence, called al-Jaburi’s arrest “very significant” as al-Jaburi was seen as a candidate to potentially replace al-Mawla should he be killed or captured.

Mutlu Civiroglu contributed to this report.

A woman who once lived in Kansas has been arrested after federal prosecutors charged her with joining the Islamic State group and leading an all-female battalion of AK-47 wielding militants.

The U.S. Attorney in Alexandria, Virginia, announced Saturday that Allison Fluke-Ekren, 42, has been charged with providing material support to a terrorist organization.

The criminal complaint was filed under seal back in 2019 but made public Saturday after Fluke-Ekren was brought back to the U.S. Friday to face charges. Her alleged participation in the Islamic State had not been publicly known before Saturday’s announcement.

Prosecutors say Fluke-Ekren wanted to recruit operatives to attack a college campus in the U.S. and discussed a terrorist attack on a shopping mall. She told one witness that “she considered any attack that did not kill a large number of individuals to be a waste of resources,” according to an FBI affidavit.

That affidavit from FBI Special Agent David Robins also alleges that Fluke-Ekren became leader of an Islamic State unit called “Khatiba Nusaybah” in the Syrian city of Raqqa in late 2016. The all-female unit was trained in the use of AK-47 rifles, grenades and suicide belts.

In all, the affidavit cites observations from six different witnesses, including some who have been charged with terrorism offenses and some who were held at prison camps for former Islamic state members.

A detention memo filed Friday by First Assistant U.S. Attorney Raj Parekh states that Fluke-Ekren even trained children how to use assault rifles, and that at least one witness saw one of Fluke-Ekren’s children, who was about 5 or 6 years old, holding a machine gun in the family’s home in Syria.

“Fluke-Ekren has been a fervent believer in the radical terrorist ideology of ISIS for many years, having traveled to Syria to commit or support violent jihad. Fluke-Ekren translated her extremist beliefs into action by serving as the appointed leader and organizer of an ISIS military battalion, directly training women and children in the use of AK-47 assault rifles, grenades, and suicide belts to support the Islamic State’s murderous aims,” Parekh wrote.

According to court papers, Fluke-Ekren moved to Egypt in 2008 and traveled frequently between Egypt and the U.S. over the next three years. She has not been in the U.S. since 2011.

Prosecutors believe she moved to Syria around 2012. In early 2016, her husband was killed in the Syrian city of Tell Abyad while trying to carry out a terrorist attack, prosecutors said. Later that year, prosecutors say she married a Bangladeshi ISIS member who specialized in drones, but he died in late 2016 or early 2017.

Four months after that man’s death, she again remarried a prominent Islamic state leader who was responsible for the Islamic State group’s defense of Raqqa.

She told one witness in 2018 that she instructed a person in Syria to tell Fluke-Ekren’s Family she was dead so the U.S. government would not try to find her, according to Parekh’s memo.

Photos from a family blog called 4KansasKids show her and her children in the years they traveled between Kansas and Egypt, posing at the base of the pyramids in Egypt and playing in the snow in the U.S.

A 2004 article about homeschooling in the Lawrence Journal-World featured Fluke-Ekren and her children. She told the paper she pulled her kids from public school because she was dissatisfied with how her children were performing in public and private schools. Homeschooling allowed her to teach Arabic to her kids.

Court papers do not indicate how she was captured, or how long she was in custody before being turned over to the FBI Friday.

She is scheduled to make an initial appearance at U.S. District Court in Alexandria on Monday, at which time she would likely be appointed an attorney.

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