Amidst speculation that
U.S.-led airstrikes had last week killed or injured Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria
(ISIS), the group released an audio message on Thursday from Baghdadi
himself where he called on his supporters to “erupt volcanoes of jihad”,
saying ISIS would “never abandon fighting”, adding: “they will be
triumphant, even if only one man of them is left.” While Baghdadi
apparently was not killed in last week’s raid on the Iraqi city of
Mosul, the rumors nonetheless raised the question: can ISIS survive and
thrive without its mysterious frontman?
“Baghdadi
is more like a CEO than a traditional battlefield leader,” says Justin
Dargin, a Middle East scholar at the University of Oxford. Unlike the
late al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Baghdadi does not present himself
as a charismatic, messianic leader to his followers. A November report from security intelligence firm The Soufan Group agrees,
saying Baghdadi “has not needed to be a visionary or a natural leader,
just strong enough to impose his will more effectively than anyone
else.”
Nicknamed “the invisible sheikh”
by his followers, Baghdadi has been careful to reveal very little about
himself, aside from a few videos released by ISIS, and even reportedly
wears a mask when addressing ISIS fighters. Experts say this is
partially a response to what happened to other leaders who were hunted
down once their secret locations were discovered, including his
predecessor Jordanian Islamist Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, who was killed in a
U.S. bombing raid in 2006. Baghdadi reportedly went to Afghanistan in the late 1990s with Zarqawi, who went on to found al-Qaeda in Iraq, the group that would eventually become ISIS.
As a member of Zarqawi’s terrorist group, Baghdadi was picked up and detained for five years by the U.S.
in Camp Bucca in Iraq in 2004, where many al-Qaeda commanders were
jailed. “”Prison sentences are opportunities for these people to meld
ideologies, to develop friendships, to develop trust,” says Lauren
Squires, research analyst at the Institute for the Study of War in Washington D.C. “Camp Bucca is where [Baghdadi] actually met a lot of his closest cohorts that are in ISIS now,”
Once a somewhat peripheral figure, Baghdadi has now become
ISIS’s leading man, playing an instrumental part in gathering support
for the militant group as it established its self-proclaimed caliphate
in June. “He became a very public face to this organization that was
rapidly growing,” says Squires, referring to Baghdadi’s notorious
appearance in a video
leading prayer at a mosque in Mosul in July. “So he was important in
unifying and developing this group to get it off the ground.”
Baghdadi also claims to be a direct descendant of the Prophet Mohammed, naming himself “Caliph Ibrahim” in July, ruler of the Islamic State caliphate which gives him further legitimacy among the organization’s followers.
But Paul Rogers, professor of Peace Studies at the
University of Bradford in the U.K., points out that while Baghdadi is
very important, ISIS “is an organization that is both adaptive and
robust.” Squires agrees, saying that the old Western strategy of cutting
off the head of a snake no longer applies, because of how resilient
ISIS has proven to be. Data from IHS Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency
Center suggests that the U.S.-led coalition has failed to slow down the number of ISIS attacks, and body counts are higher than ever before. In Baghdadi’s recent audio message he claimed that “America and its allies are terrified, weak, and powerless.”
That resilience comes from the fact that the core
leadership of ISIS is primarily made up of professionals who were elite
members of Saddam Hussein’s Baathist government in Iraq. That gives the
group a clear command and control structure, says Dargin.
Unlike al-Qaeda’s affiliate-based system, which operates
through more independent cells in different parts of the world, ISIS is
located in a tighter geographical area and has a more government-like,
bureaucratic structure. That includes two major military and administrative bodies:
the Shura Council and the Sharia Council. “What’s different [from
al-Qaeda] is that the structure falls underneath one central command,”
says Squires.
This leads her to believe that the most effective way to
degrade a terrorist organization like ISIS “is by hitting the mid-level
to senior-level leadership” repeatedly, in order to remove that echelon
and ensure the group will not be able to reconstitute its
leadership—rather than focusing solely on Baghdadi.
Researchers tell TIME that it’s very difficult to identify
who would be the next viable successor in the event of Baghdadi’s
death, but that they are certain ISIS has contingency plans and that it
would only be a temporary setback for the group, especially in practical
terms. “It is extremely important to remember that ISIS considers
itself a “state,” and while it is not a state such as is recognizable
anywhere else in the world, it would not allow itself to collapse
because of the death of one leader,” says Dargin.
The death of Baghdadi could also feed into the religious
beliefs of ISIS followers who extol martyrdom. Indeed, Squires believes
his death may even increase “the global jihadi incentive to join and
conduct retaliatory attacks.”
Of course, if Baghdadi is killed, many within ISIS and
outside it may see his death as a strategic blow against the terrorist
organization—and a successful attack would surelybe trumpeted by the U.S. But as the group continues to increase its
stronghold in Iraq and Syria, it seems that ISIS will remain a threat to
the region for quite some time—with or without Baghdadi.
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