(The Washington Post)
BY
ASSOCIATED PRESS July 2 at 12:33 PM
Omar
al-Shishani, one of hundreds of Chechens who have been among the toughest
jihadi fighters in Syria, has emerged as the face of the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant, appearing frequently in its online videos — in contrast to the
group’s Iraqi leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who remains deep in hiding and has
hardly ever been photographed.
In a video
released by the group over the weekend, al-Shishani is shown standing next to
the group’s spokesman among a group of fighters as they declare the elimination
of the border between Iraq
and Syria .
The video was released just hours before the extremist group announced the
creation of a caliphate — or Islamic state — in the areas it controls.
“Our aim is
clear and everyone knows why we are fighting. Our path is toward the
caliphate,” the 28-year-old al-Shishani declares. “We will bring back the
caliphate, and if God does not make it our fate to restore the caliphate, then we
ask him to grant us martyrdom.” The video is consistent with other Associated
Press reporting on al-Shishani.
Al-Shishani
has been the group’s military commander in Syria ,
leading it on an offensive to take over a broad stretch of territory leading to
the Iraq
border. But he may have risen to become the group’s overall military chief, a
post that has been vacant after the Iraqi militant who once held it — known as
Abu Abdul-Rahman al-Bilawi al-Anbari — was killed in the Iraqi city of Mosul in early June. The
video identified al-Shishani as “the military commander” without specifying its
Syria
branch, suggesting he had been elevated to overall commander, though the group
has not formally announced such a promotion.
As the
militant group’s operations in Iraq
and Syria grow “more and
more inter-dependent by the day, it is more than possible that someone like
(al-Shishani) could assume overall military leadership,” said Charles Lister,
Visiting Fellow with the Brookings
Doha Center .
The
extremist group began as al-Qaida’s branch in Iraq , and many of its top leaders
are Iraqi. But after it intervened in Syria ’s
civil war last year, it drew hundreds of foreign fighters into its operations
in Syria .
Now with victories on the two sides of the border, the two branches are
swapping fighters, equipment and weapons to an even greater extent than before,
becoming a more integrated organization. Its declaration of the caliphate —
aspiring to be a state for all Muslims — could mean an even greater
internationalization of its ranks.
Alexei
Malashenko, an expert with the Carnegie Endowment’s Moscow office, said ethnicity is not a major
factor in jihadi movements, only dedication to jihad. Al-Shishani “is a fanatic
of Islam with war experience, and he obviously has had a strong track record
(among fellow fighters),” he said.
Alexander
Bortnikov, the head of Russia ’s
Federal Security Service, the main KGB successor agency known under its Russian
acronym FSB, said last October that about 500 militants from Russia and hundreds more from other ex-Soviet
nations are fighting in Syria .
Al-Shishani,
whose real name is Tarkhan Batirashvili, is an ethnic Chechen from the Caucasus
nation of Georgia, specifically from the Pankisi Valley, a center of Georgia’s
Chechen community and once a stronghold for militants.
He did
military service in the Georgian army but was discharged after an unspecified
illness, said one of his former neighbors, who spoke on condition of anonymity
for fear of reprisals. At one point, Georgian police arrested him for illegal
possession of arms, the neighbor said. As soon as he was released in 2010,
Batirashvili left for Turkey .
Georgian police refused to comment.
He later
surfaced in Syria in 2013 with his nom de guerre, which means “Omar the
Chechen” in Arabic, leading an al-Qaida-inspired group called “The Army of
Emigrants and Partisans,” which included a large number of fighters from the
former Soviet Union. A meeting was soon organized with al-Baghdadi in which
al-Shishani pledged loyalty to him, according to Lebanon ’s al-Akhbar newspaper,
which follows jihadi groups.
He first
showed his battlefield prowess in August 2013, when his fighters proved pivotal
in taking the Syrian military’s Managh air base in the north of the country.
Rebels had been trying for months to take the base, but it fell soon after
al-Shishani joined the battle, said an activist from the region, Abu al-Hassan
Maraee.
The Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant entered the Syria conflict in 2013, and
initially it was welcomed by other rebels. But rebel groups — including other
Islamic militant factions — turned against it, alienated by its brutal methods
and kidnappings and killings of rivals, and accusing it of trying to take over
the opposition movement for its own ambitions of creating a transnational
Islamic enclave. Rebel factions have been fighting against the group since last
year in battles that have left thousands dead. Al-Qaida’s central command
ejected the extremist group from the network.
For the past
two months, al-Shishani has led an offensive in Syria ’s
eastern Deir el-Zour province against rival rebels, seeking to solidify his
hold on a stretch of territory connected to neighboring Iraq .
In May,
some Arab media organizations reported that al-Shishani was killed in the
fighting. An activist in Iraq
in contact with members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant said
al-Shishani suffered wounds in his right arm and was taken into Iraq where he underwent treatment before
returning to Syria .
He spoke on condition of anonymity for security concerns.
Since then,
al-Shishani has appeared multiple times in photos and videos put out by the
group. The photos and videos are consistent with the AP’s reporting from
activists on the ground. In a recent photograph, the young, round-faced
al-Shishani, wearing a black cap and beige gown, is seen with a big smile as he
examines a Humvee said to have been captured in Iraq
and brought into Syria .
Hussein
Nasser, spokesman for the Islamic Front coalition group of rebels, said
Chechens are among the most feared fighters in Syria .
“A Chechen
comes and has no idea about anything (in the country) and does whatever his
leader tells him,” Nasser said. “Even if his
emir tells him to kill a child, he would do it.”
Associated
Press writers Bilal Hussein in Beirut , Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow
and Misha Dzhindzhikhashvili in Tbilisi ,
Georgia
contributed to this report.
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