By Frederik
Pleitgen, CNN
December
22, 2014 -- Updated 0618 GMT (1418 HKT)
(CNN) --
Juergen Todenhoefer's journey was a tough one: dangerous, but also eye-opening.
The author traveled deep into ISIS territory -- the area they now call their
"caliphate" -- visiting Raqqa and Deir Ezzor in Syria , as well as Mosul
in Iraq .
Todenhoefer
managed to visit the Mosque there where the leader of ISIS ,
Abu Bakr al-Bagdadi, gave his only ever public address.
And he saw
the realities of daily life under ISIS , with
all shops having to close for prayers in the middle of the day.
"There
is an awful sense of normalcy in Mosul ,"
Todenhoefer said in an exclusive interview with CNN.
"130,000
Christians have been evicted from the city, the Shia have fled, many people
have been murdered and yet the city is functioning and people actually like the
stability that the Islamic State has brought them."
Nonetheless,
he also says there is an air of fear among residents: "Of course many of
the them are quite scared, because the punishment for breaking the Islamic
State's strict rules is very severe."
According
to ISIS's leadership, the group's fighters managed to take Mosul with only about 300 men, even though
more than 20,000 Iraqi army soldiers were stationed there when the attack was
launched.
Todenhoefer
spoke with several ISIS fighters who took part
in the operation.
"It took
us about four days to take Mosul ,"
a young fighter told him.
"So
you were only about 300 men and you defeated 20,000 troops in four days?"
Todenhoefer asked.
"Well,
we didn't attack them all at once, we hit their front lines hard, also using
suicide attacks. Then the others fled very quickly," the fighter
explained. "We fight for Allah, they fight for money and other things that
they do not really believe in."
Glow in
their eyes
Todenhoefer
told CNN the enthusiasm the ISIS militants
showed was one thing that stood out.
"When
we stayed at their recruitment house, there were 50 new fighters who came every
day," Todenhoefer said. "And I just could not believe the glow in
their eyes. They felt like they were coming to a promised land, like they were
fighting for the right thing.
"These
are not stupid people. One of the people we met had just finished his law
degree, he had great job offers, but he turned them down to go and fight ... We
met fighters from Europe and the United States . One of them was from
New Jersey .
Can you imagine a man from New Jersey
traveling to fight for the Islamic State?"
He went on
to say that one of ISIS 's main points of
strength is their fighters' willingness -- even their will -- to die on the
battlefield.
Todenhoefer
met one somewhat overweight recruit in a "safe house" who said he
wears a suicide belt to every battle because he is too chubby to run away if he
is cornered and would choose to blow himself up, rather than be captured.
"This
was a broken man," Todenhoefer said. "It was very sad to see a person
in this state. He was just very weak and very afraid of his captors."
Todenhoefer
conducted the interview with the prisoner while several ISIS
fighters stood guard. He asked the man whether he knew what would happen to
him.
"I do
not know," the captive told him. "My family does not even know I am
still alive. I hope that maybe there will be some sort of prisoner
exchange."
Child ISIS
fighters
Todenhoefer
was also taken to see child soldiers outfitted with Islamic State gear and brandishing
AK-47s. One of the boys seemed very young but claimed he had already gone to
battle for ISIS .
"How
old are you?" Todenhoefer asked.
"I am
13 years old," the boy replied -- though he looked even younger than that.
One of the
most remarkable episodes of Todenhoefer's trip to the ISIS-controlled region
came when he was able to conduct an interview with a German fighter who spoke
on behalf of ISIS 's leadership.
The man --
clearly unapologetic about the group's transgressions -- vowed there was more
to come; he also issued a warning to Europe and the United States .
"So
you also want to come to Europe ?"
Todenhoefer asked him.
"No,
we will conquer Europe one day," the man
said. "It is not a question of if we will conquer Europe ,
just a matter of when that will happen. But it is certain ... For us, there is
no such thing as borders. There are only front lines.
"Our
expansion will be perpetual ... And the Europeans need to know that when we
come, it will not be in a nice way. It will be with our weapons. And those who
do not convert to Islam or pay the Islamic tax will be killed."
Todenhoefer
asked the fighter about their treatment of other religions, especially Shia
Muslims.
"What
about the 150 million Shia, what if they refuse to convert?" Todenhoefer
asked.
"150
million, 200 million or 500 million, it does not matter to us," the
fighter answered. "We will kill them all."
Beheadings
The
interview became testy when they reached the topic of beheadings and
enslavement, especially of female captives.
"So do
you seriously think that beheadings and enslavement actually signal progress
for humanity?" Todenhoefer asked.
"Slavery
absolutely signals progress," the man said. "Only ignorant people
believe that there is no slavery among the Christians and the Jews. Of course
there are woman who are forced into prostitution under the worst circumstances.
"I
would say that slavery is a great help to us and we will continue to have
slavery and beheadings, it is part of our religion ... many slaves have
converted to Islam and have then been freed."
The ISIS
spokesman blamed the beheading of captured Western journalists and aid workers
on the policies of the United
States .
"People
should really think about the case of James Foley," he said. "He did
not get killed because we started the battle. He got killed because of the
ignorance of his government that did not give him any help."
Even with
recent gains by Kurdish forces against ISIS in Northern Iraq, Todenhoefer sees
the extremist group as entrenched, building state institutions, and that it
shows no sign of losing its grip in the main areas it controls in Iraq and Syria .
"I
think the Islamic State is a lot more dangerous than Western leaders
realize," he said. "They believe in what they are fighting for and
are preparing the largest religious cleansing campaign the world has ever
seen."
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