ISIS allegedly replaced Injured Leader Baghdadi With 'Student' of Al Qaeda Strategist Abu Musʻab Al-Suri. (CJRP).
The Islamic State’s temporary leader is a former
Iraqi physics teacher located in the country’s second-biggest city,
Mosul, the adviser to the Iraqi government on ISIS has revealed.
Yesterday, it was reported by the Guardian
that the terror group’s caliph, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, was seriously
wounded in a U.S. coalition airstrike in western Iraq in March, leaving
him with injuries which allegedly rendered him incapable of carrying out
the day-to-day duties as caliph. The revelation raised questions about
the leadership structure of the group and reportedly led to frantic
meetings between senior ISIS officials on life after Baghdadi.
Speaking to Newsweek, Dr Hisham al Hashimi, the
Iraqi government adviser, confirmed that Abu Alaa Afri, the
self-proclaimed caliph’s deputy and a former physics teacher, has now
been installed as the stand-in leader of the terror group in Baghdadi’s
absence.
“After Baghdadi’s wounding, he [Afri] has begun to head up
Daesh [arabic term for ISIS] with the help of officials responsible for
other portfolios,” confirms Hashimi. “He will be the leader of Daesh if
Baghdadi dies.”
It is believed that Afri is located in the al-Hadar region
of the city of Mosul. He has risen through the ranks of the group,
becoming more prominent in the eyes of the group’s leadership and even
more important than Baghdadi himself, Hashimi claims.
“Yes – more important, and smarter, and with better
relationships. He is a good public speaker and strong charisma,” says
the adviser when asked if Afri is now more important within the group
than Baghdadi. “All the leaders of Daesh find that he has much jihadi
wisdom, and good capability at leadership and administration.”
Little is known about Afri, also known as Haji Iman, but
Hashimi reveals some details about the previous life of Baghdadi’s
mysterious right-hand man.
“He was a physics teacher in Tal Afar [northwestern Iraqi
city] in Nineveh, and has dozens of publications and religious (shariah)
studies of his own,” he says. “He is a follower of Abu Musaab al-Suri
[prominent Al Qaeda jihadi scholar].” * Architect of Global Jihad: The Life of Al-Qaida Strategist Abu Musʻab Al-Suri
ISIS experts support Hashimi’s claim that Afri is the
rising star within the terror group.
Hassan Hassan, analyst at the Abu
Dhabi-based Delma Institute and co-author of the New York Times
bestseller ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror, says that Afri is “one of its most important players”.
“Abu Alaa [Afri] seems to have become more prominent in
recent months, especially after the group began to suffer tactical
defeats in Syria and Iraq since December. He replaced [ISIS’s Syria
governor Abu Ali] al-Anbari as al-Baghdadi’s top man after al-Baghdadi
became less involved in decision making for security reasons,” says
Hassan.
Before becoming Baghdadi’s deputy, Afri was a key
coordination link between Baghdadi and his inner circle and also his
emirs in different provinces across the group’s extensive caliphate in
Syria, Iraq and Libya. “Appointment as a wilayat [province] coordinator
is an indication of profound trust and this position is essentially the
last link between ISIS’s upper echelon and its lower ranks,” Hassan
adds.
It is believed that Afri, when senior al-Qaeda operatives
Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayyub al-Masri were killed in 2010, was
Osama bin Laden’s preferred choice to become emir of al-Qaeda in Iraq, the group which eventually morphed into ISIS.
Further, last July, The Telegraph revealed ISIS’s cabinet of which it reported that Afri, named as Abu Suja in the report, was a “general coordinator for the affairs of martyrs and women”.
Further, last July, The Telegraph revealed ISIS’s cabinet of which it reported that Afri, named as Abu Suja in the report, was a “general coordinator for the affairs of martyrs and women”.
Afri is believed to have travelled to Afghanistan in 1998,
according to Hashimi, before becoming a senior member of al-Qaeda after
its future Iraqi leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi pledged allegiance to the
terror group in 2004. He oversaw the sharia authorities in northern Iraq
and “was very strict”, notes the Iraqi adviser.
While details about Afri’s personality are limited, it is
believed that he leans toward reconciliation with rival extremist group
al-Qaeda and its Syrian affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra and prefers that
ISIS’s leadership structure is composed half of Arabs and half of
foreign members of the group.
Hassan concludes that the rise of Afri should not be viewed
as the overtaking of Baghdadi as he was installed a “supreme leader”
with his generals having the authority to “steer the group”, leading and
planning their activities while ensuring the entire leadership
“communicate on big issues”.
The group, who swept across Syria and Iraq to capture key
towns and cities last summer, have suffered a number of setbacks as a
result of the U.S.-led coalition’s military campaign, forcing ISIS from
the Syrian city of Kobane and losing the Sunni-majority city of Tikrit
in Iraq. Hmmm......Anymore 'Good news'?
Update!
Most unlikely. US denied this claim http://t.co/cbCvXqpsC3 …
Moreover, no Calipha has appointed a "vice". A shura decision. @MFS001
— Elijah J. Magnier (@EjmAlrai) April 23, 2015

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