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Former Saddam Hussein spy mastermind behind ISIS takeover of northern Syria

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http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...nd-push-into-iraq-report-claims-10189280.html

Documents uncovered by Der Spiegel claim Bakr made Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi Isis’ leader to give the group a ‘religious face’

Isis’s takeover of northern Syria and its intentions to overrun Iraq were masterminded by a man named Haji Bakr, a former intelligence officer for Saddam Hussein, it has been claimed.

In a lengthy report published by Der Spiegel, entitled “Secret files reveal the structure of Islamic State,” the German magazine said it had gained access to 31 pages of handwritten charts, lists and schedules that amount to a blueprint for the establishment of a caliphate in Syria.

The papers, which were seized by rebels in the Syrian city of Aleppo early last year after Isis (formerly known as Islamic State) fighters were forced to abandon their headquarters there, were obtained by the magazine following lengthy negotiations with the rebels.

A man called Samir Abd Muhammad al-Khlifawi, who also went by the better-known pseudonym of Haji Bakr, is claimed to be the author of the documents.

A former colonel in the intelligence service for Saddam Hussein’s air defence force, Bakr is understood to have overseen a meticulous plan for the takeover of northern Syria, using techniques learned in the Hussein regime, including surveillance, espionage, murder and kidnapping, Der Spiegel claims.

The report follows claims made by Isis defectors that a number of former officers and security agents from Hussein’s regime have been running Isis during its bloody campaign to establish a caliphate.

“What Bakr put on paper, page by page, with carefully outlined boxes for individual responsibilities, was nothing less than a blueprint for takeover,” the magazine’s story, written by Christoph Reuter, claimed.

“It was not a manifesto of faith, but a technically precise plan for an ‘Islamic Intelligence State’ – a caliphate run by an organisation that resembled East Germany’s notorious Stasi domestic intelligence agency,” it said.

The report documents Bakr’s movements from the fall of the Iraqi army in 2003 by US authorities until his death last year. It claims that between 2006 and 2008 Bakr was held in US detention facilities – including Abu Graib – before becoming highly influential in the creation of Isis in 2010.

Bakr reportedly worked with a small group of former Iraqi intelligence officers to place Abu Bakr al-Bagdhdadi at the head of the militant operation, with the goal of giving the group a “religious face,” while Bakr himself was described as a nationalist, rather than an Islamist.

Der Spiegel asserts that the combination of fanatical beliefs and strategic calculations – which were led by Bakr – have led to the success of the militant group in its goal to overrun northern Syria and to push into Iraq.

Bakr is understood to have travelled to Syria in 2012 to oversee the takeover of the country’s northern region, and that he chose to use a number of novice foreign fighters from Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Europe, as well as experienced Chechen and Uzbek fighters in Isis’ military campaign.

The former intelligence officer was reportedly killed during fighting with Syrian rebels in January last year, which was after his takeover plan had been implemented and the militants had been placed in a strong strategic position to be able to move into Iraq.

Who was it that decided that completely disbanding the Iraqi military after the invasion was a good idea ?
 

Enron

Banned
You know what though? It's not as if Iraq's new leaders (mostly Shia) would have let anyone from the former Sunni-dominated regime stay in their positions anyways, especially ones that were close to Saddam's power structure.
 

Straxus

Member
Who knows how long this idea was floating around in secrecy among the Sunni underground. Hussein might've been a dead man without Bush forcing it by his own people.
 
Killing civilians by the thousands is professional for a wannabe army?

Not really, when they go up against organized forces, Daesh are clueless about what to do.

Never underestimate your enemy in the fear that saying anything else will look like praise or respect for him.

There must be something they are doing "right" to get so much power in such a short time.

These things must be analyzed and used against them.
 

andycapps

Member
Never underestimate your enemy in the fear that saying anything else will look like praise or respect for him.

There must be something they are doing "right" to get so much power in such a short time.

These things must be analyzed and used against them.

Sure, I'm just saying that as a military force, they're nothing special. They thrive on coming into places with shaky military and police. They don't invade areas with strong militaries capable of fighting back. Peshmerga are doing well against them now, their biggest problem is a lack of weapons and munition, from what I'm seeing.

Some interesting bits in this article from CNN regarding how Daesh governs it's citizens lives.
 
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