Ansar al Islam names new leader

Ansar-al-Islam-banner.jpg

Ansar al Islam’s new flag. Image from the SITE Intelligence Group.

The al Qaeda-linked Ansar al Islam released a statement announcing the name of its new leader. The Iraqi terror group also announced that it would fly a new flag.

In a statement released on jihadist websites yesterday, Ansar al Islam named Abu Hashim Muhammad bin Abdul Rahman al Ibrahim as its leader. The brief statement, which was translated by the SITE Intelligence Group, is dated Dec. 15, 2011 and was signed by the “Command of Ansar al Islam.”

“Sheikh Abu Hashim Muhammad bin Abdul Rahman al Ibrahim was instituted as the general emir [leader] of Ansar al-Islam, and the group gave allegiance to him…. The giving of allegiance is a commitment for everyone who belongs to the group, and there is no quitting of it after signing it,” according to the statement.

Ibrahim replaces Abu Abdullah al Shafi, the former leader of Ansar al Islam, who was detained along with seven “criminal associates” during raids in the Baghdad neighborhoods of Mansour and Adhamiyah on May 3, 2010. Shafi was captured less than one month after US and Iraqi forces killed Abu Ayyub al Masri, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, and Abu Omar al Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq, al Qaeda’s political front, during a raid near Tikrit.

In addition to naming Ibrahim as the leader of Ansar al Islam, the terror group announced the creation of a new flag for the central command and the “Military and Jihad Department.”

“The group’s banner, ‘al Sahab’ [the clouds], which is black with a white section in the middle, has written on it the words of the testimony, ‘There is No God but Allah, Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah,’ in black, cursive script, and is fastened to a spear.”

The Military and Jihad Department’s banner is white and is called “al Jabal” [the mountain]. It also contains the same texts as the command’s flag.

Background on Ansar al Islam

Ansar al Islam (AAI) was formed in late 2001, when Osama bin Laden and Kurdish Islamist groups decided to combine their efforts in northern Iraq. AAI’s co-founder, Mullah Krekar, lived in Iran for a time before fleeing to Norway. Abu Musab al Zarqawi, the deceased leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, assumed a leadership position in AAI after fleeing Afghanistan. Zarqawi and other al Qaeda-linked terrorists established camps in northern Iraq in 2001 and 2002. Contrary to popular belief, Zarqawi and other AAI operatives also operated in Baghdad prior to the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq.

AAI has evolved over time, adopting multiple names and suffering from various reported schisms. Members of the group adopted the name Ansar al Sunna for a time, but reportedly reverted back to calling themselves AAI. The name Ansar al Sunna has stuck, however, and is still used by some jihadists under the AAI/AAS banner.

AAI and AAS have longstanding ties to Iran. Kurdish officials routinely complain about Iran’s support for the jihadis. Since they were first routed from their safe haven in northern Iraq by US forces in 2003, AAI/AAS leaders have operated inside Iran. As Esquire reported in 2003, “most” of AAI’s members and its leaders “escaped to Iran” following the US-led invasion.

Guards on the Iranian side of the border also allow members of the group to pass into Iraq, where they fight government forces and commit terrorist attacks.

In June 2007, the Jamestown Foundation’s Terrorism Monitor reported on the relationship between Iran and AAI. “Kurdish officials, like many others who reside along the border areas, express concern that Iran has perhaps played a role in Ansar al Islam’s resurgence,” the Jamestown Foundation reported. “Various regional newspapers have reported on Iran’s involvement with Ansar al-Islam, and some have leveled this accusation since 2004.”

In October 2007, the Dallas Morning News reported on ties between Iran and AAI. “From time to time Iran uses them [Ansar al-Islam fighters] as a pressure card to make trouble for us,” Salam Omer Ibrahim, mayor of the Iraqi border city of Said Sadiq, told the newspaper. “They’re saying, ‘If you help our opposition, we have ways to respond,’ ” Ibrahim added.

The US government has also long accused AAI and AAS of receiving support from terrorists based in Iran.

In December 2005, the US military announced that an Iraqi court had issued an arrest warrant for Mullah Halgurd Al Khabir, who was a senior AAS leader in Baghdad at the time. The military described AAS as “a terrorist organization with links to terrorists in Syria and Iran,” which has “committed multiple suicide bomb attacks in Iraq that have resulted in the deaths of Coalition Forces, Iraqi Army Soldiers, Iraqi policemen and Iraqi citizens.”

The US military also said that Khabir had ties to Zarqawi and was the “prime suspect” in both the August 2003 bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad and the October 2003 bombing of the Turkish embassy in Baghdad.

In July 2011, the US Treasury Department designated six members of an al Qaeda network headquartered in Iran. Treasury alleged that the network operated as part of an “agreement between al Qaeda and the Iranian government.” Although neither AAI nor AAS were mentioned in the designation, at least two of the six operatives targeted by the Treasury Department provide support to al Qaeda in Iraq. [See LWJ report, Treasury targets Iran’s ‘secret deal’ with al Qaeda.]

And in September 2011, the US State Department added Muhammad Hisham Muhammad Isma’il Abu Ghazala, a Hamas operative who is linked to Iran and al Qaeda and fought with Ansar al Islam in Iraq, to the list of specially designated global terrorists. In July 2006, the Iraqi government listed Abu Ghazala as one of the 41 most-wanted individuals in the country and offered a $50,000 bounty for information leading to his capture. He was described as an “Ansar al-Islam/al-Sunna affiliated improvised explosive device facilitator.”

Earlier this week, the Norwegian press reported that AAI co-founder Mullah Krekar has announced plans to return to Kurdistan.

Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of FDD's Long War Journal. Thomas Joscelyn is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Senior Editor for FDD's Long War Journal.

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4 Comments

  • Mr. Noboy says:

    I never knew the extent of Iranian influence in AAI. What a fascinating and informational article. It seems counter intuitive considering Iran’s Shiite majority and support of Shiite militia groups in Iraq.
    Another co ordinated bombing attack in Iraq has left me wondering what will become of Al Qeada in Iraq when the inevitable Sunni vs Shiite civil war breaks out? Will the Sunni’s open themselves up to Al Qeada or will they reject them as outsiders once again?
    I, for one, could care less if the Sunnis and Shiites slaughter each other in the millions but the rise of Al Qeada poses a direct threat to the US and our interests. That poses some very specific problems for our political and military leadership.

  • alex humpty says:

    So all roads lead to Iran. That seems to be the conclusion of the majority of the reportage on LWJ these days.
    We’ve not, however, had an article that examines the consequences of any overt military action against Iran, both politically and economically. Meir Dagan has recently being black-balled for publically stating the obvious in reigning in those seeking to rush to war with Iran.
    Iran has links to ACMs in Iraq and Af-Pak ? Not at all surprised. It makes absolute strategic sense from the Iran pov. Iran poses no threat to the US. It does to Saudi Arabia. Let the two sides resolve their millenial dispute. We can clean up after. Just my tuppence worth.

  • Bungo says:

    It’s my firm opinion that the ship has sailed regarding the famous “Shiite/Sunni Civil War” in Iraq. I think that if that was ever going to happen it would have happened already. As a matter of fact it probably DID already happen. It was simply a smaller, low intensity affair than what was predicted. The Sunnis tried, failed and will be assimilated into the overall situation in Iraq over a period of years.
    As for “Al Queda in Iraq” there will probaly be some of these trouble makers around for a long time. They will continue to blow things up from time to time but they will be as ineffectual and inconsequential as always in any of their “goals”. Right now I would say most (or at least half) of all Muslim countries now have some sort of “Al Queda” group within them blowing things up now and again. But they’re all fighting for a losing cause. No Islamic nation is going to KowTow to a couple of psycopaths. It just won’t work. Lord only knows how long this “Al Queda” craze will last but they’re definitely on the downhill slide. They just don’t have any grass-roots support now like they may have had in the past. If you want to see real problems concerning “Al Queda” you have to visit the failed nations of Yemen and Somalia.

  • mike merlo says:

    Are there any documented links or collaboration between the PKK & Ansar al Islam?

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