Kurdish Security Official: ISIS Leader Baghdadi Almost Certainly Alive

Kurdish Security Official: ISIS Leader Baghdadi Almost Certainly Alive
A top Kurdish counter-terrorism official Lahur Talabany speaks during an interview with Reuters in Sulaimania, Iraq on July 17, 2017. (REUTERS/Ari Jalal)
Reuters
7/17/2017
Updated:
7/17/2017

Sulaimania, IRAQ—A top Kurdish counter-terrorism official said on Monday he was 99 percent sure that ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was alive and located south of the Syrian city of Raqqa, after reports that he had been killed.

Baghdadi is definitely alive. He is not dead. We have information that he is alive. We believe 99 percent he is alive,” Lahur Talabany told Reuters in an interview.

“Don’t forget his roots go back to al-Qaeda days in Iraq. He was hiding from security services. He knows what he is doing.”

Iraqi security forces have ended three years of ISIS rule in the Iraqi city of Mosul, and the group is under growing pressure in Raqqa—both strongholds in the militants’ crumbling self-proclaimed caliphate.

Leader of ISIS Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi at a mosque in the center of Iraq's second city, Mosul, according to a video recording posted on the Internet on July 5, 2014. (REUTERS/Social Media Website via Reuters TV)
Leader of ISIS Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi at a mosque in the center of Iraq's second city, Mosul, according to a video recording posted on the Internet on July 5, 2014. (REUTERS/Social Media Website via Reuters TV)

Still, Talabany said ISIS was shifting tactics despite low morale and it would take three or four years to eliminate the group.

After defeat, ISIS would wage an insurgency and resemble al-Qaeda on “steroids”, he said.

The future leaders of ISIS were expected to be intelligence officers who served under former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, the men credited with devising the group’s strategy.