Islamic State group leader Abu Hussein al-Qurashi’s six-month rule ended when he detonated a suicide vest during a Turkish special forces raid in northwest Syria on Saturday after refusing to surrender, a senior Turkish security official said.
The third IS leader to die by detonating an explosive vest during a raid since 2019, al-Qurashi leaves behind an organization that once ruled millions of people via its control of a third of Iraq and Syria, but has now been forced underground.
The four-hour raid, led by Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MIT), saw special forces blast their way through a perimeter fence, back door and walls of his hideout in a two-story building near the town of Jandaris, the security official said.
Photo: AP
Two Syrian security sources said Turkish-backed Syrian armed groups set a perimeter around the area while Turkish special forces, who one source said earlier entered Syria in armored vehicles, raided the house.
The MIT declined to comment for this report. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday said that al-Qurashi “was neutralized” as part of the intelligence forces’ operation.
Images of the site provided by the security official showed a red-roofed building with most of the walls on its ground floor blown out.
Metal and cinderblock debris lay scattered on a paved patio with a small fountain, and on the brick-red soil of an adjacent field planted with olive trees.
The MIT, which the Turkish source said had been following al-Qurashi for a long time, conducted the covert operation after determining he would soon relocate, the official said, adding that al-Qurashi detonated his suicide vest when he realized he would be captured.
There were calls for al-Qurashi to surrender, but no response, the source said.
Like his predecessor, al-Qurashi never made a public address, a marker of how far the group’s reach has fallen since former leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi climbed the pulpit of a crowded mosque in Iraq in 2014 to declare his self-styled caliphate.
Al-Qurashi was the latest in a series of senior IS members to be either captured or killed in Syria’s northwest, a sliver of territory held by rival militias, including hardline armed groups and jihadist factions backed by Turkey.
The area has become the most significant IS safe haven in the region after the group was territorially defeated in Iraq in 2017 and Syria in 2019, with members and supporters slipping across the remote 600km Iraqi-Syrian border.
“There are a lot of sleeper cells in these areas that can facilitate more ISIS [Islamic State of Iraq and Syria] officials coming into these zones, and plenty of checkpoints at which they can pay money to get through easily,” Navvar Shaban of the Omran Center for Strategic Studies said.
“The only safe haven for the senior Daesh [IS] leaders is in Syria, and specifically in areas bordering Turkey,” an Iraqi intelligence official said.
Iraqi intelligence cooperation with Turkey played a major role in recent operations targeting senior IS members, according to the source and a second Iraqi intelligence official focused on key IS leaders’ activities in Iraq, Syria and Turkey.
The cooperation helped Turkey determine the approximate whereabouts of al-Qurashi in Syria
They said Turkey facilitated the entry of Iraqi agents into northwestern Syria, who then lured senior IS leader Khaled al-Jabouri from Turkey to Syria where he was killed in a US drone strike last month.
In the process of that operation, Turkish-backed armed groups detained two IS members, based in Afrin and a village near Jandaris, who had aimed to provide Jabouri with a message from al-Qurashi, the sources said.
“This was a red flag that Qurashi was highly likely hiding in this area,” one of the sources said.
The US had also helped with the provision of intelligence obtained by advanced systems that could intercept IS communications in Syria, the source said.
A spokesperson for the US-led anti-IS coalition said they do not comment on the military operations of other nations.
A Turkish security official declined to comment on any Iraqi intelligence involvement in the operation.
With al-Qurashi gone, analysts expect the Islamic State group to eventually announce a new leader.
He would become the fourth in as many years, presiding over a group that has seen a significant reduction in activities across the areas it operates, chiefly the Middle East and Africa.
The Iraqi intelligence officials said IS’ new leader would likely be an Iraqi, like his predecessors, but there were only a handful of leaders left who were eligible to take over the role, three of whom were known to Iraqi intelligence.
The Islamic State group has not confirmed or commented on the killing of its leader.
DEADLOCK: Putin has vowed to continue fighting unless Ukraine cedes more land, while talks have been paused with no immediate results expected, the Kremlin said Russia on Friday said that peace talks with Kyiv were on “pause” as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin still wanted to capture the whole of Ukraine. Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said that he was running out of patience with Putin, and the NATO alliance said it would bolster its eastern front after Russian drones were shot down in Polish airspace this week. The latest blow to faltering diplomacy came as Russia’s army staged major military drills with its key ally Belarus. Despite Trump forcing the warring sides to hold direct talks and hosting Putin in Alaska, there
North Korea has executed people for watching or distributing foreign television shows, including popular South Korean dramas, as part of an intensifying crackdown on personal freedoms, a UN human rights report said on Friday. Surveillance has grown more pervasive since 2014 with the help of new technologies, while punishments have become harsher — including the introduction of the death penalty for offences such as sharing foreign TV dramas, the report said. The curbs make North Korea the most restrictive country in the world, said the 14-page UN report, which was based on interviews with more than 300 witnesses and victims who had
COMFORT WOMEN CLASH: Japan has strongly rejected South Korean court rulings ordering the government to provide reparations to Korean victims of sexual slavery The Japanese government yesterday defended its stance on wartime sexual slavery and described South Korean court rulings ordering Japanese compensation as violations of international law, after UN investigators criticized Tokyo for failing to ensure truth-finding and reparations for the victims. In its own response to UN human rights rapporteurs, South Korea called on Japan to “squarely face up to our painful history” and cited how Tokyo’s refusal to comply with court orders have denied the victims payment. The statements underscored how the two Asian US allies still hold key differences on the issue, even as they pause their on-and-off disputes over historical
CONSOLIDATION: The Indonesian president has used the moment to replace figures from former president Jokowi’s tenure with loyal allies In removing Indonesia’s finance minister and U-turning on protester demands, the leader of Southeast Asia’s biggest economy is scrambling to restore public trust while seizing a chance to install loyalists after deadly riots last month, experts say. Demonstrations that were sparked by low wages, unemployment and anger over lawmakers’ lavish perks grew after footage spread of a paramilitary police vehicle running over a delivery motorcycle driver. The ensuing riots, which rights groups say left at least 10 dead and hundreds detained, were the biggest of Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto’s term, and the ex-general is now calling on the public to restore their