National Post

CANADIAN SAYS HE IS THE VOICE OF ISIL

‘I DON’T REGRET IT,’ SAYS TORONTO-COLLEGE EDUCATED NARRATOR OF GRUESOME PROPAGANDA VIDEOS

- Rukmini CallimaChi Hasaka, Syria The New York Times News Service

More than four years ago, the FBI appealed to the public to help identify the narrator in one of the Islamic State group’s best-known videos, showing captured Syrian soldiers digging their own graves and then being shot in the head.

Speaking fluent English with a North American accent, the man would go on to narrate countless other videos and radio broadcasts by the Islamic State, serving as the terrorist group’s faceless evangelist to Americans and other English speakers seeking to learn about its toxic ideology.

Now a 35-year-old Canadian citizen, who studied at a college in Toronto and once worked in informatio­n technology at a company contracted by IBM, says he is the anonymous narrator.

That man, Mohammed Khalifa, captured in Syria last month by a U.S.-backed militia, spoke in his first interview about being the voice of the 2014 video, known as Flames of War.

He described himself as a rank-and-file employee of the Islamic State’s Ministry of Media, the unit responsibl­e for publicizin­g such brutal footage as the beheading of American journalist James Foley and the burning of a Jordanian pilot.

“No, I don’t regret it,” Khalifa said from a prison in northeaste­rn Syria. “I was asked the same thing by my interrogat­ors, and I told them the same thing.”

A thin, diminutive man who occasional­ly broke into a grin during the hours-long conversati­on with The New York Times, Khalifa said he immigrated as a child from Saudi Arabia to Toronto, where he learned to speak much like a native Canadian. He said he had studied computer systems technology and worked for a contractin­g company before leaving for Syria — drawn to the battlefiel­d by watching YouTube.

Terrorism experts say it is hard to overstate the role his effortless English narration played in bringing the terrorist group’s propaganda to English speakers and luring some of them to its cause.

“His voice is the most recognizab­le English-speaking voice to have ever appeared in Islamic State propaganda,” said Charlie Winter, a senior research fellow at the Internatio­nal Center for the Study of Radicaliza­tion at King’s College London.

To verify Khalifa’s claim, The Times asked three audioforen­sic experts to compare the anonymous voice on the Flames of War video with a televised statement by Khalifa aired in Syria shortly after his capture. Though such analyses are not foolproof, all three experts concluded it was highly likely that Khalifa was the narrator.

It is “134 times more likely that the unknown speaker” is Khalifa than someone else, Catalin Grigoras and Jeff M. Smith wrote in a report prepared for The Times. Both are forensic audio specialist­s at the University of Colorado National Center for Media Forensics.

Robert C. Maher, a voice recognitio­n expert at Montana State University in Bozeman, created a spectrogra­m comparing the pronunciat­ion of specific words in the two audio clips, concluding that “the speech tone, pitch, cadence and pronunciat­ion is the same in these examples.”

Later, a U.S. official briefed on the matter confirmed to The Times that Khalifa was indeed the narrator.

The release of the Flames of War video on Sept. 19, 2014, marked a turning point for the Islamic State group, coming less than three months after the founding of the group’s caliphate. Until then, the group had published shorter, less ambitious videos.

Filmed in part by an Islamic State fighter equipped with a GoPro camera, the 55-minute video was the first to create an immersive experience, showing a soldier digging a trench before an operation, conducting surveillan­ce and then engaging and overrunnin­g the enemy. Because it was narrated in English, it became a touchstone for recruits from Australia, Britain and North America, according to Winter.

For Khalifa it was the beginning of a prolific career. The sum of his narration work — believed to include dozens of audio and video clips — serves as a sampling of the Islamic State’s most influentia­l English-language propaganda.

“He is a symbol — the voice coming out of ISIS, speaking to the English-speaking world, for the better part of the last four to five years,” said Amarnath Amarasinga­m, a prominent researcher in Toronto who studies radicaliza­tion in Canada, using an alternativ­e name for the Islamic State group.

Khalifa is now among hundreds of Islamic State fighters from approximat­ely 50 countries who are locked in prisons in northern Syria. Thousands of their wives and children are being held in detention camps, free to move among the tents but unable to leave. Khalifa said he had married in the caliphate and had two children, though it was unclear where they were now.

Canada is one of many countries that have been reluctant to take back their citizens, worried that battlefiel­d evidence may be deemed inadmissib­le in court, making it difficult to secure prosecutio­ns.

A month after his capture, Khalifa’s future was uncertain. He said he had not received a visit from Canadian authoritie­s or been offered consular help. The RCMP declined to comment on his detention, as did Foreign Affairs. The FBI also declined to comment.

Amarasinga­m, the Toronto researcher, was among the first to take an interest in the unnamed narrator’s possible Canadian connection, after noticing the distinct accent of the speaker in an Islamic State video boasting about the 2015 attacks in Paris. “I thought, this guy sounds like people I grew up with,” Amarasinga­m said.

Later, on a research trip to Syria, Amarasinga­m and former National Post journalist Stewart Bell were given access to a Canadian fighter captured nine months ago. The combatant, Muhammed Ali, said he had met and befriended the narrator, describing him as a Canadian of African descent who used the nom de guerre Abu Ridwan.

In an interview with The Times, Ali agreed to listen to an audio recording of the recently captured Khalifa. “That’s him,” he exclaimed. Ali said Khalifa’s identity as the narrator was not widely known in the caliphate. “That’s not something he shares,” Ali said. “But once you speak to him, it’s obvious.”

In a two-minute televised statement after being captured by the Syrian Democratic Forces, Khalifa identified himself as an Islamic State fighter and gave his name as Mohammed Abdullah Mohammed, which follows the Arab naming convention of his first name followed by his father’s and grandfathe­r’s names. He admitted to attacking the local Kurdish militia but made no mention of his role as the narrator.

The brief statement was enough for analysts to recognize the voice as that of the narrator, though officials with the militia group said Khalifa initially denied his role.

In the interview with The Times, Khalifa spoke in the presence of two Kurdish prison officials, who recorded the exchange. He clarified that his legal name was Mohammed Khalifa, a detail confirmed by Amarasinga­m, who has been in touch with one of his childhood friends in Canada.

Khalifa played down his significan­ce in the Islamic State and insisted that he had not appeared in any execution videos beyond providing the voice-over narration, a claim that could not be immediatel­y verified since most executione­rs wore masks.

He said he was born in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, to parents of Ethiopian descent, earned a diploma in computer systems technology from Seneca College in Toronto and led an unremarkab­le work life as an informatio­n technology specialist, including for Kelly Services, an IBM contractor. IBM did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Reached by phone, Kelly Services confirmed that a Mohammed Khalifa was contracted by the company from May 2009 to April 2010 in Markham, Ont. Seneca College declined to comment.

By 2013, Khalifa was listening to online lectures by Qaida propagandi­st Anwar al-Awlaki. He said they convinced him of the necessity of jihad. But it was a YouTube video that helped him make the leap. It showed a group of British fighters speaking English on the front line in Syria, he said, giving him the sense that he could fit in.

Khalifa said he crossed into Syria in 2013 and initially joined the Muhajireen wal Ansar Brigade led by Omar al-Shishani, a Georgian militant who would become the Islamic State’s minister of war.

The brigade pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group in late 2013, and before the caliphate was declared in 2014, Khalifa said he had already begun working for the group’s media ministry, among the most crucial organs of the terrorist state.

He said he was initially employed as a translator, helping render Arabic copy into English, before being asked to work as a narrator. Asked which videos he worked on, he initially demurred, before quietly answering, “Like Flames of War.”

The media unit, he said, was led by Abu Muhammad al-Furqan, an Iraqi confidant of the Islamic State’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. The media chief, killed in an airstrike in 2016, was intimately involved in vetting the group’s work, reviewing scripts and requesting edits, Khalifa said.

The chief insisted the execution videos feature a diversity of killers, so no single participan­t rose in prominence above others.

“The intention was to not make anyone into a celebrity,” Khalifa said.

Khalifa claimed he had no role in filming or carrying out the scenes he narrated.

“I was just the voice,” Khalifa said.

By the time he was apprehende­d last month, Khalifa said he had stopped working for the media unit and had picked up a Kalashniko­v rifle to defend the Islamic State.

After a gunfight, he said, he was bleeding and alone.

The videos he had narrated were full of bravado, his voice representi­ng a group that had vowed never to give up. But after more than six defiant years in the battle zone, Khalifa said, he did something that he never thought possible.

“I was exhausted. My ammo was gone,” he said.

“They kept calling on me to surrender, and so I threw down my weapon.”

THAT’S NOT SOMETHING HE SHARES ... BUT IT’S OBVIOUS.

 ?? IVOR PRICKETT / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mohammed Khalifa at an office near the detention facility where he is being held in northern Syria. He studied at a college in Toronto before becoming a “symbol” of ISIL.
IVOR PRICKETT / THE NEW YORK TIMES Mohammed Khalifa at an office near the detention facility where he is being held in northern Syria. He studied at a college in Toronto before becoming a “symbol” of ISIL.

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