USA TODAY US Edition

Islamic State leader pops up on video

Terrorist salutes killers in Sri Lanka bombings

- Deirdre Shesgreen Contributi­ng: Kim Hjelmgaard and Tom Vanden Brook

The Islamic State terrorist group released a video Monday purportedl­y showing its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, for the first time in nearly five years.

In the video, Baghdadi praises the Sri Lanka attackers and calls those deadly bombings revenge for the Islamic State’s defeat in Syria, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which tracks extremist groups. Those attacks, carried out on Easter Sunday against Catholic churches and high-end hotels, killed more than 250 people, including at least four Americans.

The Islamic State, also known as ISIS, claimed responsibi­lity for the attack. Sri Lankan officials said members of a local radical Islamic group carried out the bombings with the help of an internatio­nal network.

The ISIS video was released by AlFurqan, the terrorist group’s media outlet. It shows Baghdadi – whose whereabout­s are unknown – seated on a rug or cushion with a machine gun propped up next to him and a black robe draped around his legs. His hair is covered with a black hood, but his face and bushy beard are visible.

Rita Katz, executive director and founder of SITE, said the video demonstrat­es

that ISIS remains a “serious danger.” It shows not only that Baghdadi “is still alive,” she wrote in a tweet Monday, “but also that he is able to reemerge to his supporters and reaffirm the group’s us-vs-the-world message after all the progress made against the group.”

The Islamic State lost control of its last patch of territory in Syria in late March, when the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces freed the eastern Syrian village of Baghouz. Jihadists

mounted a last stand there.

That ended the self-declared “caliphate” ISIS establishe­d in 2014, when the terrorist group controlled a large swath of territory in Syria and Iraq. In the video, Baghdadi talks about the end of the fighting in Syria, according to SITE.

As the attacks April 21 in Sri Lanka demonstrat­ed, that territoria­l defeat has not extinguish­ed the Islamic State’s capacity to unleash death and destructio­n.

Charlie Winter, a senior research fellow at the Internatio­nal Centre for the Study of Radicaliza­tion, part of King’s College in London, said ISIS probably released the video to prove Baghdadi is alive and portray him as a “hands-on” leader. It helps “reiterate that its jihad isn’t over,” Winter said in a series of tweets Monday.

The bombings in Sri Lanka mirrored other Islamic State attacks. Terrorism specialist­s noted that ISIS has frequently used local extremists to carry out terrorist attacks, and they often aim at “soft targets” that are not well-secured.

In a statement on its propaganda site, ISIS said the Sri Lanka attack specifical­ly targeted Christians and foreigners from countries involved in fighting the terrorist group in Syria and Iraq.

Experts said additional attacks would almost certainly follow.

“That’s because terrorism has long been a crucial promotiona­l tactic for ISIS,” Winter and Aymenn Al-Tamimi, an independen­t researcher and founder of a website that collects ISIS documents, wrote in an analysis published by The Atlantic.

“This won’t change just because the organizati­on, which tried to build a proto-state on territory it held in Iraq and Syria, was militarily defeated earlier this year,” they wrote. For ISIS, “the strategic utility of terrorism has never been greater.”

 ?? AP ?? A video posted on a militant website Monday purportedl­y shows the leader of the Islamic State terrorist group, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
AP A video posted on a militant website Monday purportedl­y shows the leader of the Islamic State terrorist group, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

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