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Al-Qaeda in Iraq

Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI; Arabic: القاعدة في العراق, romanizedal-Qā'idah fī al-ʿIrāq) or al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia (القاعدة في بلاد الرافدين), officially known as Tanzim Qaidat al-Jihad fi Bilad al-Rafidayn or TQJBR[9] ("Organization of Jihad's Base in Mesopotamia", تنظيم قاعدة الجهاد في بلاد الرافدين), was an Iraqi Salafi Sunni jihadist organization[2] affiliated with al-Qaeda, for two years.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq
(Organization of Jihad's Base in Mesopotamia)
One of several flags used by AQI in their video releases; others used white text for the circle and the shahada.
LeadersAbu Musab al-Zarqawi  (17 October 2004 – 7 June 2006)
Abu Ayyub al-Masri  (7 June 2006 – 15 October 2006)
Dates of operation17 October 2004[1]–15 October 2006
HeadquartersAnbar Province[citation needed]
Active regionsIraq
IdeologySalafi jihadism[2]
Wahabism
Anti-Shi'ism[3]
Qutbism
Part of al-Qaeda
AlliesMujahideen Shura Council
Opponents Multi-National Force – Iraq
 Iraq (Iraqi security forces, Kurdish and Shia militias)
Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq[4]
Mahdi Army[5]
 Jordan
 United Nations
Battles and warsIraq War
Iraqi insurgency (2003–06)
Iraqi Civil War (2006-08)
Designated as a terrorist group by Iraq[6]
 Malaysia[7]
 Saudi Arabia[8]

Origins Edit

The group was founded by the Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 1999 under the name Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad (جماعة التوحيد والجهاد, "Group of Monotheism and Jihad").

The group is believed to have started bomb attacks in Iraq as of August 2003, five months after the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the Iraq War, targeting UN representatives, Iraqi Shiite institutions, the Jordanian embassy, provisional Iraqi government institutions.

After it pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network in October 2004, its official name became Tanzim Qaidat al-Jihad fi Bilad al-Rafidayn.[1][10][11][12]

Leadership Edit

On 7 June 2006, the leader of AQI, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and his spiritual adviser Abu Abdul Rahman, were both killed by a U.S. airstrike with two 500 lb (230 kg) bombs on a safe house near Baqubah. The group's leadership was then assumed by the Egyptian militant Abu Ayyub al-Masri, also known as Abu Hamza al-Muhajir.[13]

Purpose Edit

In a letter to al-Zarqawi in July 2005, Al-Qaeda's Ayman al-Zawahiri outlined a four-stage plan beginning with taking control of Iraq. Step 1: expulsion of US forces from Iraq. Step 2: establishing in Iraq an Islamic authority—a caliphate. Step 3: "the jihad wave" should be extended to "the secular countries neighbouring Iraq". Step 4: "the clash with Israel".[14][15]

Operations Edit

 
US Navy Seabees during the Second Battle of Fallujah (November 2004)

2004 Edit

At the end of October 2004, Al-Qaeda in Iraq kidnapped Japanese citizen Shosei Koda.[16] In an online video, AQI gave Japan 48 hours to withdraw its troops from Iraq, otherwise Koda's fate would be "the same as that of his predecessors, [Nicholas] Berg and [Kenneth] Bigley and other infidels".[17] While Japan refused to comply with this demand, Koda was beheaded, and his dismembered body found on 30 October.[18]

AQI claimed responsibility for the car bomb attacks on 19 December 2004 in the Shiite holy cities Najaf and nearby Karbala, killing 60 people.[19]

2005 Edit

According to internal documents seized in 2008, AQI began in 2005 systematically killing Iraqi tribesmen and nationalist insurgents wherever they began to rally against it.[20]

Attacks in 2005 claimed by AQI include:

  • 30 January: AQI launched attacks on voters during the Iraqi legislative election in January.[14] In 100 armed attacks, 44 people were killed, although some attacks may have been carried out by other groups. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said: "We have declared a fierce war on this evil principle of democracy (…)".[21]
  • 28 February: in the southern city of Hillah, a car bomb struck a crowd of police and Iraqi National Guard recruits, killing 125 people.[19]
  • 2 April: the group launched a combined suicide and conventional attack on Abu Ghraib prison in April.[14]
  • 7 May: in Baghdad, two explosives-laden cars were used against an American security company convoy. 22 people are killed, including two Americans.[19]
  • 6 July: AQI claimed responsibility for the kidnapping and execution of Egypt's ambassador to Iraq, Ihab el-Sherif.[22][23] In a message posted on the Internet, Zarqawi said: "The Islamic court of the al-Qaeda Organization in the Land of Two Rivers has decided to refer the ambassador of the state of Egypt, an ally of the Jews and the Christians, to the mujahideens so that they can execute him."[24]
  • 15–17 July: a three-day series of suicide attacks, including the Musayyib marketplace bombing, left 150 people dead and 260 wounded. AQI claimed that the bombings were part of a campaign to take control of Baghdad.[25]
  • 19 August: In the Jordanian city of Aqaba, a rocket attack kills a Jordanian soldier.[19]
  • 14 September: Al-Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for a single-day series of more than a dozen bombings in Baghdad, which killed about 160 people, most of whom were unemployed Shia workers.[26][27] Al-Zarqawi declared "all-out war" on Shiites, Iraqi troops and the Iraqi government in a statement.[26]
  • Friday 16 September: a suicide bomb attack outside a Shiite mosque 200 km north of Baghdad killed 13 worshippers.[27]
  • 24 October: AQI made coordinated suicide attacks outside the Sheraton Ishtar and Palestine Hotel in Baghdad in October.[14]
  • 9 November: in the Jordanian capital Amman, three bomb attacks against hotels killed 60 people.[19]
  • 18 November: AQI claimed responsibility for a series of Shia mosque bombings in the city of Khanaqin, which killed at least 74 people.[27]

2006 Edit

Autumn 2006, AQI took over Baqubah, the capital of Diyala Governorate, and before March 2007, AQI or its umbrella organization 'Islamic State of Iraq' (ISI) claimed Baqubah as its capital.[31]

  • The US suggested that 'al Qaeda' was involved in the wave of chlorine bombings in Iraq, October 2006–June 2007, which affected hundreds of people, albeit with few fatalities.[32]
Further violent activities in Iraq after 13 October 2006 blamed on 'al Qaeda (in Iraq)' are listed in article Islamic State of Iraq (ISI).

War: Sunnis against Shias Edit

September 2005, after a U.S.-Iraqi offensive on the town of Tal Afar, al-Zarqawi declared "all-out war" on Shia Muslims in Iraq.[3]

Conflicts between Al Qaeda in Iraq and other Sunni Iraqi groups Edit

In September–October 2005, there were signs of a split between homegrown Iraqi Sunni Arab insurgents who wanted Sunni influence in national politics restored,[33] and therefore supported a "no" vote in the 15 October 2005 referendum on a constitution,[34] and al-Zarqawi's Al Qaeda in Iraq, which strove for a theocratic state and threatened to kill those who engaged in the national political process with Shiites and Kurds,[33] including those who would take part in that referendum.[34]

From mid-2006, AQI began to be pushed out of their strongholds in rural Anbar Province, from Fallujah to Qaim, by tribal leaders in open war. That campaign was assisted by the Iraqi government paying cash gifts and alleged salaries to tribal sheikhs of up to $5,000 a month.[35] In September 2006, 30 tribes in Anbar Province formed an alliance called the "Anbar Awakening" to fight AQI.[36]

January 2006: Tanzim (AQI) creates Mujahideen Shura Council Edit

 
Shosei Koda before his beheading

AQI's efforts to recruit Iraqi Sunni nationalist and secular groups were undermined by its violent tactics against civilians and by its fundamentalist doctrine. In January 2006 it created an umbrella organization called the Mujahideen Shura Council (MSC), in an attempt to unify Sunni insurgents in Iraq.[29]

Strength of AQI in 2004–2006 Edit

American military field leaders, in particular, Lt. General Michael Flynn, in late spring 2004, were 'strategically surprised' at the capabilities, scale of operations, and quality of leadership of the subject.[37] Western media suggested that foreign fighters continued to flock to AQI.[38] A secret U.S. Marine Corps intelligence report of August 2006 wrote that Iraq's Sunni minority had been increasingly abandoned by their religious and political leaders who had fled or been assassinated, was "embroiled in a daily fight for survival", feared "pogroms" by the Shiite majority, and was increasingly dependent on Al-Qaeda in Iraq as its only hope against growing Syrian dominance across Baghdad.

In western Iraq, AQI was entrenched, autonomous and financially independent, and therefore the death of AQI leader Al-Zarqawi in June 2006 had little impact on the structure or capabilities of AQI. Illicit oil trading provided them with millions of dollars, and their popularity was rising in western Iraq.[39]

In Anbar, most government institutions had disintegrated by August 2006, and AQI was the dominant power, the U.S. Marine Corps intelligence report said.[39] In 2006, the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research estimated that Al-Qaeda in Iraq's core membership was "more than 1,000".[40]

October 2006: Tanzim (AQI) creates Islamic State of Iraq Edit

On 13 October 2006, the MSC declared the establishment of the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), comprising Iraq's six mostly Sunni Arab governorates: Baghdad, Anbar, Diyala, Kirkuk, Salah al-Din, Ninawa, and "other parts of the governorate of Babel", with Abu Omar al-Baghdadi being announced as the self-proclaimed state's Emir.[41] A Mujahideen Shura Council leader said: "God willing we will set the law of Sharia here and we will fight the Americans"; the Council urged on Sunni Muslim tribal leaders to join their separate Islamic state "to protect our religion and our people, to prevent strife and so that the blood and sacrifices of your martyrs are not lost".[42]

Following the announcement, scores of gunmen took part in military parades in Ramadi and other Anbar towns to celebrate. In reality, the group did not control territory in Iraq.[42][43]

In November, a statement was issued by Abu Ayyub al-Masri, leader of Mujahideen Shura Council (MSC), announcing the disbanding of the MSC, in favor of the ISI.[citation needed] After this statement, there were a few more claims of responsibility issued under the name of the Mujahideen Shura Council, but these eventually ceased and were totally replaced by claims from the Islamic State of Iraq.[citation needed]

In April 2007, Abu Ayyub al-Masri was given the title of 'Minister of War' within the ISI's ten-member cabinet.[44]

 
Car bombings were a common form of attack in Iraq during the Coalition occupation

According to a report by US intelligence agencies in May 2007, the ISI planned to seize power in the central and western areas of the country and turn it into a Sunni Islamic state.[45]

By June 2007, the uncompromising brand of extreme fundamentalist Islam of AQI and the ISI had alienated more nationalist Iraqi strands of insurgency.[46]

U.S. fighting Tanzim (Al-Qaeda in Iraq) Edit

In November 2004, al-Zarqawi's network was the main target of the US Operation Phantom Fury in Fallujah,[citation needed] but its leadership managed to escape the American siege and subsequent storming of the city.

On 7 June 2006, al-Zarqawi and his spiritual adviser Sheik Abd-Al-Rahman, were both killed by a U.S. airstrike with two 500 lb (230 kg) bombs on a safe house near Baqubah. The group's leadership was then assumed by Abu Ayyub al-Masri, also known as Abu Hamza al-Muhajir.[13]

Criticisms from al-Zawahiri Edit

U.S. intelligence in October 2005 published an intercepted letter purportedly from Ayman al-Zawahiri questioning AQI's tactic of indiscriminately attacking Shias in Iraq.[47]

In a video that appeared in December 2007, al-Zawahiri defended AQI, but distanced himself from the crimes against civilians committed by "hypocrites and traitors" that he said existed among its ranks.[48]

Operations outside Iraq and other activities Edit

On 3 December 2004, AQI attempted unsuccessfully to blow up an Iraqi–Jordanian border crossing. In 2006 a Jordanian court sentenced al-Zarqawi and two of his associates to death in absentia for their involvement in the plot.[49] AQI claimed to have carried out three attacks outside Iraq in 2005. In the most deadly, suicide bombs killed 60 people in Amman, Jordan on 9 November 2005.[50] They claimed responsibility for the rocket attacks which narrowly missed the American naval ships USS Kearsarge and USS Ashland in Jordan, and also targeted the city of Eilat in Israel, and for the firing of several rockets into Israel from Lebanon in December 2005.[14] The affiliated groups were linked to regional attacks outside Iraq which were consistent with their stated plan, one example being the 2005 Sharm al-Sheikh bombings in Egypt, which killed 88 people, many of them foreign tourists.

The Lebanese-Palestinian militant group Fatah al-Islam, which was defeated by Lebanese government forces during the 2007 Lebanon conflict, was linked to AQI and led by al-Zarqawi's former companion who had fought alongside him in Iraq.[51] The group may have been linked to the little-known group called "Tawhid and Jihad in Syria",[52] and may have influenced the Palestinian militant group in Gaza called Jahafil Al-Tawhid Wal-Jihad fi Filastin.[53]

See also Edit

References Edit

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  45. ^ Mahnaimi, Uzi (13 May 2007). . The Sunday Times. London. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011.
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  49. ^ Aloul, Sahar (19 December 2005). . The Inquirer. Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on 29 October 2007.
  50. ^ "Al Qaeda claims responsibility for Amman blasts". The New York Times. 10 November 2005. from the original on 28 January 2015. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  51. ^ . International Herald Tribune. Associated Press. 20 May 2007. Archived from the original on 25 May 2007.
  52. ^ . International Herald Tribune. Associated Press. 28 May 2007. Archived from the original on 1 June 2007. Retrieved 6 August 2007.
  53. ^ , MEMRI 10 November 2008

qaeda, iraq, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, 2022, arabic, القاعدة, في, العراق, romanized, idah, ʿirāq, qaeda, mesopotamia, القاع. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2022 Al Qaeda in Iraq AQI Arabic القاعدة في العراق romanized al Qa idah fi al ʿIraq or al Qaeda in Mesopotamia القاعدة في بلاد الرافدين officially known as Tanzim Qaidat al Jihad fi Bilad al Rafidayn or TQJBR 9 Organization of Jihad s Base in Mesopotamia تنظيم قاعدة الجهاد في بلاد الرافدين was an Iraqi Salafi Sunni jihadist organization 2 affiliated with al Qaeda for two years Al Qaeda in Iraq Organization of Jihad s Base in Mesopotamia One of several flags used by AQI in their video releases others used white text for the circle and the shahada LeadersAbu Musab al Zarqawi 17 October 2004 7 June 2006 Abu Ayyub al Masri 7 June 2006 15 October 2006 Dates of operation17 October 2004 1 15 October 2006HeadquartersAnbar Province citation needed Active regionsIraqIdeologySalafi jihadism 2 WahabismAnti Shi ism 3 QutbismPart ofal QaedaAlliesMujahideen Shura CouncilOpponentsMulti National Force Iraq Iraq Iraqi security forces Kurdish and Shia militias Asa ib Ahl al Haq 4 Mahdi Army 5 Jordan United NationsBattles and warsIraq WarIraqi insurgency 2003 06 Iraqi Civil War 2006 08 Designated as a terrorist group by Iraq 6 Malaysia 7 Saudi Arabia 8 Preceded by Jama at al Tawhid wal Jihad Ansar al Islam associate Succeeded byMujahideen Shura Council Islamic State of Iraq Contents 1 Origins 2 Leadership 3 Purpose 4 Operations 4 1 2004 4 2 2005 4 3 2006 5 War Sunnis against Shias 6 Conflicts between Al Qaeda in Iraq and other Sunni Iraqi groups 7 January 2006 Tanzim AQI creates Mujahideen Shura Council 7 1 Strength of AQI in 2004 2006 8 October 2006 Tanzim AQI creates Islamic State of Iraq 9 U S fighting Tanzim Al Qaeda in Iraq 10 Criticisms from al Zawahiri 11 Operations outside Iraq and other activities 12 See also 13 ReferencesOrigins EditThe group was founded by the Jordanian militant Abu Musab al Zarqawi in 1999 under the name Jama at al Tawhid wal Jihad جماعة التوحيد والجهاد Group of Monotheism and Jihad The group is believed to have started bomb attacks in Iraq as of August 2003 five months after the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the Iraq War targeting UN representatives Iraqi Shiite institutions the Jordanian embassy provisional Iraqi government institutions After it pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden s al Qaeda network in October 2004 its official name became Tanzim Qaidat al Jihad fi Bilad al Rafidayn 1 10 11 12 Leadership EditOn 7 June 2006 the leader of AQI Abu Musab al Zarqawi and his spiritual adviser Abu Abdul Rahman were both killed by a U S airstrike with two 500 lb 230 kg bombs on a safe house near Baqubah The group s leadership was then assumed by the Egyptian militant Abu Ayyub al Masri also known as Abu Hamza al Muhajir 13 Purpose EditIn a letter to al Zarqawi in July 2005 Al Qaeda s Ayman al Zawahiri outlined a four stage plan beginning with taking control of Iraq Step 1 expulsion of US forces from Iraq Step 2 establishing in Iraq an Islamic authority a caliphate Step 3 the jihad wave should be extended to the secular countries neighbouring Iraq Step 4 the clash with Israel 14 15 Operations EditSee also Iraq 2003 2007 US Navy Seabees during the Second Battle of Fallujah November 2004 2004 Edit At the end of October 2004 Al Qaeda in Iraq kidnapped Japanese citizen Shosei Koda 16 In an online video AQI gave Japan 48 hours to withdraw its troops from Iraq otherwise Koda s fate would be the same as that of his predecessors Nicholas Berg and Kenneth Bigley and other infidels 17 While Japan refused to comply with this demand Koda was beheaded and his dismembered body found on 30 October 18 AQI claimed responsibility for the car bomb attacks on 19 December 2004 in the Shiite holy cities Najaf and nearby Karbala killing 60 people 19 2005 Edit See also Terrorist incidents in Iraq in 2005 According to internal documents seized in 2008 AQI began in 2005 systematically killing Iraqi tribesmen and nationalist insurgents wherever they began to rally against it 20 Attacks in 2005 claimed by AQI include 30 January AQI launched attacks on voters during the Iraqi legislative election in January 14 In 100 armed attacks 44 people were killed although some attacks may have been carried out by other groups Abu Musab al Zarqawi said We have declared a fierce war on this evil principle of democracy 21 28 February in the southern city of Hillah a car bomb struck a crowd of police and Iraqi National Guard recruits killing 125 people 19 2 April the group launched a combined suicide and conventional attack on Abu Ghraib prison in April 14 7 May in Baghdad two explosives laden cars were used against an American security company convoy 22 people are killed including two Americans 19 6 July AQI claimed responsibility for the kidnapping and execution of Egypt s ambassador to Iraq Ihab el Sherif 22 23 In a message posted on the Internet Zarqawi said The Islamic court of the al Qaeda Organization in the Land of Two Rivers has decided to refer the ambassador of the state of Egypt an ally of the Jews and the Christians to the mujahideens so that they can execute him 24 15 17 July a three day series of suicide attacks including the Musayyib marketplace bombing left 150 people dead and 260 wounded AQI claimed that the bombings were part of a campaign to take control of Baghdad 25 19 August In the Jordanian city of Aqaba a rocket attack kills a Jordanian soldier 19 14 September Al Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for a single day series of more than a dozen bombings in Baghdad which killed about 160 people most of whom were unemployed Shia workers 26 27 Al Zarqawi declared all out war on Shiites Iraqi troops and the Iraqi government in a statement 26 Friday 16 September a suicide bomb attack outside a Shiite mosque 200 km north of Baghdad killed 13 worshippers 27 24 October AQI made coordinated suicide attacks outside the Sheraton Ishtar and Palestine Hotel in Baghdad in October 14 9 November in the Jordanian capital Amman three bomb attacks against hotels killed 60 people 19 18 November AQI claimed responsibility for a series of Shia mosque bombings in the city of Khanaqin which killed at least 74 people 27 2006 Edit See also Terrorist incidents in Iraq in 2006 The 5 January bombings on Shi ite civilians in Karbala and Ramadi near a religious shrine and a police recruiting centre were blamed by some residents on al Qaeda in Iraq 28 The Al Askari Mosque one of the holiest sites in Shia Islam after the first attack by Al Qaeda in Iraq in 2006 The 22 February 2006 al Askari Mosque bombing was blamed by a U S intelligence officer 29 in March 2007 and by Iraqi officials 30 in May 2007 on AQI On 3 June 2006 AQI abducted and killed four Russian diplomats in Iraq 16 June 2006 a U S checkpoint near Baghdad was attacked one U S soldier killed and two abducted Those abducted Thomas Lowell Tucker and Kristian Menchaca were found on 19 June having been tortured and killed The next day Mujahedeen Shura Council of Iraq MSC an organization including Tanzim Qaidat al Jihad fi Bilad al Rafidayn claimed to have slaughtered the two Americans Three weeks later MSC issued a video showing the mutilated corpses of Tucker and Menchada purportedly as revenge for the rape and murder of an Iraqi girl in March 2006 by U S soldiers of the same brigade Autumn 2006 AQI took over Baqubah the capital of Diyala Governorate and before March 2007 AQI or its umbrella organization Islamic State of Iraq ISI claimed Baqubah as its capital 31 The US suggested that al Qaeda was involved in the wave of chlorine bombings in Iraq October 2006 June 2007 which affected hundreds of people albeit with few fatalities 32 Further violent activities in Iraq after 13 October 2006 blamed on al Qaeda in Iraq are listed in article Islamic State of Iraq ISI War Sunnis against Shias EditSeptember 2005 after a U S Iraqi offensive on the town of Tal Afar al Zarqawi declared all out war on Shia Muslims in Iraq 3 Conflicts between Al Qaeda in Iraq and other Sunni Iraqi groups EditSee also Awakening movements in Iraq In September October 2005 there were signs of a split between homegrown Iraqi Sunni Arab insurgents who wanted Sunni influence in national politics restored 33 and therefore supported a no vote in the 15 October 2005 referendum on a constitution 34 and al Zarqawi s Al Qaeda in Iraq which strove for a theocratic state and threatened to kill those who engaged in the national political process with Shiites and Kurds 33 including those who would take part in that referendum 34 From mid 2006 AQI began to be pushed out of their strongholds in rural Anbar Province from Fallujah to Qaim by tribal leaders in open war That campaign was assisted by the Iraqi government paying cash gifts and alleged salaries to tribal sheikhs of up to 5 000 a month 35 In September 2006 30 tribes in Anbar Province formed an alliance called the Anbar Awakening to fight AQI 36 January 2006 Tanzim AQI creates Mujahideen Shura Council EditSee also Mujahideen Shura Council Iraq Shosei Koda before his beheadingAQI s efforts to recruit Iraqi Sunni nationalist and secular groups were undermined by its violent tactics against civilians and by its fundamentalist doctrine In January 2006 it created an umbrella organization called the Mujahideen Shura Council MSC in an attempt to unify Sunni insurgents in Iraq 29 Strength of AQI in 2004 2006 Edit American military field leaders in particular Lt General Michael Flynn in late spring 2004 were strategically surprised at the capabilities scale of operations and quality of leadership of the subject 37 Western media suggested that foreign fighters continued to flock to AQI 38 A secret U S Marine Corps intelligence report of August 2006 wrote that Iraq s Sunni minority had been increasingly abandoned by their religious and political leaders who had fled or been assassinated was embroiled in a daily fight for survival feared pogroms by the Shiite majority and was increasingly dependent on Al Qaeda in Iraq as its only hope against growing Syrian dominance across Baghdad In western Iraq AQI was entrenched autonomous and financially independent and therefore the death of AQI leader Al Zarqawi in June 2006 had little impact on the structure or capabilities of AQI Illicit oil trading provided them with millions of dollars and their popularity was rising in western Iraq 39 In Anbar most government institutions had disintegrated by August 2006 and AQI was the dominant power the U S Marine Corps intelligence report said 39 In 2006 the State Department s Bureau of Intelligence and Research estimated that Al Qaeda in Iraq s core membership was more than 1 000 40 October 2006 Tanzim AQI creates Islamic State of Iraq EditSee also Islamic State of Iraq On 13 October 2006 the MSC declared the establishment of the Islamic State of Iraq ISI comprising Iraq s six mostly Sunni Arab governorates Baghdad Anbar Diyala Kirkuk Salah al Din Ninawa and other parts of the governorate of Babel with Abu Omar al Baghdadi being announced as the self proclaimed state s Emir 41 A Mujahideen Shura Council leader said God willing we will set the law of Sharia here and we will fight the Americans the Council urged on Sunni Muslim tribal leaders to join their separate Islamic state to protect our religion and our people to prevent strife and so that the blood and sacrifices of your martyrs are not lost 42 Following the announcement scores of gunmen took part in military parades in Ramadi and other Anbar towns to celebrate In reality the group did not control territory in Iraq 42 43 In November a statement was issued by Abu Ayyub al Masri leader of Mujahideen Shura Council MSC announcing the disbanding of the MSC in favor of the ISI citation needed After this statement there were a few more claims of responsibility issued under the name of the Mujahideen Shura Council but these eventually ceased and were totally replaced by claims from the Islamic State of Iraq citation needed In April 2007 Abu Ayyub al Masri was given the title of Minister of War within the ISI s ten member cabinet 44 Car bombings were a common form of attack in Iraq during the Coalition occupationAccording to a report by US intelligence agencies in May 2007 the ISI planned to seize power in the central and western areas of the country and turn it into a Sunni Islamic state 45 By June 2007 the uncompromising brand of extreme fundamentalist Islam of AQI and the ISI had alienated more nationalist Iraqi strands of insurgency 46 U S fighting Tanzim Al Qaeda in Iraq EditIn November 2004 al Zarqawi s network was the main target of the US Operation Phantom Fury in Fallujah citation needed but its leadership managed to escape the American siege and subsequent storming of the city On 7 June 2006 al Zarqawi and his spiritual adviser Sheik Abd Al Rahman were both killed by a U S airstrike with two 500 lb 230 kg bombs on a safe house near Baqubah The group s leadership was then assumed by Abu Ayyub al Masri also known as Abu Hamza al Muhajir 13 Criticisms from al Zawahiri EditU S intelligence in October 2005 published an intercepted letter purportedly from Ayman al Zawahiri questioning AQI s tactic of indiscriminately attacking Shias in Iraq 47 In a video that appeared in December 2007 al Zawahiri defended AQI but distanced himself from the crimes against civilians committed by hypocrites and traitors that he said existed among its ranks 48 Operations outside Iraq and other activities EditOn 3 December 2004 AQI attempted unsuccessfully to blow up an Iraqi Jordanian border crossing In 2006 a Jordanian court sentenced al Zarqawi and two of his associates to death in absentia for their involvement in the plot 49 AQI claimed to have carried out three attacks outside Iraq in 2005 In the most deadly suicide bombs killed 60 people in Amman Jordan on 9 November 2005 50 They claimed responsibility for the rocket attacks which narrowly missed the American naval ships USS Kearsarge and USS Ashland in Jordan and also targeted the city of Eilat in Israel and for the firing of several rockets into Israel from Lebanon in December 2005 14 The affiliated groups were linked to regional attacks outside Iraq which were consistent with their stated plan one example being the 2005 Sharm al Sheikh bombings in Egypt which killed 88 people many of them foreign tourists The Lebanese Palestinian militant group Fatah al Islam which was defeated by Lebanese government forces during the 2007 Lebanon conflict was linked to AQI and led by al Zarqawi s former companion who had fought alongside him in Iraq 51 The group may have been linked to the little known group called Tawhid and Jihad in Syria 52 and may have influenced the Palestinian militant group in Gaza called Jahafil Al Tawhid Wal Jihad fi Filastin 53 See also Edit Islam portalIslamic terrorism List of bombings during 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