Appendix B – Statement of Reasons – Ansar al-Islam
(Also known as: Ansar al-Islam Army,
Ansar al-Sunna, Army of Ansar al-Islam, Devotees of Islam, Followers of Islam
in Kurdistan, Jaish Ansar al-Islam, Jaish Ansar al-Sunna, Jund al-Islam,
Kurdish Taliban,
Kurdistan Supporters of Islam, Partisans
of Islam, Protectors of Islam, Protectors of the Sunni Faith, Soldiers of
Islam, Soldiers of God,
Supporters of Islam in Kurdistan)
The following information is based on
publicly available details about Ansar al-Islam (AAI). To the Australian
Government’s knowledge, these details are accurate and reliable and have been
corroborated by classified information.
Basis for listing a terrorist
organisation
Division 102 of the Criminal Code
provides that for an organisation to be listed as a terrorist organisation, the
Attorney-General must be satisfied on reasonable grounds that the organisation:
(a)
is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing,
planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or
not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur); or
(b)
advocates the doing of a terrorist act (whether
or not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur).
Details of the organisation
AAI is a Sunni Islamist militant group that
operates mainly in the Kurdish areas in the north-west region of Iraq. It originally emerged from several smaller Kurdish Sunni extremist groups active
within the Kurdish areas of northern Iraq. AAI was first proscribed on 27 March
2003, and was last re-listed as a proscribed group on 17 March 2009.
AAI was formed in 2001 when Abdallah al
Shafi’I, leader of the Jund al Islam (Soldiers of Islam) group, merged his
force with Mullah Krekar’s splinter faction of the Islamic Movement of
Kurdistan. Mullah Krekar emerged as the spiritual leader of AAI while Abdullah
al Shafi’I was appointed the military commander. Al Shafi’I was captured by
Iraqi and United States (US) forces on 3 May 2010.
AAI is aligned ideologically with al-Qa’ida
and aims to expel foreign forces from Iraq, minimise the influence of Iraq’s Shia and Kurdish populations and establish an Islamic caliphate administered under
Sharia Law. Al Shafi’I trained at an al-Qa’ida training camp in Afghanistan and was said to have close ties to Usama bin Laden and al-Qa’ida. When captured
by Iraqi and US forces on 3 May 2010, al Shafi’I also admitted to carrying out
joint operations with al-Qa’ida in Iraq (AQI). AAI does not have the capability
to overthrow the Iraqi Government. However, it continues to pose a significant
threat to security, particularly in the north of the country.
Counter‑terrorism operations against
AAI and AQI eventually may force the groups to cooperate on a more regular
basis in preparing for and conducting attacks to maintain their respective
capabilities.
It is unknown who will take, or has taken,
the place of al Shafi’I as military leader of AAI following his capture. For
his part, as at August 2011 Mullah Krekar remains in Norway after having been
deported there by the Netherlands in 2003. Krekar is not in custody in Norway and under Norwegian law he cannot be deported to Iraq as he would face prosecution, with the
possibility of receiving the death penalty. Despite his remote location, Krekar
remains a spiritual leader for AAI.
AAI’s area of operation and influence is
predominately in the north-west of Iraq, including in Baghdad, and the
provinces of al-Anbar, Salah ad-Din and Diyala. AAI also maintains a presence
in Mosul and Kirkuk and these cities are used as staging grounds for attacks
against Kurdish interests in Arbil and Sulaymaniyah. Arrests and weapons
seizures made throughout 2009 and 2010 against AAI have eroded its overall
capability to conduct attacks in Iraq. Nevertheless, it is still capable of
conducting attacks against foreign forces, Iraqi security forces and Kurdish
targets.
AAI is predominately comprised of Iraqis,
some of whom are former intelligence and security personnel. However, AAI’s
ranks also include a number of Sunni Arab foreign fighters – predominately
Yemenis and Saudis.
Locally, AAI receives funds from donations
from local sheikhs and former Ba’athist officials and conducts criminal acts to
raise funds. AAI also receives donations from the Iraqi diaspora around the
world, particularly in Jordan, Turkey and Europe and from AAI associates in Syria. It also is possible that AAI receives monetary support from al-Qa’ida and al-Qa’ida
in Iraq (AQI) given the links between its leadership and these groups. Some
reporting also indicates that AAI receives support from Iran via the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.
Terrorist activity of the organisation
AAI plans and conducts attacks against
foreign forces, Shia, Kurdish and Iraqi government interests. AAI’s attacks
most commonly target US and Iraqi security forces using Improvised Explosive
Devices (IEDs) and Indirect Fire (IDF) attacks.
Directly or indirectly engaged in the
doing of terrorist acts
Below is a list of attacks for which AAI
has indicated responsibility by posting a video or media statement since AAI’s
last re-listing in 2009. Except where noted, the dates of these attacks and the
veracity of AAI’s claims are unknown. However, AAI is believed to be behind
attacks that occur against US and Iraqi troops in the group’s area of
operation:
·
12 July 2011: AAI claimed responsibility for a car bombing that
killed two Iraqi government officials in Baghdad on 17 June 2011;
·
14 May 2011: AAI’s media unit released a video showcasing a
number of the group’s recent attacks against Iraqi security forces, referring
to them as “agents of the United States in its ‘proxy war’ on Iraq”;
·
11 April 2011: AAI claimed responsibility for the 22 March
2011assassination of an Iraqi Army officer in a car bomb attack in Baghdad;
·
28 March 2011: AAI released a video of two fighters recounting
events from a clash with American soldiers in Kirkuk province;
·
8 December 2010: AAI released a video showing the group’s
fighters launching an ambush on Iraqi forces in Samarra;
·
30 November 2010: AAI released a video showing the group’s
fighters firing a mortar shell at a US military base in Samarra;
·
23 November 2010: AAI released a video showing an IED attack
against a US vehicle;
·
10 November 2010: AAI released a video showing an IED attack
against a US vehicle in Mosul;
·
20 October 2010: AAI released a video of an IED attack against an
Iraqi Army vehicle in Mosul;
·
14 October 2010: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military patrol;
·
30 July 2010: AAI released a video of a mortar
strike on al-Bakr Airbase;
·
26 July 2010: AAI released a video claiming
damage to an Iraqi troop carrier in Mosul’
·
12 June 2010: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US base in Kirkuk;
·
3 June 2010: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against an Iraqi military vehicle in Mosul. AAI claimed this attack
killed Iraqi military personnel;
·
18 May 2010: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US vehicle in Mosul;
·
9 May 2010: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against an Iraqi police vehicle in Mosul;
·
28 April 2010: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Kirkuk;
·
4 April 2010: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US military base in Kirkuk;
·
18 March 2010: AAI released a video of an attack
against an Iraqi troop transport vehicle in Mosul. AAI claimed this attack
caused deaths and injuries of Iraqi soldiers;
·
12 March 2010: AAI released a video of a rocket
attack against a US military vehicle in Diyala province;
·
3 March 2010: AAI released a video of an attack
against a US military vehicle in Tikrit which AAI claims killed US soldiers;
·
14 February 2010: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US military base in Balad;
·
11 February 2010: AAI released a video showing a
raid on Iraqi soldiers in Kirkuk. An unknown number of Iraqi soldiers were
killed and injured in this attack;
·
5 February 2010: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Mosul;
·
25 January 2010: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against an Iraqi military facility in Samarra;
·
11 January 2010: AAI released a video of an IED
attack on an Iraqi police vehicle in Anbar province;
·
3 September 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US base in Baghdad;
·
28 August 2009: AAI released a video of a
thermal grenade attack against a US military vehicle in Mosul;
·
7 August 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US military base in Baghdad;
·
1 August 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US base in Yusifiyah;
·
25 July 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Tikrit;
·
20 July 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against US military barracks in Kirkuk;
·
12 July 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Tikrit. AAI claimed that all of the
occupants of the vehicle were killed or injured;
·
6 July 2009: AAI released a video of a bombing
against a US patrol in Kirkuk province which possibly took place on 21 May
2009. AAI reported two US soldiers were killed and one injured in this attack;
·
27 June 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Huweija;
·
29 June 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Tikrit;
·
20 June 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Diyala province. AAI reported all
military personnel in the vehicle were killed in this attack;
·
14 June 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US military base in Mosul;
·
9 June 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Salah ad-Din province;
·
3 June 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against US military vehicles in an area south of Baghdad;
·
27 May 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Huweija;
·
20 May 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against an Iraqi National Guard vehicle in Diyala;
·
17 May 2009: AAI released a video of an IED attack
against a US military vehicle in Mosul;
·
5 May 2009: AAI released a video of a guided
rocket attack against a US military vehicle in Huweija. AAI claimed the US
military personnel onboard were killed and injured in this attack;
·
23-26 April 2009: AAI released four videos
claiming attacks against a US airbase with rockets and against US military
patrols using ambush, IEDs and a minesweeper in the Mosul area between 4 and 18
April 2009. AAI indicated a number of US military personnel were killed in the attacks;
·
18 April 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Baghdad;
·
12 April 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Fallujah;
·
8 April 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US military base west of Baghdad;
·
3 March 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Huweija. AAI said this attack took
place in a large market;
·
24 February 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against an Iraqi security force vehicle in Diyala;
·
23 February 2009: AAI claimed responsibility for
an attack on a US aircraft in Ninawa province;
·
17 February 2009: AAI claimed responsibility for
an attack on a security officer working for the Kurdish Intelligence Agency,
Asayesh, with a sticking bomb placed on the officer’s vehicle;
·
11 February 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against a US military base in Yusufiyah;
·
7 February 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against an Iraqi National Guard vehicle in Kirkuk. AAI indicated in the
video that this attack caused an unknown number of deaths and casualties;
·
22 January 2009: AAI released a video of an IED
attack against a US military vehicle in Salah ad-Din province;
·
3 January 2009: AAI released a video of an IDF
attack against ‘enemy barracks’ in Kirkuk. AAI indicated that the ‘enemy’
suffered casualties in this attack.
Advocating the doing of terrorist acts
AAI has released a number of statements
that advocate violent jihad and encourage Muslims to participate.
·
2 August 2011: AAI released a statement for the
holy month of Ramadan rallying its fighters for jihad, saying Sunnis must show
‘one’s faith and get closer to Allah with the sword and the blood’.
·
11 April 2011: AAI released a statement
congratulating the al-Qa’ida‑affiliated Sunni umbrella group, Islamic
State of Iraq (ISI), for the 29 March 2011 raid on the Tikrit
provincial council building. The statement praises the ISI attackers,
asserting ‘legitimate vengeance is one of the greatest ways to get closer to
Allah’ and predicting that ‘this style of fighting will have great achievement
in the near future’.
·
7 January 2011: AAI released a statement threatening
the Arab Summit that was scheduled to be held in Baghdad in March 2011. The AAI
leadership called upon all jihadist factions in Iraq to strike those who
give legitimacy to the Iraqi government, and declared, ‘every Arab political or
commercial title in Iraq is considered to be a military target for the
mujahideen’.
·
14 November 2010: AAI released a statement
rallying fighters, scholars and Muslims in general for jihad. AAI urged every
Muslim to ‘embrace the call to fight’ and instructed its fighters to wage a
‘war of attrition’ by implementing ‘constant distracting and focused attacks’
against the enemy.
·
20 October 2010: AAI released a 16-page document
assuring fighters of inevitable victory in Afghanistan, Iraq and other battlefields.
·
19 August 2010: The Military Council of AAI
released a statement for the holy month of Ramadan rallying its fighters for
jihad. The group instructed its fighters to escalate their calls for jihad, to
intensify guerrilla warfare and ‘exhaust’ remaining military and paramilitary
forces allied with the US.
·
22 June 2010: AAI released a media statement
that denounced recent arrests of Muslims in Kurdistan and threatened violence
against ‘the Kurdish secularists’ should all those detained not be released and
‘unjust campaigns and media slander against Muslims’ and preachers not be
stopped.
·
21 March 2010: AAI released a video on the
seventh anniversary of the war in Iraq, claiming that Britain masterminded the
war to provide for Israel’s security in the region and that Britain implicated
the US in the war. Anti‑British and US rhetoric is a feature of this
video and AAI reaffirmed its desire to establish an Islamic state, through
violence if necessary.
·
3 January 2010: AAI released a statement that
urged the Sunni population of Samarra not to sell their land, particularly to
non-Sunnis, and expressed AAI’s belief that Samarra land may be ‘swallowed by
its Shia neighbours if it does not resist its advances’. AAI indicated in this
statement that all ‘individuals who are loyalists to the subordinated and act
as facilitators for them and their actions, and who penetrated the city of
Samarra’ are easy targets for AAI.
·
30 November 2009: AAI released a statement that
encouraged Muslims to commit to violent jihad as a religious duty.
·
27 November 2009: Al-Shafi’I released a media
statement addressed to scholars and the general Sunni Muslim population of
Samarra that said the US policy on the Middle East ‘will not bring any agent of
change that is authentic and effective, one that can be counted on even by
governments that have been set up on Muslims in the region’. Al-Shafi’I renewed
AAI’s commitments and urged other groups and scholars to commit to jihad and
the pursuit of Islamic dominance.
·
21 November 2009: AAI released a media statement
that urged the mujahideen to aim their attacks against ‘the enemy’ and not
fight one another.
·
14 November 2009: AAI released a 16-page
document critical of the democratic processes in Iraq and discouraged Iraqis
against promoting and working in electoral campaigns and participating in the
elections, arguing that such is a form of ‘supporting the enemy’.
·
27 October 2009: AAI released a eulogy for Baitullah
Mehsud, former leader of Tehrik-i-Talibani Pakistan. In this
eulogy, AAI encouraged the Mujahedeen to continue their fight despite the death
of their leader.
·
20 September 2009: AAI released a media
statement that urged extremists to ‘hold steadfast to their principles and to
jihad and to demonstrate that their generation is not stagnant, but moving in
accordance with Sharia’.
·
21 August 2009: AAI released a video of an
operation against US forces in Diyala, calling it a ‘Ramadan gift’.
Conclusion
ASIO assesses AAI continues to directly and
indirectly engage in preparing, planning, assisting in, advocating and
fostering the doing of acts involving threats to human life and serious damage
to property. This assessment is corroborated by information provided by
reliable and credible intelligence sources, as well as by terrorist acts
conducted by AAI.
In the course of pursuing its objectives in
Iraq, AAI is known to have committed or threatened action:
·
with the intention of advancing AAI’s political,
religious or ideological causes;
·
that causes, or could cause, serious damage to
property, the death of persons or endanger a person’s life; and
·
with the intention of creating a serious risk to
the safety of sections of the public globally.
Other relevant information
Since January 2009 AAI has exhibited links
to, expressed support for, or received verbal support from al-Qa’ida Senior
Leadership (AQSL), AQI, al-Qa’ida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and Tehrik-e-Taliban.
·
AAI is reported to have cooperated with AQI, and AAI’s leadership
has links to AQSL. On 27 October 2009, AQSL figure Abu Yahya al-Libi appeared
in an al‑Qa’ida media statement and recommended that the Islamic State of
Iraq and AAI unite and make concessions to each other for that purpose.
Following the deaths of Abu-Umar al-Baghdadi and Abu-Hamzah al-Muhajir, the
respective Leader and Deputy Leader of the ISI, AAI released a statement of
condolences for their deaths, ideologically supported the ISI, and encouraged
AAI to follow their lead. Libi again called for unity between AQI and AAI in a
video statement released on 15 June 2010. On 28 April 2009 AQIM expressed
condolences for the deaths of ISI leaders and urged AAI to unite with the ISI
as ‘the best move with which you can infuriate the enemies of the faith’. On 16
June 2010, AAI released a statement that offered condolences for the death of
al-Qa’ida in Afghanistan general head Mustafa Abu Al-Yazid and reaffirmed its
commitment to violent jihad.
AAI is listed on the United Nations 1267
Committee’s consolidated list and as a proscribed terrorist organisation by the
governments of the US, UK, New Zealand and Canada.