April 17, 2015 | Quoted by Jamie Dettmer - The Daily Beast

He Served Saddam. He Served ISIS. Now Al Douri May Be Dead.

He’s been on the loose since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and despite a $10 million bounty for his capture always managed to stay one step ahead of his pursuers, but now Iraqi officials are fairly confident that the King of Clubs can finally be crossed off the U.S. “kill or capture” list. According to them Izzat Ibrahim al Douri, for decades one of Saddam Hussein’s key advisers and the leader of a powerful militia allied with the so-called Islamic State, is now dead.

His death was claimed today by the governor of Salahuddin province, Raed al Jubouri, who told al Arabiya TV that al Douri was killed in fighting near the town of Hamreen in the Sunni Muslim heartland of northern Iraq. The station broadcast a photo of a dead man who looked like al Douri, pallid and freckled, whose face has been likened to The Red Skull in Captain America comics.

The former Iraqi general and Saddam deputy, one of whose daughters was briefly married to the Iraqi tyrant’s son Uday, has been reported killed many times before. To be certain he is dead, his body is being transported to Baghdad for DNA testing, say the Iraqi authorities.

“For sure this [al Douri’s death] will have an impact… There will be a break among them,” predicted al Jubouri. “This is a major victory for those involved in the operation.”

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Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, an American counter-terrorism analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, agrees that al Douri’s death, if confirmed, might be “potentially significant.” It could present “serious dangers” to the Naqshbandi Army, he says.

“Al-Douri had been building the organization since the Saddam era based on Sufi networks within Saddam’s military,” said Gartenstein-Ross. “One thing we do know is that these groups tend to be based on very personal leadership structures. If that is the internal structure the group has, one mainly centered on al Douri, his death could result in significant challenges for the organization and perhaps result in its fragmentation.”

But he cautions: as a highly clandestine organization, it is hard to understand the nature of the Naqshbandi Army clearly. “We have seen variations within the organization depending on geographical area in Iraq on how members relate to the Islamic State. We don’t know if the variations are due to local leaders having different views or whether it was due to centralized decision-making in which the army decided to operate in different ways in different locales. If there is good survivability built into the organization—in other words if there is a clear succession and the command structures remain intact—it has a good chance of weathering his death.”

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Topics:

Topics:

Iraq Islam Washington Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Sunni Islam Saddam Hussein Baghdad Daveed Gartenstein-Ross Al Arabiya Death Sufism