"HERE, WE WERE NOT ONLY SAFE, BUT WE WERE ONLY A FEW HUNDRED METERS AWAY FROM THE ENTIRE AL-QAEDA LEADERSHIP"
Abu Ahmed was imprisoned in a US-run detention center in southern Iraq called Camp Bucca in 2004. That's where he met al-Baghdadi, among others who would later form ISIS. According to Ahmed, Baghdadi managed to trick the US Army into thinking he was a peacemaker, all the while building what would become ISIS right under their noses:
"He was respected very much by the US army," Abu Ahmed said. "If he wanted to visit people in another camp he could, but we couldn’t. And all the while, a new strategy, which he was leading, was rising under their noses, and that was to build the Islamic State. If there was no American prison in Iraq, there would be no IS now. Bucca was a factory. It made us all. It built our ideology."
When they entered the US-run
prison, Baghdadi and many of the others were members of small Sunni
militia groups. But the organizing space allowed them to unify under the
name al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), led at the time by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
"We could never have all got together like this in Baghdad, or
anywhere else," Abu Ahmed says, sounding almost grateful to the
Americans. "It would have been impossibly dangerous. Here, we were not
only safe, but we were only a few hundred meters away from the entire
al-Qaeda leadership."
Later, after Zarqawi was killed,
and AQI's near-total defeat at the hands of a Sunni uprising and the
American surge, Baghdadi and his compatriots rebuilt the group under
the ISIS
banner. Their network organized partially out of US-run detention
centers has played a key role in that. The Iraqi government, Chulov
reports, estimates that "17 of the 25 most important Islamic State
leaders running the war in Iraq and Syria spent time in US prisons
between 2004 and 2011."
In other words: without the Iraq war and American prisons there meant to detain possible terrorists, ISIS as we know it wouldn't exist.
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