ISIS video is counterpoint to Obama's 'dismantle' and 'destroy' speech
The production is slick. The imagery: ominous.
The Islamic State in Iraq
and Syria is out with a new video from its Al Hayat Media Center. ISIS
also produced the videos of the beheadings of two American journalists
and a British aid worker.
It took nearly a week, but this appears to be the terror group's response to President Barack Obama's speech in which he said the U.S. objective in expanded airstrikes would be to "degrade, and ultimately destroy" ISIS.
The President is expected
to speak Wednesday about the U.S. strategy for combating ISIS, which
also calls itself the "Islamic State."
The 52-second video plays much like a trailer for an action-adventure movie.
ISIS embraces modern technology
Peshmerga battle ISIS with aid from above
There are plenty of slow-motion explosions, and flames are shown engulfing American troops.
There are cameos from
President George W. Bush and his "Mission Accomplished" banner, along
with plenty of menacing fighters with masks over their faces, ready to
execute civilians.
The producers even toss
in a clip from Obama at the White House: "American combat troops will
not be returning to fight in Iraq," he says.
A lingering explosion puts an exclamation point on the whole thing.
And then the logo, fit for a Hollywood blockbuster: "Flames of War -- fighting has just begun ... Coming soon."
The video fades to black.
An ISIS magazine
Named after a town in
northern Syria, Dabiq magazine publishes stories portending a battle
between Islam and the West. It has portrayed Obama and Republican Sen.
John McCain of Arizona as "crusaders" who will "bring about the complete
collapse of the modern American empire."
It also carries images
evoking apocalyptic battles between the Sunni extremist group's fighters
and the rest of the world, including American soldiers enveloped in
flames.
ISIS is taking a page
from the playbook of al Qaeda, a former ally that has praised and
advocated terrorist attacks in its glossy magazine, Inspire.
But experts say the terrorist groups don't appear have the same propaganda goals.
Inspire focuses more on
practical advice for terrorists planning attacks, publishing guides on
how to make bombs and get them onto planes.
Dabiq is a vehicle
intended to spark desire in its readers to join and fight with ISIS,
said Seth Jones, a security analyst at the RAND Corporation.
Kurds say they killed an ISIS commander
The Kurdish fighting
force known as the Peshmerga killed an ISIS commander during battle
Tuesday, according to a senior Peshmerga official who took part in the
operation.
The Peshmerga killed
ISIS commander Abu Abdullah during a Kurdish operation to push ISIS
farther from Irbil, the capital of Iraq's Kurdish region, the official
said on condition of anonymity Wednesday.
In the battle, the
Peshmerga reclaimed five Iraqi villages as well as a bridge along the
main highway linking Irbil to Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city,
according to a senior Peshmerga official taking part in the operations.
The Peshmerga said the battle was meant to push ISIS fighters back toward Mosul, to the west of Irbil -- and part of the Peshmerga's larger plan to reclaim areas that ISIS claimed this year.
ISIS destroyed the
bridge linking the two cities a month ago, hoping to prevent any
opposing force from advancing on Mosul, but the Peshmerga said its
forces went around the bridge for Tuesday's attack.
U.S. air power appeared
to play a role in the offensive. Two U.S. airstrikes targeted an armored
vehicle and ISIS fighting position northwest of Irbil, according to the
U.S. military. That's the same area where the Peshmerga operation was
under way.
ISIS has seized large
swaths of land as part of its effort to create a caliphate -- an Islamic
state -- that stretches from western Syria to eastern Iraq.
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