He is America’s most wanted — the No. 1 name on the government’s kill list of ISIS leaders, say senior U.S. military and intelligence officials.
Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi may be the face of ISIS, but Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, the terror group’s director of external operations, is the man most likely to cause harm in the West. The U.S. wants al-Adnani dead because he’s considered the author of the strategy of wanton murder that has left more than 500 dead in attacks around the world since October 10 — and apparently helped inspire last week’s massacre in San Bernardino.
“He is at the top of the list,” confirmed a senior intelligence official.
“We are tracking him,” said a senior U.S. military official. “We believe he is in Iraq.”
Laith al-Khouri of Flashpoint Intelligence, an NBC counterterrorism analyst, said the rationale for the U.S. interest in killing Adnani is simple.
“Adnani has been the main voice behind issuing ISIS threats to the West,” said al-Khouri. He is also dangerous, said al-Khouri, because his charisma draws new followers to the group. “He is so admired and glorified by jihadists worldwide that he stands as a primary point of recruitment.”
Since the November attack in Paris that killed 130, U.S. officials have come to see the 38-year-old al-Adnani as the ISIS version of Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, the al Qaeda leader who masterminded the September 11 attacks. Counterterrorism officials say al-Adnani likely “greenlighted” the complex Paris operation, working through Abdelhamid Abbaaoud, who ran the operation and then died in a police raid.
But in addition to those acts of violence directed or “greenlighted” by ISIS, sympathizers with the group have followed tenets established by al-Adnani to mount their own assaults. Al-Adnani encouraged attacks around the world in a video statement published online in September 2014, the day after the U.S.-led coalition launched its first airstrikes against the ISIS “caliphate” in Syria and Iraq.
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“If you can kill a disbelieving American or European — especially the spiteful and filthy French,” said al-Adnani, “or an Australian, or a Canadian, or any other disbeliever from the disbelievers waging war, including the citizens of the countries that entered into a coalition against the Islamic State, then rely upon Allah, and kill him in any manner or way however it may be.”
Al-Adnani’s resume helped him reach the top ranks of ISIS. He was one of the first foreign fighters to oppose U.S. Coalition Forces in Iraq, crossing the border from his native Syria into Iraq in 2003. He swore an oath of allegiance to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Al Qaeda in Iraq leader later killed by U.S. fighter-bombers. He also reportedly was captured in 2005 and taken into custody at a camp run by the U.S. military, but was released after five years in 2010. He was arrested and held the whole time under an alias.









