ISIS, perhaps the most feared terrorist group in the world, traces its short history to a man who was a prison gang leader, a high school dropout and an alleged teenage pimp.

His name: Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Zarqawi was “Hitler-like” and “incredibly brutal,” said Lt. Gen. Mike Flynn, a retired former director of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency.

“He was a dictator with a plan,” Flynn said on CNN’s TV series “Declassified.” “His plan was to kill as many people that did not see life the way he saw it, and to change the face and the nature of the Middle East — and frankly the Islamic world.”

Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in an undated photo from the U.S. Department of Defense.
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in an undated photo from the U.S. Department of Defense.

 

In the 10 years since Zarqawi’s violent death, ISIS — or the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria — has gathered enough support and weapons to seize territory stretching from northern Syria to central Iraq.

It also controls areas of other nations, and has claimed responsibility for recent terror attacks that have killed hundreds of people in the Middle East and Europe.

ISIS destroys priceless antiquities, holds slaves and uses the internet to lure young women and jihadists from around the world.

And it all traces back to Zarqawi, the man who took his name from the town where he was born in 1966: Zarqa, Jordan.

Pimp, bootlegger, thug

Zarqawi reportedly dropped out of high school and gained a reputation as a local pimp, bootlegger and thug, according to more than one biographer.

At age 23, he spent time in Afghanistan and then returned to Jordan, where he was thrown in prison in 1993 for subverting the government and possessing illegal weapons.

Prison life took Zarqawi to another level.

There, he learned the Quran and used his charisma to recruit prisoners for Islamic jihad. A royal amnesty in 1999 freed Zarqawi and allowed him to return to Afghanistan to meet Osama bin Laden. The two terrorists reportedly disliked each other from the start.

By 2003, he was in Iraq. Zarqawi led a ruthless three-year campaign of coordinated attacks against Iraqi and U.S. targets. He called his group Al Qaeda in Iraq. A targeted U.S. airstrike killed Zarqawi in 2006.

After that, terrorists who went on to lead ISIS took up where Zarqawi left off.

Here are five Zarqawi claims to infamy tied to today’s ISIS:

1. He’s widely acknowledged as the father of ISIS

Zarqawi’s dream about creating an Islamic state has come true, said Flynn. “When I look at what we’re facing now, I see Zarqawi all over this battlefield. Zarqawi is the father of the Islamic state.”

“He created something bigger than a small terrorist organization,” said retired U.S. Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal, a top Iraq War commander. “He created a movement.”

Also important, McChrystal said, is that Zarqawi convinced people an Islamic state was achievable.

2. Zarqawi’s tactics were extreme — even for bin Laden

The mastermind of 9/11 disagreed with Zarqawi’s strategy of attacking fellow Muslims. “What he was trying to do was create a civil war between Sunni and Shia,” said McChrystal. Fighting between the two factions created problems for the U.S.-led military coalition.

Today, ISIS continues to use these tactics by targeting Muslims who don’t follow its interpretation of Islam.

In March, a man wearing a belt rigged with explosives walked into a soccer stadium full of families about 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of Baghdad and blew himself up, killing at least 25 people and wounding 90 others. ISIS claimed responsibility.

“What we see ISIS doing now is an escalation of what we saw al-Zarqawi do, targeting Muslims first and foremost,” said Amanda Rogers, a research fellow at Georgia State University.

“This is al-Zarqawi 101.”

3. Zarqawi almost single-handedly changed the course of the Iraq War

“He was the person that suddenly made it clear we could lose in Iraq,” said McChrystal.

In 2004 in Falluja, U.S. generals saw the war make a huge shift from Saddam Hussein’s former soldiers to forces — many of them foreign fighters — who were loyal to Zarqawi.

The First Battle of Falluja started as a military response to the brutal killing of four U.S. contractors whose mutilated bodies were hanged from a bridge. Soon, it became a “siege,” McChrystal said.

By the time war planners decided to pause and regroup, 27 American servicemen were dead. When coalition forces returned seven months later, they fought the bloodiest military battle since Vietnam.
Flash forward to January 2014.

Falluja was the first Iraqi city captured by ISIS, which used it as a staging area to send suicide bombers to nearby Baghdad. Fighting between Iraqi and ISIS forces for control of the city spiked again this summer.

Iraqi government forces drive their armored vehicle through a street in Falluja, Iraq, on Monday, June 27, after retaking the city from ISIS. A senior Iraqi general announced on state TV that <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/26/middleeast/falluja-liberated-isis/" target="_blank">the battle for Falluja is over</a> as Iraqi troops retook the final ISIS holdout in the city.
Iraqi government forces drive their armored vehicle through a street in Falluja, Iraq, on Monday, June 27, after retaking the city from ISIS. A senior Iraqi general announced on state TV that the battle for Falluja is over as Iraqi troops retook the final ISIS holdout in the city.

 

4. Like ISIS, he beheaded captives and posted video

Zarqawi shocked the world with a string of kidnappings and beheadings — which were then posted online and credited to Zarqawi or his group.

It began with the kidnapping and killing of American contractor Nicholas Berg in May 2004. The barbaric practice was then embraced by ISIS, most notoriously by the terrorist dubbed Jihadi John. He was killed last January in a targeted drone strike in Raqqa, Syria, ISIS’ de facto capital.

5. The U.S. made Zarqawi a worldwide celebrity

Before 2003, Zarqawi wasn’t widely known. But during the run-up to the U.S.-led invasion, Secretary of State Colin Powell tried to gain support during a February U.N. speech, saying multiple times that Zarqawi was a key link between Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein’s regime.

The invasion took place about a month after the speech.

The veracity of that Saddam-Zarqawi link has been challenged. Retired CIA operations officer Sam Faddis told PBS’ “Frontline,” “We never found any indication that Zarqawi was in Baghdad working for Saddam or linked up with Saddam.”

Would the world know Zarqawi’s name if Powell had never mentioned Zarqawi at the U.N. presentation?
If Zarqawi had never risen to infamy, would the Iraq War have played out differently? Would ISIS have ever been born?

We’ll never know.

ISIS spreads its terror worldwide

Now, more than four years after the end of the Iraq War, ISIS has spread around the globe. The terror group has claimed responsibility for the October 2015 Metrojet plane bombing over the Sinai Peninsula, which killed 224; the November 2015 Paris attacks that killed 130; and the bombings in Brussels that killed 32 in March.

A U.S.-led anti-ISIS coalition has been fighting ISIS from the air and on the ground, killing more than 10,000 fighters and 20 ISIS leaders, according to a Pentagon estimate released last March.

Before the U.S. and other coalition nations began ramping up military involvement against ISIS in the Syria and Iraq region in 2014, ISIS controlled 34,000 square miles of territory, the Pentagon said.

The recent Pentagon estimate calculated that ISIS has lost 40% of that territory.

Testifying before the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee on June 16, CIA Director John Brennan revealed that ISIS has about 18,000 and 22,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria and has the ability to draw on a “large cadre of Western fighters” that could attack inside the United States.

The number of ISIS fighters, according to Brennan, far exceeds what al Qaeda had at its height: ISIS has between 5,000 and 8,000 fighters in Libya, in addition to 7,000 in Nigeria, and hundreds more in Egypt, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

“Our efforts have not reduced the group’s terrorism capability and global reach,” Brennan said.

As reported by CNN