Enemy of Enemies: The Rise of ISIL
Al Jazeera explores the origins and evolution of the world’s most feared and powerful insurgent group – ISIL.
READ THE INTERACTIVE ADAPTATION – Enemy of Enemies: the Rise of ISIL
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) has been truly devastating to those it comes in contact with and bloody to those under its control.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 items- list 1 of 4Nigeria killed more than 13,000 ‘terrorists’ in past year, president says
- list 2 of 4Could ex-ISIL fighters be used against Iran, as a Russian official claimed?
- list 3 of 4Three wounded in Swiss train station stabbing labelled ‘act of terror’
- list 4 of 4Australia charges alleged ISIL-linked woman after return from Syria
Its sudden rise and expansion in 2014 has perplexed many. It has humiliated its enemies, including those in Damascus, Baghdad, Tehran and Washington. Armed with extensive weaponry, boasting an international fighting force and adept in the art of digital media propaganda, the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant has become the de facto authority across an area the size of Jordan.
This two-part series peels back the rhetoric to examine how a volunteer organisation managed to rise up from the ashes of post-invasion Iraq and defeat standing armies many times its size and capacity.
How did it begin? How did it grow so astonishingly quickly? And how is it being used by global and regional powers to change the geopolitical map of the Middle East?
WATCH PART TWO:
|
|
ISIL is the product of genocide in Syria. The Syrian civil war was ISIL's greatest gift and ISIL somewhat was President Assad’s greatest gift.
With critical testimony from informed insiders and experts from across three continents, as well as original footage from Syria and Iraq, this series mixes documentary and discussion to unravel the interweaving nexus of events and alliances, at once aligned and conflicting, that have given rise to the world’s most notorious, and powerful, insurgent group.
Al Jazeera’s former Middle East correspondent, Sue Turton, narrates the documentary and also moderates a studio discussion between Iraq’s former national security adviser, Mowaffak al Rubaie; Ali Khedery, special adviser to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq; and Australian journalist and Middle East correspondent, Martin Chulov.