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A reluctant Islamic State fighter insists he never wanted ‘to get my hands bloody’

Times reporter Molly Hennessy-Fiske interviews ISIS fighter and speaks with Iraqi military on the east side of Mosul.

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The pudgy Islamic State fighter was wearing a short beard, sweater and jeans when troops caught him crossing the front line with civilians in east Mosul on Thursday and ushered him into an abandoned house for questioning.

He admitted to being a militant.

“They forced me,” said Omar Ahmed.

After he was detained and questioned Thursday, Ahmed agreed to speak with a reporter and interpreter from The Times, and to be photographed by the paper. He was not restrained, soldiers did not coerce him into talking or prompt him to answer, beyond clarifying questions. Gunfire sounded outside during the interview, because of the proximity to the front line, but Ahmed did not express concern about his safety or ask to leave.

Ahmed, 21, a native of Mosul’s eastern, middle-class Zahra neighborhood, said he was a reluctant militant.

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“In the beginning, I refused the idea. I refused them,” he said, his voice calm and even. “I was not convinced. I was accused of being an apostate.”

But once Islamic State came to power, he said, “I became obliged.”

Families escaping the violence of Mosul head toward the edge of the town of Gogjali, where an Iraqi soldier directs them to be checked.
Families escaping the violence of Mosul head toward the edge of the town of Gogjali, where an Iraqi soldier directs them to be checked.
(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times )

Ahmed said he declared his allegiance to the “caliphate” on March 18 at Mosul’s Mohammed Abd Wahhab mosque, named after the Muslim preacher who founded the extremist Sunni movement of Wahhabism.

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“I was supposed to become Islamic State police inside Mosul, not on the front lines,” he said as he sat on the floor of an empty room, facing several Iraqi special forces soldiers. “I would prefer to be a policeman, not to kill people, not to get my hands bloody.”

Instead, he was sent to fight, first in an Islamic State province in Syria, then in Mosul.

Ahmed said he did not kill anyone, “not at all, just one mortar. The mortar went into the river.”

He described Islamic State forces as organized along military lines, with brigades and battalions as well as special forces and suicide bomb squads.

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“Each one has his work,” he said.

Women and children who had just fled Mosul on foot rest in a house before being transported to a camp for the displaced near Irbil, Iraq.
Women and children who had just fled Mosul on foot rest in a house before being transported to a camp for the displaced near Irbil, Iraq.
(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times )

But he noticed cracks in the façade. While he was stationed in Syria earlier this year, near the Iraqi border, fighters disappeared.

In Mosul, where he served more recently, he said, Islamic State administration was better.

“They are taking care of their fighters. If someone needs a leave, they will give it to him,” Ahmed said. “Fighters in Mosul have high morale. Most people who have low morale, it’s because of the airstrikes.”

Ahmed said airstrikes have taken a toll on militants.

“They will be besieged and they will be upset and they will want to get out, so they will have fights between them,” he said. “If the airplane will just come without striking, if someone is outside you will see fighting and firing between fighters.”

On Wednesday, he said his father urged him to surrender. The older man approached an Iraqi army officer and said, “I have someone who’s with Islamic State.”

Iraqi special forces member Waleed Nabi prepares to go back to the front line on the edge of Mosul. He had to go home when his cousin died in a mine accident near the Jordanian border.
Iraqi special forces member Waleed Nabi prepares to go back to the front line on the edge of Mosul. He had to go home when his cousin died in a mine accident near the Jordanian border.
(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times )
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But then he said his father changed his mind, telling him not to talk to soldiers.

“Don’t go and give up now, because they will think that you are going to attack them,” he recalled his father saying.

“My dad told me just wait until the army comes and civilians leave their houses and are welcoming the army, then you can go and give up,” Ahmed said.

On Thursday, he said, “I gave up. I surrendered.”

Across the room, 1st Lt. Haitham Moala, of the Iraqi army’s elite special forces Golden Division, interrupted him.

“He’s lying,” Moala said. “We got some wounded here and then our soldiers saw someone was coming toward the road behind the clinic. When we were questioning him, [turns out] he was Daesh,” the lieutenant said, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

He said Ahmed had posed as a civilian. He had tried to slip past them with a crowd of others toting white flags at the field clinic a few yards away, next to a berm separating the village from Mosul’s embattled Malayeen neighborhood, where mortar rounds were still flying.

“He was pretending to be a displaced person because of the operation on that side, like he was lost. Then we saw him close to the clinic,” Moala said.

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He turned to Ahmed.

“You said before when I was questioning you that your dad was encouraging you to be Daesh,” he said.

The Times asked Ahmed where his father was. “My dad left at 9:30 a.m.,” he said.

It was dusk.

Members of the Iraqi special forces wait to be transported to the front line, where fighting has been heavy against Islamic State, as the battle for Mosul continues.
Members of the Iraqi special forces wait to be transported to the front line, where fighting has been heavy against Islamic State, as the battle for Mosul continues.
(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times )

Before the meeting with the captive, soldiers had directed The Times reporter and photographer to the charred remains of two other Islamic State fighters. Soldiers claimed that the pair had been armed with a machine gun, and that they had killed them as the fighters fled after attempting to assist a suicide bomb attack. There was no sign of the machine gun, which soldiers said they had removed.

Amnesty International called on Iraqi authorities Thursday to investigate reports that fighters wearing Iraqi federal police uniforms tortured and extrajudicially executed residents in villages outside Mosul.

“Deliberately killing captives and other defenseless individuals is prohibited by international humanitarian law and is a war crime,” the group said in its report.

Iraqi federal police rejected the allegations in a Facebook post Thursday.

Iraqi officials also have an incentive to keep Islamic State captives alive as informants. Ahmed was still being held late Thursday, according to Moala and a special forces commander.

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Moala said officials planned to transfer Ahmed to Baghdad for further questioning.

“He will have good information,” he said.

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