Radwan Nammous (1950 – April 3, 2016), also known by his
nom de guerreAbu Firas al-Suri (
Arabic: أبو فراس السوري,
romanized: ʾAbū Firās as-Sūrī), was a senior official in the
al-Qaeda affiliated
al-Nusra Front, serving as the group's spokesman.[1]
Early life
Suri was born in 1950 in the Syrian town of
Madaya, near
Damascus. He joined the
Syrian military and attained the rank of lieutenant but was discharged due to his Islamist leanings in 1979.[2]
Al Suri later traveled to Afghanistan, where he met
Abdullah Azzam, a founding father of modern jihadism, and
Osama bin Laden. He then helped bin Laden and Pakistani jihadists establish
Lashkar-e-Taiba, a terrorist organization that remains closely linked to al-Qaeda to this day.[3]
After the
9/11 attacks, al Suri helped the families of al-Qaeda members escape Afghanistan. From 2003 to 2013 he was in Yemen, until the dispute between the al-Nusra Front and the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant erupted.[3]
Syrian Civil War
Due to the
infighting between jihadist groups in Syria, Al Qaeda’s senior leaders dispatched al-Suri to Syria, where he participated in failed mediation efforts between al-Nusra Front and ISIL.
Role within the al-Nusra Front
Al-Suri's role as a senior figure in the al-Nusra Front was not publicly known until March 2014 when he appeared in a Nusra video speaking against ISIL.[4] In the following months. al-Suri took on an increasingly prominent role within al-Nusra. Al-Suri became a spokesman for events such as the group's hostage taking of UN peacekeepers in 2014.[4] In July 2014, an audio recording of a major rally of fighters in Syria was leaked. In it, al-Suri could be heard introducing
Abu Mohammad al-Julani, al-Nusra’s emir, who spoke of establishing an Islamic emirate in Syria. In a video released by al-Nusra on 8 August 2014, al-Suri said al-Nusra would declare an emirate in Syria only after consulting with other factions.[4]
The American Bilal Abdul Kareem interviewed Abu Firas in Syria, in which Abu Firas said that the ultimate aims of his people did not just include Syria, but they were merely fighting in Syria for the time being.[5] Bilal's interview of Abu Firas was shown in an Al-Qaeda video released by Al Qaeda leader
Ayman al-Zawahiri called "Three Sheikhs of Jihad".[6][7][8]
Abu Firas appeared in a Nusra video which released more information on him, such as his previous Muslim Brotherhood affiliation and his association with bin Laden and
Abdullah Azzam.[9] Abu Firas al Suri and Abu Sulayman al Muhajir appeared in "The Heirs of Glory" a video released by Nusra Front, which vowed to bring back the caliphate, included old audio by
Osama bin Laden (such as his 1998 announcement that "So we seek to incite the Islamic Nation so it may rise to liberate its lands and perform Jihad in the path of Allah, and to establish the law of Allah, so the Word of Allah may be supreme"). The video glorified the
September 11 attacks and the Islamists
Sayyid Qutb and
Abdullah Azzam.[10]
Ahrar ash-Sham was criticized by Abu Firas.[11] Ahrar was attacked for listening to Turkey and Qatar asking for a split between al Qaeda and Nusra and Ahrar trying to gain support from the west, Turkey, and Qatar.[12] Abu Firas's criticism was expounded on to Ahrar by
Abu Qatada.[13][14] His article was criticized by Abu Abdullah al-Shami.[15]
Ahrar's alleged compliance with non-Muslims was Abu Firas's criticism.[16] Ahrar was compared to a non-virgin girl by Abu Firas.[17] The approval of the Revolutionary covenant of May 2014 was deemed as "nationalism" of Ahrar by Abu Firas.[18] Abu Ammar al Shami rebuked Abu Firas Al Suri over Ahrar criticism.[19] A photo of
Abu Khaled al-Suri, Hassan Abboud of
Ahrar ash-Sham, and Abu Firas al-Suri was released.[20][21][22]
In an article published in the 19th edition of the
Turkistan Islamic Party's magazine "Islamic Turkistan", Radwan Nammous (Abu Firas al-Suri) denounced the United Nations, secularism, civility and democracy.[23] "Doğu Türkistan Haber Ajansı" published a Turkish language version[24] of an interview between Nusra Magazine El Risale and Abu Firas al-Suri.[25]
Death
On 3 April 2016, Abu Firas al-Suri (at the age of 65),[26] his son and 20 other al-Nusra Front fighters were killed in a US airstrike in Syria's
Idlib province.[27][28][29]
Ahrar leader
Abdul Razzaq Al Mahdi tweeted his condolences upon Abu Firas's death.[30] Nusra disseminated a biography of Abu Firas al-Suri[31] after his death by the US airstrike.[32]
^Zelin, Aaron Y. (October 25, 2015).
"New issue of the magazine: "al-Risālah #2"". JIHADOLOGY: A clearinghouse for jihādī primary source material, original analysis, and translation service.