ISIS Audio Tape: 'Islam Was Never a Religion of Peace'

Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi calls on supporters to join the fight in Syria and Iraq or to take up arms wherever they live. Social Media Website/REUTERS

The terrorist group Islamic State (ISIS) issued an audio recording on Thursday that it said was from its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, in which he calls on supporters around the world to join the fight in Syria and Iraq or to take up arms wherever they live.

It was Baghdadi's first message since the organization released an audio message it claimed to be from him in November. In late April, the leader was injured in an airstrike while in al-Baaj, along the Syrian border. Abu Alaa Afri, the deputy leader of ISIS, took over day-to-day operations for the organization while Baghdadi recovered. Then, a recent airstrike in Tal Afar, Iraq, a city in the northwestern region, killed Afri along with other high-ranking officials.

This new recording from Baghdadi comes at a time of leadership uncertainty for the Islamic State, as a third leader will now have to take the reins of the violent extremist group.

In the recording, issued by the group's al-Furqan media outlet and posted on several websites, a voice that sounds like Baghdadi's says: "There is no excuse for any Muslim not to migrate to the Islamic State.... Joining [its fight] is a duty on every Muslim. We are calling on you either join or carry weapons [to fight] wherever you are."

Reuters could not independently verify the authenticity of the audio or its date.

According to the BBC, Baghdadi said, "Islam was never a religion of peace. Islam is the religion of fighting. No one should believe that the war that we are waging is the war of the Islamic State. It is the war of all Muslims, but the Islamic State is spearheading it. It is the war of Muslims against infidels."

In the message, Baghdadi tells the rulers of Saudi Arabia, whom he considers his enemies, that "their end is near," adding that Gulf rulers felt threatened by the growing popularity of his group among Sunni Muslims.

"They have lost their so-called legitimacy.... When they felt that their masters, the Crusaders and the Jews, have replaced them with the Rafeda they launched their so-called war against Rafeda in Yemen," he said, using a derogatory term for Shi'ite Muslims.

Saudi Arabia heads a coalition of Gulf and Arab nations fighting Shi'ite Houthi rebels in Yemen.

"They claim that they are defending the Sunnis.... They are lying. It is a desperate attempt to deter Muslims from joining the Islamic State...[because] it is defending them and this terrifies the sons of Saloul," he said using a derogatory term to describe the rulers of Saudi Arabia.

Islamic State considers all those who oppose it to be infidels.

The group has faced military setbacks in Iraq, including the loss of the city of Tikrit to Iraqi forces, including Shi'ite paramilitaries, in the first big counteroffensive since the Islamic State rapidly seized swaths of territory last year.

But the militants have struck back at the oil-producing town of Baiji and in the western province of Anbar where its move on the provincial capital of Ramadi displaced thousands of people.

Baghdadi called on those who left Ramadi to return, saying: "You are our people, we will defend you.... We want your safety and security."

With the United States conducting air strikes against Islamic State positions, reports have circulated that Baghdadi had been seriously wounded and had handed leadership over to a deputy.

Baghdadi has issued several audio message since he declared the Islamic State but appeared in only one video right after his group seized the Iraqi city of Mosul last year. He was filmed giving a sermon in one of the city's mosques with several of his commanders sitting in the front row.

But fighters from his group told Reuters they frequently saw him in battlefields, leading the fight or checking on his soldiers. He was wounded in a battle in Syria last year.

At the end of his message Baghdadi saluted Islamic State loyalists in several countries including Egypt.

"You soldiers of the Islamic State stay steadfast.... Your enemy [the Shi'ite] is drained and today it is weaker than yesterday. It is also becoming weaker and weaker and you are becoming strong."

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