Abu Bakr Al-Bagadi (48-year-old estimate) of the Islamic State (IS), who announced that the United States was killed in classified operations, made a short but strong impression on the history of Islamic extremist terrorist organizations in the Middle East.

Experts say al-Qaida's impact over the three years since 2014, during IS's heyday, is comparable to al-Qaida's head Osama bin Laden, who frightened the world with the September 11 attacks.

U.S. intelligence agencies have begun a $ 25 million bounty on Baghdad, the same as al-Qaida's former boss, Osama Bin Laden.

Very little information has been disclosed about the identity of Al-Bagadi.

Born in 1971, he was born in Samara, north-central Iraq, and is known as Ibrahim Ali Albadri Alsamara.

IS, who announced the establishment of a country on June 29, celebrating the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan in 2014, announced him as Khalifa (Ibrahim).

Shortly after this announcement, a video of his sermon was released at the Great Mosque in Mosul, Iraq on July 5th.

His face was revealed when this video first appeared.

Since then, his death and slander around him has never ceased, but the material has never been confirmed.

Rumors have flown from Syria's eastern Iraqi border.

In April 2019, his video was released in five years through IS's media Alpurkan, and last month a voice message presumed to be Al-Bagadi was released.

In 2014, he appeared as a clergyman with a black turban on his head. The black turban means that it is a direct line of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.

He connected himself with the prophet and admirer of the Khalifa Empire, a Muslim ideal.

The US military invaded Iraq in 2003 and reportedly arrested him in an operation to recapture Fallujah, Anbar province, the base of Sunni insurgency.

The fact that the US military was incarcerated in April 2004 in the southern Iraqi camp of Bukha is generally consistent, but the view that he was released was in December of that year and in 2009.

Since its release, the track has not been known in detail, but considering Iraq's situation at that time, it appears that the ranks have gradually increased by joining the al-Qaida Iraq branch (AQI).

Abu Omar al-Bagadi dies in April 2010 after Iraqi Islamic state (organized by ISI and AQI) explodes.

There is also confusion at this point.

In its self-announced organizational charts last month, the IS claimed, "In October 2010, ISI was created under the direction of Abu Omar Al-Bagadi."

He quickly expanded his forces in Iraq in turmoil of civil war, renaming the ISI to the Iraq-Syria-Islamic State (ISIS) in April 2013, absorbing Syrian hard-line Sunni rebels, and in June 2014 proclaiming the establishment of a self-proclaimed state, IS. To reach

In the process, al-Qaeda announced a break in relations in February 2014, when some Syrian organizations were lost to ISIS at the time.

The IS, however, has still claimed to be the "hostile" of Osama bin Laden, the founder of al-Qaida and the symbol of jihad.

In 2015, IS published a formalization of the start of the IS as Jamat Altahid Waljihad, founded in 1999 by Abu Musabu Al-Zarqawi (explosives in 2006) in Iraq.

The organization turned into AQI after Alzarkawi pledged allegiance to bin Laden.

Bin Laden has already died and his 'inheritance' al Qaeda has receded somewhat after the 11/11 terrorist war in the United States, but al-Bagadi and IS surpassed al-Qaeda during its three-year period in 2014. It was notorious to say

The Taliban still has not left its southern base of Afghanistan.

In contrast, the IS has instigated terrorism through the Internet, leading Western 'lonely wolves' (terrorist acting alone) to Islamic extremism.

Even without direct command from the IS, extremist terrorism followed IS's ideas.

Beyond mere terrorist organizations, they sang the country, ran their own administrative and judicial organizations, and issued IS once to the point where they issued money separately.

Armed organizations in northern Africa, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia, as well as in Iraq and Syria, served as branches of the IS.

IS was called 'the richest terrorist organization' by taking control of oil fields in Iraq and Syria, and built the 'strongest network' through social network services (SNS).

At the center was a figure named al-Bagadi, the spiritual landlord of terrorists.