Harman Patil (Editor)

Jaish al Muhajireen wal Ansar

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Active
  
Summer 2012–present

Area of operations
  
Headquarters
  
Aleppo, Syria

Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar Jaish alMuhajireen wa Ansar From Chechnya To Syria

Ideology
  
Sunni IslamismJihadism

Leaders
  
Sheikh Mu 'atassim Billah al-Madani (September 2015 - Present)Abu Ibrahim Khurasani (June 2015 - September 2015)Salahuddin al-Shishani (December 2013 – June 2015)Abu Omar al-Shishani (Summer 2012 – Winter 2013)

Strength
  
~750 fighters (September 2015)

Originated as
  
Muhajireen Brigade (Katibat al-Muhajireen)

Allies
  
Islamic Front (formerly), Ansar al-Din Front (formerly)

Battles and wars
  
Syrian civil war, Battle of Aleppo, Siege of Menagh Air Base, 2013 Latakia offensive, 2016 Latakia offensive

Opponents
  
Syrian Armed Forces, National Defence Forces, Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant

Part of
  
Al-Nusra Front, Caucasus Emirate (formerly), Ansar al-Din Front (formerly), Al-Qaeda (2013–2016)

Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar (JMA or JAMWA, Arabic: جيش المهاجرين والأنصار‎‎ Army of Emigrants and Supporters), formerly known as the Muhajireen Brigade (Katibat al-Muhajireen), is a jihadist group made up of Arabs that has been active in the Syrian Civil War against the Syrian Government. The group was briefly affiliated with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), but after changes in leadership it took an increasingly hostile stance against it. In September 2015, JMA pledged allegiance to the Al-Qaeda affiliated Al-Nusra Front.

Contents

Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar Syria RoundUp Sept 30 Up to 50 Insurgent Groups Merge Near

It has been designated as a terrorist organization by Canada and the United States. However an analyst named Joanna Paraszczuk has argued that the charges of kidnapping and attacking civilians indicated by the US State Department are false; she furthermore indicates that the sanctions will have no practical effect.

Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen00fJai

Origin

Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar Muhajireen Brigade Terrorist Groups TRAC

The group was established under the name Muhajireen Brigade in summer 2012, and was led by an ethnic Kist, Abu Omar al-Shishani (alternatively called Abu Omar al-Chechen), an Islamist fighter from Georgia’s Pankisi Gorge who had fought against Russia in the Second Chechen War and the Russia-Georgia War. While Syrian jihadist groups like Ahrar ash-Sham and Al-Nusra included foreign jihadists who had traveled to Syria to fight with the rebels, Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar was composed largely of non-Syrian fighters when it was formed. Its membership would come to consist of mostly Arabs from Syria, Saudi Arabia and Libya.

Role in the Syrian civil war

Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar SYRIA PUBLIC Chechenled foreign fighters claim 39split from Al

The group became involved in the Battle of Aleppo against the Syrian Army. The group lost ten men in two days in late September 2012 in a confrontation with the Syrian Army; the unit subsequently redeployed after receiving insufficient support from other rebels.

The Muhajireen Brigade went on to participate in major assaults against Syrian military bases in alliance with other jihadist units. In October 2012, they assisted the Al-Nusra Front in a raid on the 606 Rocket Brigade, an air defense and Scud missile base in Aleppo. In December 2012, they fought alongside Al-Nusra Front during the overrunning of the Sheikh Suleiman Army base in Western Aleppo. In February 2013, together with the Al-Tawhid Brigade and Al-Nusra Front, they stormed the base of the Syrian military's 80th Regiment near the main airport in Aleppo.

In March 2013, the Kavkaz Center reported that the Muhajireen Brigade had merged with two Syrian jihadist groups, Jaish Muhammad and Kataeb Khattab, to form the group Jaish Muhajireen wal-Ansar.

The group played a key role in the August 2013 capture of Menagh Air Base, which culminated in a VBIED driven by two of their members killing and wounding many of the last remaining Syrian Armed Forces defenders. A branch of the Muhajireen Brigade was involved in the 2013 Latakia offensive.

In August 2013, Abu Omar released a statement announcing the expulsion of one of his commanders, Emir Seyfullah, and 27 of his men from the group. He accused the men of embezzlement and stirring up the animosity of local Syrians against the foreign fighters by indulging in takfir—excommunication—against other Muslims. However, Seyfullah rejected these charges, instead claiming that he had been expelled because he had opposed Abu Omar's plan to merge JMA with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

Following the announcement of the death of Caucasus Emirate leader Dokka Umarov in March 2014, a statement from the North Caucasian members of JMA was posted on the rebel Kavkaz Center website pledging allegiance to his successor, Aliaskhab Kebekov.

In February 2014, JMA joined the Ahl Al-Sham Operations room, a joint command consisting of the main Aleppo-based rebel groups including Jabhat Al-Nusra (Al-Nusra Front), the Islamic Front and the Army of Mujahedeen. In the months that followed, JMA reportedly spearheaded many of the assaults on Syrian government-controlled areas of Western Aleppo.

On 25 July 2014, the group joined with several other Aleppo-based jihadist factions into an alliance called Jabhat Ansar al-Din. On 23 September Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar left and joined Jabhat al-Nusra.

In late 2014, the Saudi-dominated faction Green Battalion swore allegiance to JMA leader Salahuddin Shishani and became part of the group. In mid-2015, Shishani was deposed from the leadership following an internal dispute with the Saudi head of JMA’s sharia committee, Mu'atassim Billah al-Madani. Al-Madani subsequently became the new leader of JMA, while Shishani and his North Caucasian loyalists formed a new independent group called Jaish al-Usrah, and swore allegiance to the Caucasus Emirate's then leader, Magomed Suleymanov.

Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant

In late November 2013, in an online statement, Abu Omar swore a bay'at—oath of allegiance—to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). The statement claimed that those members of the group who had sworn a prior bay'at to Dokka Umarov, leader of the Caucasus Emirate, were awaiting approval from Umarov before also joining ISIL. The group suffered a split, with hundreds of members siding with Abu Omar and joining ISIL. Those fighters who remained in JMA appointed another Chechen, Salahuddin al-Shishani, as their new commander in December 2013. The group has since fought alongside groups that ISIL has clashed with, and some of its leaders have publicly opposed ISIL. Following the 2015 leadership dispute, many JMA militants reportedly defected to ISIL.

Structure

The group's leadership structure consists of a military leadership, a sharia committee, a shura council and a media arm, Liwa al-Mujahideen al-Ilami. The latter is the same name as a media group established by foreign mujahideen fighting in the Bosnian war.

The group is composed of diverse nationalities. The Chechen rebel news agency Kavkaz Center described the then Muhajireen Brigade as being made up of Mujahideen from the Caucasus Emirate, Russia, Ukraine, Crimea and other CIS countries. Many of them were veterans from other conflicts. Members killed fighting for the group have included ethnic Azeris, Tajiks, Kazakhs and Dagestanis. The Syrian rebels referred to them as "Turkish brothers". One JMA battalion was composed of jihadists from western countries (the US, the UK, Germany and others) who fought together for language reasons. As the group expanded, it integrated native Syrians into its membership. Following a leadership dispute in mid-2015, the JMA split and became effectively an Arab dominated organisation.

Reuters reported in early March 2015 that Al Nusra Front had plans to unify with Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar into a new organisation, separate from Al-Qaeda. Al Nusra rejected these reports on 9 March 2015. JMA did eventually join Nusra in September 2015, but they didn't split from Al Qaeda.

References

Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar Wikipedia