Military Review English Edition July-August 2015 | Page 112
Notes
1. Albu is used to denote a large tribal configuration, but
Abu also may be employed as an article for a tribal name.
Thus, some sources refer to the Nimr tribe as the Abu Nimr,
others as the Albu Nimr.
2. Matt Bradley, “Islamic State Executes at Least 40 Tribal
and Iraqi Government Fighters,” Wall Street Journal, 29 October 2014.
3. “IS Militants Execute 75 Tribesmen in Western Iraq,”
Xinhua, 30 October 2014.
4. “Islamic State: Militants Kill 50 from Iraqi Anbar Tribe,”
BBC [British Broadcasting Corporation], 1 November 2014
(reporting executions in Ras al-Maa); “ISIS Kills 85 More Members of Iraqi Tribe,” Reuters, 1 November 2014 (describing
bodies found in Hit).
5. See “Islamic State ‘Kills 322’ from Single Sunni Tribe,”
BBC, 2 November 2014 (describing IS’s public execution of
fifty tribesmen); “IS Militants Execute 67 Tribesmen in Western Iraq,” Xinhua, 2 November 2014 (describing IS’s killing of
sixty-seven tribe members as they fled).
6. “IS Militants Execute 36 Tribesmen in Western Iraq,”
Xinhua, 4 November 2014.
7. “Iraq Security Forces on Alert as Shi’ites Gather for
Ashura,” Reuters, 4 November 2014.
8. “Asaabaat Daa’esh Tartakeb Majzarah Jadeeda Bihaqq
‘Asheerat al-Bu Nimr Bi’i’daamha Akthar min 70 Shakhsaan,”
Iraqi Media Net, 11 November 2014 (describing IS’s execution of 70 Albu Nimr tribesmen); “Daa’esh Ya’adam 16
Shakhsaan min ‘Asheerat al-Bu Nimr Shimaali Sharq al-Ramadi,” Al-Mada Press, 13 November 2014 (reporting execution
of sixteen Albu Nimr members).
9. AQI would go through several name changes before
finally settling on the IS appellation after it announced that
it had reestablished the caliphate. See Aaron Y. Zelin, The
War between ISIS and al-Qaida for Supremacy of the Global
Jihadist Movement (Washington, DC: Washington Institute for
Near East Policy, 2014), table 1 (detailing IS’s various name
changes). This article refers to the group as AQI up until
its expulsion from al-Qaida in February 2014, and calls it IS
thereafter.
10. Gary W. Montgomery and Timothy S. McWilliams,
Al-Anbar Awakening vol. 2: Iraqi Perspectives (Quantico, VA:
Marine Corps University Press, 2009), 46,188.
11. Nadem al-Jabouri, Tanthim al-Qaida fi-l-Iraq (unpublished manuscript, 2009), 3; Waleed al-R v