The leader of Emni before 2016 was
Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, who worked as IS' spokesman and chief of propaganda. He was the second highest-in-command leader of IS. He had met the
caliph of IS,
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, while they were both imprisoned at the
Camp Bucca U.S. detention facility in the late 2000s. Emni first exported terrorists abroad in 2014. Al-Adnani first publicly called for IS' sympathizers to perform terrorist attacks in the west in September 2014, and made another public appeal in May 2016. The town of
Manbij in northern Syria was used a processing center for foreign recruits. Recruits only met al-Adnani after "10 levels of training", and would pledge allegiance to him blindfolded; this made it so even the organizations' top fighters did not know his identity. The level below al-Adnani were made of lieutenants that were assigned a specific region of the world to perform terrorism within, with titles such as "secret service for European affairs". Two of the top lieutenants went by the pseudonyms of "Abu Souleymane al-Faransi" and "Abu Ahmad"; they were French and Syrian respectively. Emni carried out the
2015 Bardo National Museum attack,
2015 Sousse attacks, and
2015 Paris attacks, and made the suitcase bombs used in the
2016 Brussels bombings. "Abu Souleymane al-Faransi" had a potential role in the Paris attacks; during the hostage kidnapping and standoff inside the
Bataclan theatre, hostage David Fritz Goeppinger heard a bomber ask another in French, "Should we call Souleymane?"; the other member was annoyed that they were speaking in French and asked them to switch to Arabic. Another key member of Emni was
Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the on-ground commander of the Paris attacks who was killed by Parisian police days after the attack. Multiple terrorist incidents occurred in many different locations after the May 2016 call to violence. Afterwards, Emni committed the
July 2016 Dhaka attack. France and Germany received intelligence on Emni after multiple arrests in 2014 and 2015. The U.S. received intelligence on the organization from
USB drives left behind in
Manbij after the city's 2016
liberation, as well from the interrogation of Mohamad Jamal Khweis, a non-member American from Virginia who travelled to
Syria to meet Emni members before being captured by
Kurdish troops in March 2016. Abu Muhammad al-Adnani was killed in Syria in August 2016, but Emni continued operating. As of 2019, Emni was still active. == References ==