ISIS Releases Video of Leader al-Baghdadi for First Time in Five Years
Leader says recent Sri Lanka bombings were revenge for the fall of the group's last stronghold in Syria
Leader says recent Sri Lanka bombings were revenge for the fall of the group's last stronghold in Syria
While hundreds of thousands of displaced Iraqis and Syrians face an uncertain future with no international help in sight, ISIS is likely to copy Al-Qaida and set up new strongholds around the world
Tensions mount between Al-Qaida-linked militants and Syrian forces in Idlib, threatening to unravel a truce put together by Turkey and Russia last September
Fabien Clain's voice announced that the Islamic State claimed responsibility for the onslaught that killed 130 people
Comments come a day after U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces capture the town of Hajin, the largest urban area controlled by ISIS in the enclave
UN human rights boss says 7,000 civilians are trapped between ISIS fighters and U.S.-led coalition airstrikes in Deir al-Zor
Two Syrian women and four children who had been held along with 21 other hostages are released as part of a deal between the Syrian regime and ISIS
Despite military gains, Marine General Joseph Dunford says 'little progress has been made in addressing the underlying conditions that lead to violent extremism'
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's whereabouts are unknown, and he has not been heard from in almost a year ■ Recording in which he allegedly calls on followers to 'persevere' could not be authenticated
The 'Islamic State' helped strengthen the sense of nationalism in Middle Eastern states, and the organization's disintegration has dealt a historic blow to the idea of an Islamic State without quotation marks
Al-Qaida appears to be a leader among terror groups in Syria and Egypt that compete for manpower, money and influence. Unlike ISIS, Al-Qaida is capable of mobilizing popular support
Militants had publicly identified the Sinai mosque, which also served as a Sufi center, as a target months ago
The fall of Boukamal means remaining ISIS militants are currently holed up in small towns and villages along in Syrian desert
Iraqi and Syrian officials, however, still fear ISIS will reconstitute as a guerrilla force, capable of waging attacks without territory to defend
Islamic State will continue to thrive, even without territory, as long as the anarchy and resentment that nourished it continues
After the fall of its de facto capital of Raqqa, few expect ISIS to completely go away, or for the bloodshed in the two countries and the region to end quickly
British think-tank finds 'relationship between committing terrorist attacks and having a history of physical and/or sexual violence,' Guardian reports
With help of Russian airstrikes, forces work to push Islamic State fighters from their last stronghold in central Syria