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Notorious, red-bearded Isis warlord

Abu Omar al-Shishani aka Tarkhan Batirashvili, a Georgian fighting with Isis, is believed to have been killed in a US air strike in northeastern Syria. While Shishani's exact rank is unclear, he is described him as Isis's most senior military commander in charge of key battles. – AFP pic, March 10, 2016. Abu Omar al-Shishani aka Tarkhan Batirashvili, a Georgian fighting with Isis, is believed to have been killed in a US air strike in northeastern Syria. While Shishani's exact rank is unclear, he is described him as Isis's most senior military commander in charge of key battles. – AFP pic, March 10, 2016. A fierce, battle-hardened warlord with roots in Georgia and a thick red beard, Omar al-Shishani is one of the most notorious faces of the Islamic State jihadist group.

Yesterday, a US official said Shishani – whose real name is Tarkhan Batirashvili – "likely died" in an assault earlier this month by US warplanes and drones in northeastern Syria.

Shishani, whose nom de guerre means Omar the Chechen, was one of the Isis leaders most wanted by Washington which put a US$5 million (RM20.6 million) bounty on his head.

The US official branded Shishani "the Isil equivalent of the secretary of defence”.

Shishani comes from the Pankisi Gorge region that is populated mainly by ethnic Chechens.

He fought as a Chechen rebel against Russian forces before joining the Georgian military in 2006, and fought Russian forces again in Georgia in 2008.

He resurfaced in northern Syria in 2012 as the leader of a battalion of foreign fighters, said Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, research fellow at the Middle East Forum, a US think-tank.

As early as May 2013, when Isis was just emerging in Syria, he was appointed the group's military commander for the north of the country, Tamimi said.

While Shishani's exact rank is unclear, Richard Barrett of the US-based Soufan Group described him as Isis's "most senior military commander", adding that he has been in charge of key battles.

"He is clearly a very capable commander and has the loyalty of Chechen fighters who are considered by Isis as elite troops," Barrett said.

Shishani is not however a member of Isis's political leadership, a structure that is even murkier than its military command.

A profile of Shishani written by an Isis supporter and posted online described him as "one of the best strategic and tactical leaders".

He was born in 1986 to a Christian father and a Muslim mother, according to the text, which claims he "never lost any of his battles".

In an indication of Shishani's popularity among jihadist sympathisers, the text describes him as "the new Khalid Ibn al-Walid" – a reference to a leader from the early days of Islam who played a crucial role in spreading the nascent religion in Syria and Iraq.

Observers, however, downplayed Shishani's importance.

"He was a fierce fighter," according to Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the Syrian conflict.

"He would be sent to frontlines across Isis-held territory," he said.

"If his death is confirmed, the impact will be symbolic, on the morale of Isis. But it won't have an actual impact on the battlefield. There are many other leaders," he said, noting that Shishani has been reported dead before.

"Isis chooses which faces to make known in the media – while it conceals the real leaders."

Shishani's reported killing remains unconfirmed, with the United States stopping short of formally declaring him dead.

"At dawn, the US government informed us that there was such an assumption (that Shishani was dead). I stress that it's only an assumption, nothing more," Georgia's Defence Minister Tina Khidasheli said.

Shishani's father, Taimouraz Batirashvili, told the Russian news agency Interfax that he had no confirmation of his fate.

"I know nothing about the death of my son. They announce his death almost every month," he said. – AFP, March 10, 2016.

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