
The  al Qaeda-linked army now conquering territory in Syria and Iraq  ultimately wants its emerging Islamic state to be a launching pad for  attacking the U.S. homeland, says a new congressional report.
 
 Four analysts at the Congressional Research Service made that  assessment, citing intelligence reports and the words of Abu Bakr  al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant  (ISIL).
 
 The CRS report, delivered to members of Congress, makes the point  that ISIL is a well-organized, well-funded terrorist group with definite  goals to take territory and kill people it considers nonbelievers.
 
 “Several leading representatives of the U.S. intelligence  community have stated that [ISIL] maintains training camps in Iraq and  Syria, has the intent to attack the United States and is reportedly  recruiting and training individuals to do so,” says the June 20 report.
 
 It quotes al-Baghdadi threatening the U.S.: “Know, O defender of  the Cross, that a proxy war will not help you in the Levant, just as it  will not help you in Iraq. Soon, you will be in direct conflict — God  permitting — against your will.”
 
 What makes ISIL even more dangerous is its ability to raise, and  steal, money. Wealthy Sunni sheiks in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar  have funneled money to ISIL to help it bring down the regime of Syrian  President Bashar Assad, who is an Alawite, an offshoot of Shia Islam.  Mr. Assad aligns himself with Shiite-dominated Iran, and its proxy in  Lebanon, the militant group Hezbollah.
 
 Oil-rich, Sunni-dominated Gulf states consider the Shiite-led regimes a threat.
 
 ISIL also is coercing money from businesses in the cities it  conquers. Media reports say it may have stolen hundreds of millions of  dollars from banks in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.
 
 It now controls many of the Sunni-majority towns in the north of  Iraq and is expanding its conquest in Anbar province, including the  cities of Fallujah and Ramadi.
 
 The Shiite-dominated government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri  al-Maliki mostly has watched and retreated, unable to field army units  that can blunt or reverse the assaults.
 
 “[ISIL] attempts to assert control over the cities of Fallujah and  Ramadi in Iraq’s Al Anbar province, and its June 2014 offensive in  northern Iraq underscored the group’s lethality and ability to conduct  combat operations and manage partnerships with local groups in multiple  areas over large geographic distances,” the CRS report states.
 
 Robert Maginnis, a retired Army officer and military analyst, said ISIL is planting the seeds for attacks on the West.
 
 “It already has many hundreds of jihadists with Western nation  passports,” Mr. Maginnis said. “Those battle-proven jihadists will  eventually return to their Western homelands to carry on the jihad using  the violent ways learned in Syria and Iraq. And now that [ISIL]  controls a giant swath of the Middle East, the Western jihadists have a  training platform, financing and [a] cheerleading state sponsor.”
 
 ISIL is partly an offshoot of al Qaeda in Iraq, which American  forces virtually defeated in 2007-2011 before a complete U.S. troop  pullout.
 
 Without U.S. guidance and intelligence, Iraqi security forces have  shown themselves unable to deal with the new al Qaeda fighter influx.  The invaders and Iraqi Sunni allies waged a new war based on terrorism,  unleashing waves of vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices. The  remnants of al Qaeda in Iraq have now hooked up with ISIL.
 
 The Pentagon on Tuesday conceded that ISIL now controls vast  stretches of territory in Iraq, as 90 more special operations,  intelligence officers and planners arrived in Baghdad.
 
 President Obama said as many as 300 U.S. troops ultimately will go  to Iraq to create a new joint Iraqi-U.S. operations center. The  Americans first will assess the situation, then advise U.S. commanders  on what is needed, and then advise Iraq’s security forces themselves.  The mission’s duration is sketchy.
 
 Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby, spokesman for Defense Secretary Chuck  Hagel, said ISIL is “well resourced” and “better organized” than most  terrorist groups.
 
 “If you look at the map of Iraq, I mean, sort of the central swath  going from north of Samarra around Tikrit all the way up to Mosul —  that’s [ISIL]-controlled territory, by and large, and we’re seeing them  try to solidify those gains and to continue to threaten Baghdad,” Adm.  Kirby said. “That’s kind of the general lay down.”
 
 The CRS report concluded: “The offensive in northern and central  Iraq, led by the Sunni Islamist insurgent and terrorist group [ISIL],  has raised significant concerns for the United States. These concerns  include a possible breakup of Iraq’s political and territorial order and  the establishment of a potential base for terrorist attacks in the  region or even against the U.S. homeland.”