Entertainment

Bradley Cooper Producing ISIS Series For HBO

Brandon Katz Contributor
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Academy Award nominee Bradley Cooper is taking on ISIS. The 41-year-old actor, alongside “The Hangover” director Todd Phillips, is set to executive produce an adaptation of reporter Joby Warrick’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS” for HBO.

Deadline Hollywood reports that the adaptation will be a miniseries and will be titled “Black Flags.”

The description for “Black Flags” is as follows:

When the government of Jordan granted amnesty to a group of political prisoners in 1999, it little realized that among them was Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a terrorist mastermind and soon the architect of an Islamist movement bent on dominating the Middle East. In Black Flags, an unprecedented character-driven account of the rise of ISIS, Joby Warrick shows how the zeal of this one man and the strategic mistakes of Presidents Bush and Obama led to the banner of ISIS being raised over huge swaths of Syria and Iraq.

Zarqawi began by directing terror attacks from a base in northern Iraq, but it was the American invasion in 2003 that catapulted him to the head of a vast insurgency. By falsely identifying him as the link between Saddam and bin Laden, U.S. officials inadvertently spurred like-minded radicals to rally to his cause. Their wave of brutal beheadings and suicide bombings persisted until American and Jordanian intelligence discovered clues that led to a lethal airstrike on Zarqawi’s hideout in 2006.

His movement, however, endured. First calling themselves al-Qaeda in Iraq, then Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, his followers sought refuge in unstable, ungoverned pockets on the Iraq-Syria border. When the Syrian civil war broke out in 2011, and as the U.S. largely stood by, ISIS seized its chance to pursue Zarqawi’s dream of an ultra-conservative Islamic caliphate.

Drawing on unique high-level access to CIA and Jordanian sources, Warrick weaves gripping, moment-by-moment operational details with the perspectives of diplomats and spies, generals and heads of state, many of whom foresaw a menace worse than al Qaeda and tried desperately to stop it. Black Flags is a brilliant and definitive history that reveals the long arc of today’s most dangerous extremist threat.

The plan is for “The Book of Henry” scribe and best selling author Gregg Hurwitz to adapt the novel with “Game of Thrones” director Tim Van Patten to handle duties behind the camera. It is not known when viewers can expect “Black Flags” to drop.