Neutralization of several leaders of ISIS and Al-Qaeda organizations in Syria… Details
The U.S. Central Command stated that it conducted two strikes in Syria this month, resulting in the deaths of 37 armed individuals, including several senior leaders of ISIS and the “Huras al-Din” group affiliated with Al-Qaeda.
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The Central Command, in a statement published by Reuters, indicated that the first strike, carried out on September 24, resulted in the death of 9 terrorist elements, including a prominent leader of the “Huras al-Din” group in northwestern Syria. Additionally, a strike conducted on the 16th of the same month on an ISIS training camp killed at least 28 members, including 4 senior leaders.
General Eric Kurilla, commander of the U.S. Central Command, stated in the release: “These two strikes against the leaders and fighters of ISIS and Huras al-Din demonstrate Central Command’s commitment to inflicting a lasting defeat on terrorist organizations in the region.”
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ISIS controlled vast areas in Syria and Iraq since 2014, imposing a “caliphate” rule before being defeated in 2019 by the international coalition led by the United States, with the assistance of Syrian Kurdish forces.
Since the defeat of the terrorist organization, its fighters have retreated to the Syrian desert and continue to carry out attacks primarily targeting the army and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.
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The United States has about 2,500 troops in Iraq and about 900 troops in Syria as part of the international coalition formed in 2014 to fight ISIS.
At the end of August, U.S. forces and Iraqi security forces killed 15 fighters of the organization during a large-scale operation in Iraq.
Washington and Baghdad announced last Friday that this international coalition would end its operations in Iraq within a year but would continue its mission in Syria.