Home/Middle East/Pres. Trump/MAJOR NEWS THAT THE MSM HAS BURIED: Trump Approves Special Ops Raid Targeting ISIS Leader Baghdadi, Military Says He's Dead
MAJOR NEWS THAT THE MSM HAS BURIED: Trump Approves Special Ops Raid Targeting ISIS Leader Baghdadi, Military Says He's Dead
The United States military has conducted a special operations raid
targeting one of its most high-value targets, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the
leader of the Islamic State militant group (ISIS), Newsweek has learned. President Donald Trump approved the mission nearly a week before it took place.
Amid
reports Saturday of U.S. military helicopters over Syria's northwestern
Idlib province, a senior Pentagon official familiar with the operation
and Army official briefed on the matter told Newsweek that
Baghdadi was the target of the top-secret operation in the last bastion
of the country's Islamist-dominated opposition, a faction that has
clashed with ISIS in recent years. A U.S. Army official briefed on the
results of the operation told Newsweek that Baghdadi was killed
in the raid. And the Defense Department told the White House they have
"high confidence" that the high-value target killed was Baghdadi, but
further verification is pending.
Members of a team from the Joint
Special Operations Command carried out Saturday's high-level operation
after receiving actionable intelligence, according to sources familiar
with the operation. The location raided by special operations troops had
been under surveillance for some time.
On Saturday night, after
the operation had concluded, President Trump tweeted: "Something very
big has just happened!" The White House announced later that the
president will make a "major statement" Sunday at 9:00 a.m.
Baghdadi, an Iraqi national, is an ultraconservative cleric who
became active in the Islamist insurgency against U.S. forces following
the 2003 invasion that toppled Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. He was
held by U.S. forces in the detention centers of Abu Ghraib and Camp
Bucca, where a number of future jihadi leaders rubbed shoulders while in
military custody.
He went on to join Al-Qaeda in Iraq, rising up
the ranks of the violent group as it merged with others to form the
Islamic State of Iraq and eventually inherited its leadership in 2010,
when his predecessor was killed in a joint U.S.-Iraqi operation. As the
group took advantage of a U.S. military exit to further expand, he
renamed the group to the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham—or the
Levant—better known as ISIS, in 2013, seeking to expand to neighboring
Syria, where a civil war was raging.
Baghdadi's forces made
lightning gains across both Iraq and Syria, and in 2014 he declared his
group a global caliphate from the Grand Al-Nuri Mosque in Iraq's second
city of Mosul in his only known public appearance as ISIS leader.
Officially known from then on simply as the Islamic State, the group
began to grab world attention not only for atrocities committed across
the region, but in high-profile strikes on civilians in the West as
well.
The United States involved itself in Syria by backing groups trying
to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad in an uprising also supported by
Turkey and other regional powers. The Pentagon began to realign itself
by partnering with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces as ISIS grew
increasingly powerful, Islamists overtook the opposition and Russia
joined Iran in backing Assad against these factions.
Rival
campaigns led by the Syrian government and the Syrian Democratic Force
were launched to defeat ISIS, which began to lash out abroad with bloody
attacks in France, Germany, the United Kingdom and beyond. The
perpetrators of at least three mass killings in the U.S. professed their
allegiance to ISIS.
The group began to lose ground in both Iraq and Syria in
recent years, however, with a U.S.-led coalition, Iran and Russia among
the international powers hunting for Baghdadi. Though various,
conflicting reports have been offered as to his fate and whereabouts, no
single government has acknowledged any knowledge.
The most
persistent of these reports involved him being in the so-called Jazeera
region. Once a hotbed for ISIS activities, the area was often described
as being in poor health condition. The region was seized by the
U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces—yet Baghdadi was nowhere to be
seen.
"Baghdadi being in Syria follows his presumed pattern of
life operating between Iraq and Syria," a former senior counterterrorism
official, who has tracked and supported the capture of operatives
traveling from Pakistan to Iraq and Turkey, told Newsweek. "If
he is dead, that would be a tremendous blow to ISIS, especially if other
seniors leaders were killed during this operation."
As recent as
February, Vice-Admiral Igor Kostyukov, head of the Russian general
staff's Main Intelligence Department, told the state-run Tass news
agency that Baghdadi's "whereabouts are unknown," but "he is definitely
not in Idlib." The site is the base of operations for Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham, a rival jihadi group with ties to Al-Qaeda's former Nusra
Front, headed by Baghdadi's former associate, Abu Mohammed al-Jolani,
who refused to join ISIS in a move that created a major rift among the
militant groups.
Assad himself was seen on a rare visit to the
frontlines of Idlib province in footage released Monday. The Syrian
leader told his troops "that the Idlib battle is the core to decisively
end chaos and terrorism in all of Syria" and vowed to defeat the array
of rebel groups there while also teaming up with Kurdish-led forces
against any Turkish-led attempts to push further into northern Syria.
Facing
nationwide defeats at the hands of the government and its allies, a
number of Syrian rebel groups have opted to reorganize themselves with
the support of Turkey. Ankara has mobilized these fighters to battle the
Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG), the main component of the
Syrian Democratic Forces, considered a terrorist organization by Turkey
due to alleged links to the banned Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).
Though
Trump has withdrawn U.S. Special Forces from northern Syria, he has
called for some troops to remain elsewhere in eastern Syria, where much
of the country's oil reserves remain under Kurdish-led control. A convoy
of U.S. military vehicles was seen rolling through the city of Qamishli
on its way to eastern Deir Ezzor province.
Turkey has since
halted its incursion following back-to-back deals with the U.S. and
Russia, which has sought to restore Assad's authority at the country's
northern border and facilitate a YPG withdrawal. This process remains
ongoing, though reports remain of sporadic violence between the two
factions, something that some critics of the U.S. exit worried may give
ISIS a chance to resurge.
Asked how Baghdadi's death may affect the U.S. withdrawal, the former senior counterterrorism official told Newsweek, "If you are leaving you want to try to find your targets before you leave."
The
Joint Special Operations Command, out of U.S. Army base Fort Bragg in
North Carolina, is a sub-unified command of the U.S. Special Operations
Command. Led by U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General Scott A. Howell, the
command oversees special mission units such as the Naval Special Warfare
Development Group and 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta,
known to the public as SEAL Team Six and Delta Force, respectively.
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