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Three Isis leaders killed in US-led air strikes in Iraq Sorry - this page has been removed.
(4 months later)
US-led air strikes against the Islamic State (Isis) in Iraq have killed three of the militant group’s top leaders but not senior commander Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, US officials said on Thursday. This could be because it launched early, our rights have expired, there was a legal issue, or for another reason.
Among those killed was Abd al Basit, whom the officials described as the group’s military “emir”, and Haji Mutazz, a deputy to Baghdadi. Those strikes took place between 3 December and 9 December, they said.
They also confirmed last month’s killing of Radwan Taleb al-Hamdouni, whom local medical sources had described to Reuters at the time as the radical militant group’s leader in the northern city of Mosul. For further information, please contact:
News of the killings, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, came the same day the top US commander of coalition efforts against Isis, Lieutenant General James Terry, hailed the impact of four months of air strikes in Iraq.
“We’ve made significant progress in halting that (militant) offensive,” Terry told reporters.
He pointed to successful air strikes this week around Iraq’s Sinjar mountain and Zumar. Those strikes helped Kurdish peshmerga fighters fight their way to Sinjar mountain and, according to a Kurdish leader, free hundreds of people trapped there by Isis fighters.
At the same time, Terry outlined a long fight ahead, cautioning that it would take several years to build necessary capabilities of Iraqi forces, who crumbled during Isis’s offensive this summer.