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Thread: Collapse of ISIS Caliphate: US-backed Syrian forces now control all routes into Raqqa

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    Slayer of Moors Odin's Avatar
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    Default Collapse of ISIS Caliphate: US-backed Syrian forces now control all routes into Raqqa

    The Islamic State group no longer has a presence in Syria's Aleppo province after withdrawing from a series of villages where regime forces were advancing, a monitor said on Friday.

    'ISIS withdrew from 17 towns and villages and is now effectively outside of Aleppo province,' according to British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

    It comes as US-backed Syrian fighters seized the last road into ISIS's de facto capital Raqqa, in Syria, after neighbouring Iraq declared 'the end of the fake jihadi state' in its war-torn nation.

    Syrian Democratic Forces are now in control of all high-speed routes into Raqqa, captured by ISIS in 2013, from the south, a spokesman for the US-led coalition confirmed.

    It was yet another major setback for ISIS which declared its 'caliphate' straddling Syria and Iraq three years ago, but has since lost most of its territory.

    Only this week Iraqi forces recaptured an iconic mosque in Mosul, Iraq, the terror group's last major stronghold in the country, prompting Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to declare 'the end of the fake jihadist state'.

    (SOHR) said an SDF unit has seized villages across the river from Raqqa, describing it as a 'strategic' move that completes the siege around the city.

    'IS has no other choice now but to surrender or fight to the end,' said the Observatory director, Rami Abdurrahman.

    Tightening the noose around Raqqa effectively seals the territory and denies the militants an escape route to their other stronghold in Deir el-Zour, south of the city.

    Colonel Joe Scrocca, spokesman for the US-led coalition, said moving toward the Euphrates from the east 'would completely encircle the city and has been the SDF plan from the start'.

    He went on: 'South of the Euphrates river, the SDF now control all high-speed routes into Raqqa.'

    ISIS militants carried out a counter-attack on SDF forces east of the city hours after the attack, regaining control of the al-Sinaa and Mashalab neighborhoods which were captured in the early days of the offensive.

    Speaking in Baghdad, coalition spokesman Ryan Dillon said ISIS fighters have been 'abandoned' by their leadership.

    He said in the last week, the SDF have cleared seven and a half square miles of territory in and around Raqqa.

    The advance toward Raqqa city began last year, as Kurdish-led forces fought to clear rural parts of the province of the presence of ISIS militants.

    Backed by airstrikes from the international coalition, the Syrian fighters captured the strategic town of Tabqa in May, and seized one of Syria's major dams that lies nearby.

    The battle for the city began in earnest on June 6, as the fighters moved in from east, west and north of Raqqa.

    Scrocca warned that the fight for Raqqa has only began, adding: 'There is still much fighting to be done in the city.'

    Meanwhile, Iraqi forces have captured the famous and hugely symbolic al-Nuri mosque in Mosul where ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi first declared its 'caliphate' nearly three years ago.

    He made the 'caliphate' announcement in an audio recording before appearing for the first time in public at the mosque days later.

    The declaration ushered in a period of gruesome violence and an attempt by the militant group to erase borders between the neighboring states.

    On Friday, the United Nations called on the Iraqi government to intervene to halt 'imminent' forced evictions of many people suspected of having ties to Islamic State from the city of Mosul.

    Hundreds of families have received threatening letters laying down a deadline for leaving, mainly under tribal agreements, which amount to 'acts of vengeance', U.N. human rights spokesmman Rupert Colville said.

    'We urge the Iraqi Government to take action to halt such imminent evictions or any type of collective punishment, and to reinforce the formal justice system to bring perpetrators to justice,' he told a Geneva news briefing.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...qqa-Syria.html



    Just as President Trump promised, ISIS is on it's last ropes, fortunately. I'm glad our Special Forces have done a superb job training the soldiers over there, to reclaim their land from these tyrants. It is as it should be. Back in April, ISIS attacked a base where more than 100 Special Forces "advisers" are stationed, and took a two hour beating from both the air and the ground, while the good guys took no casualties.
    Last edited by Odin; 07-01-2017 at 11:46 PM.

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    Banned Albobalboa's Avatar
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    Wonderful news. Is the FSA still going strong? They'll have a chance to really build up on the fall of ISIS now, as really ISIS just helped the Ruskis and Assad by weakening their opposition.

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    Veteran Member Fantomas's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Albobalboa View Post
    Wonderful news.
    Yes, it is. But i wouldn't be very optimistical about it. While Assad regime is in power, ISIS has a secure rear and can come out anywhere again
    DE OPPRESSO LIBER


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    Slayer of Moors Odin's Avatar
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    Default Iraq's PM arrives in Mosul to declare victory over ISIS

    Dressed in a military uniform, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi arrived here in Mosul on Sunday to congratulate Iraq’s armed forces for wresting the city from the Islamic State. The victory marked the formal end of a bloody campaign that lasted nearly nine months, left much of Iraq’s second-largest city in ruins, killed thousands of people and displaced nearly a million more.

    While Iraqi troops were still mopping up the last pockets of resistance and could be facing guerrilla attacks for weeks, the military began to savor its triumph in the shattered alleyways of the old city, where the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, put up a fierce last stand.

    Hanging over the declaration of victory is the reality of the hard road ahead. The security forces in Mosul still face dangers, including Islamic State sleeper cells and suicide bombers. And they must clear houses rigged with explosive booby traps so civilians can return and services can be restored.

    Mosul was the largest city in either Iraq or Syria held by the Islamic State, and its loss signifies the waning territorial claims of a terrorist group that had its beginnings in the aftermath of the American invasion of Iraq in 2003. The group is also threatened with the loss of its de facto capital, the Syrian city of Raqqa, which is encircled by Arab and Kurdish fighters supported by the United States.

    But the end of the Islamic State’s hold on Mosul does not mean peace is at hand. Other cities and towns in Iraq remain under the militants’ control, and Iraqis expect an increase in terrorist attacks in urban centers, especially in the capital, Baghdad, as the group reverts to its insurgent roots.

    “It’s going to continue to be hard every day,” said Col. Pat Work, the commanding officer of the Second Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, which is carrying out the American advisory effort here.

    “Iraqi security forces need to be on the top of their game, and we need to be over their shoulder helping them as they move through this transition to consolidate gains and really sink their hold in on the west side,” Colonel Work said as he rolled through the streets of western Mosul recently in an armored vehicle. “ISIS will challenge this.”

    The victory could have been sweeter as the Iraqis were denied the symbolism of hanging the national flag from the Grand al-Nuri Mosque and its distinctive leaning minaret, which was wiped from the skyline in recent weeks as a final act of barbarity by Islamic State militants who packed it with explosives and brought it down as government troops approached.

    It was at that mosque in June 2014 where Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi strode to the top of a pulpit and declared himself the leader of a caliphate straddling the borders of Iraq and Syria, a vast territory where for three years Islamist extremists have governed with a strict form of Islamic law, held women as sex slaves, carried out public beheadings and plotted terrorist attacks against the West.

    This past week, as fighting raged nearby, Iraqi soldiers took selfies in front of the stump of the minaret and posed at the spot where Mr. Baghdadi made his speech. Destruction surrounded them, as did the stench of decaying bodies of Islamic State fighters, left to rot in the blazing sun.

    The battle for Mosul began in October, after months of planning between Iraqis and American advisers, and some Obama administration officials had hoped it would conclude before they left office, giving a boost to the departing president’s efforts to defeat the Islamic State.

    Instead, it lasted until now, and it was far more brutal than many expected. With dense house-to-house fighting and a ceaseless barrage of snipers and suicide bombers, the fight for Mosul was some of the toughest urban warfare since World War II, American commanders have said. Iraqi officers, whose lives have been defined by ceaseless war, said the fighting was among the worst they had seen.

    “I have been with the Iraqi Army for 40 years,” said Maj. Gen. Sami al-Aradi, a commander of Iraq’s special forces. “I have participated in all of the battles of Iraq, but I’ve never seen anything like the battle for the old city.” He continued: “We have been fighting for each meter. And when I say we have been fighting for each meter, I mean it literally.”

    Even as Mr. Abadi arrived here outfitted in the black uniform of Iraq’s elite Counterterrorism Service, Iraqi forces were pressing to erase a pocket of Islamic State resistance by the Tigris River. Speaking from his base in the old city, Lt. Gen. Abdul-Wahab al-Saadi, a senior commander in that service, said that the militants’ enclave was about 200 yards long and 50 yards wide and that he expected it to be taken later in the day or on Monday.

    After arriving here, Mr. Abadi met with the Federal Police, who have taken significant losses in the battle, and went to visit the joint command overseeing the operation. But in an acknowledgment that the victory he had come to proclaim was not completely sealed, Iraqi officials said the prime minister would not make a public statement until the last patch of Islamic State territory in Mosul was cleared.

    Earlier in the day, a post on Mr. Abadi’s official Twitter account stated that he had come to Mosul “to announce its liberation and congratulate the armed forces and Iraqi people on this victory.”

    Some militants had sought to escape by swimming across the river, but General Saadi said his soldiers had shot them. The general said he had planted the Iraqi flag on the banks of the Tigris on Sunday morning — an act he described as a “special moment” in which he reflected on the many soldiers he had lost in the long battle.

    The retaking of the city, by all accounts, came at a great cost. Sensitive to the mounting casualties, the Iraqi government does not disclose how many of its troops have been killed. But deaths among Iraqi security forces in the Mosul battle had reached 774 by the end of March, according to American officers, which suggests the toll is more than a thousand now.

    Even more civilians are estimated to have been killed, many at the hands of the Islamic State and some inadvertently by American airstrikes. At least seven journalists were killed, including two French correspondents and their fixer, an Iraqi Kurdish journalist, in a mine explosion in recent weeks.

    The Iraqis and their international partners will now be confronted by the immense challenge of restoring essential services like electricity and rebuilding destroyed hospitals, schools, homes and bridges, which were wrecked in the ground combat or by the airstrikes, artillery fire and Himars rocket attacks carried out by the American-led coalition to help Iraqi troops advance.

    “When the fighting stops, the humanitarian crisis continues,” said Lise Grande, the deputy special representative for Iraq for the United Nations secretary general.

    Western Mosul, especially its old city, where the Islamic State made its last stand, was hit particularly hard, becoming a gray and decimated landscape. As the combat has drawn to a close, thousands of civilians have begun to return. But 676,000 of those who left the western half of the city have yet to come back, according to United Nations data.

    It is not hard to see why. Of the 54 neighborhoods in western Mosul, 15 neighborhoods that include 32,000 houses were heavily damaged, according to data provided by Ms. Grande. An additional 23 neighborhoods are considered to be moderately damaged. The cost of the near-term repairs and the more substantial reconstruction that is needed in Mosul has been estimated by United Nations experts at more than $700 million, she said.

    In the heart of the old city, craters littered intersections and roadways, marking the places where bombs pummeled the ground, dropped from coalition warplanes. Street after street was covered in soaring piles of rubble, with rebar poking out of shattered masonry.

    In a church used as a weapons-making factory by the Islamic State, mortars were lying on the ground next to a pink backpack decorated with a picture of a kitten. When troops unzipped the backpack, they found plastic sachets of a white explosive powder, which they identified as C4 used in militants’ bombs.

    The military victory in Mosul has come without a political agreement between Iraq’s two largest communities, Sunni and Shiite Arabs, whose stark sectarian divisions led to the rise of the Islamic State. For many members of Iraq’s minority Sunnis, the Islamic State was seen as a protector against abuses they had suffered under Iraq’s Shiite-led government, especially under the former prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki.

    After the Islamic State seized Mosul in 2014, many Sunnis welcomed them. Mr. Maliki was then removed from office, replaced by Mr. Abadi, a more moderate and less sectarian leader, but one widely viewed as weak. Under Mr. Abadi, there has been no meaningful reconciliation.

    “I will leave Mosul because it has become a destroyed city,” said Aisha Abdullah, a teacher who endured life under the Islamic State. “In every corner of it there is memory and blood.”

    And while the Islamic State, with its harsh rule, alienated many of the Sunni residents it sought to represent, residents said its ideology caught on among some of the population, particularly young men.

    “There is no use in reconstructing the city if the people of Mosul don’t change,” Ms. Abdullah said. “There are still many people who assist ISIS, and the acts of violence will never end.”

    Marwan Saeed, another Mosul resident, who lives in the city’s east side, which was liberated in January and where life has largely been restored to normal, with schools and shops reopening and most civilians returning home, said he feared for the future, now more than ever.

    “Frankly, I’m desperate over the future,” he said. “ISIS destroyed the people’s mentality, and the wars destroyed the infrastructure, and we paid the price. There is no such thing as the phase ‘after ISIS.’ ISIS is a mentality, and this mentality will not end with guns alone.”

    Iraqi forces still have to retake several Islamic State strongholds: Hawija and Tal Afar in northern Iraq and a series of towns in Iraq’s Euphrates River valley, stretching from Anah to Qaim.

    While this is happening, Syrian fighters backed by American firepower are to complete the taking of Raqqa before moving to surround and kill the militants in Euphrates River towns on the Syrian side of the border.

    “Mosul and Raqqa is not the end of it by any stretch of the imagination,” said Brig. Gen. Andrew A. Croft, a senior Air Force officer with the American-led task force that is fighting the Islamic State.

    And there is the fear that many Islamic State fighters who were not captured or killed had simply put down their guns and blended in with the civilian population, to live to fight another day.

    The wives of Islamic State fighters also pose a risk. In the last week, a woman holding a baby and wearing a long-sleeved robe that disguised a hand-held detonator tried to blow herself up as she approached an Iraqi soldier, said Second Lt. Muntather Laft, a media officer with the Counterterrorism Service.

    “Do you know that most of the ISIS fighters have shaved their beards and took off their clothes, and now they are free?” said Zuhair Hazim al-Jibouri, a member of Mosul’s local council.
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/09/w...liberated.html

    Good thing it's retaken once again, since Obama lost it. That didn't take long at all.



    The way this is going, pretty soon the shattered remnants of ISIS will have to settle for whatever odd jobs come along; maybe rent themselves out security guards at some liberal rally, or something.

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    Except for the head chopping I always think of The Keystone Cops when I think of ISIS.




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    Slayer of Moors Odin's Avatar
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    Default ISIS confirms death of leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi

    The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Tuesday that Islamic State officials have confirmed the death of terrorist leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

    “Top tier commanders from IS who are present in Deir Ezzor province have confirmed the death of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, emir of the Islamic State group, to the Observatory,” Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the monitoring group, told AFP.

    Russia’s Defence Ministry said in June that it might have killed Baghdadi in a May airstrike on a gathering of Islamic State commanders outside Raqqa, Syria, but U.S. and Iraqi officials remained skeptical, saying they had no evidence to corroborate the claim.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reportedly has a solid track record of accurate reporting on the region. The group’s director told CBS News that the Islamic State sources could not confirm when Baghdadi died, or whether he died as the result of an attack.

    A spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State told CBS that, “we cannot confirm this report, but hope it is true. We strongly advise ISIS to implement a strong line of succession, it will be needed.”
    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/...ief-confirmed/



    This has been confirmed by many other news outlets. Many times, ISIS won't confirm the death(s) of their top members because they feel it would be admitting defeat. They didn't confirm the death of Dennis Cuspert (ISIS nom de guerre Abu Talha al-Almani) either. Now that we're no longer stupidly trying to overthrow Assad's secular government, and we've sanctioned ISIS' biggest ally (Qatar), we're getting crap done. President Trump has already had more military accomplishments than Obama who couldn't beat a "JV team".

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    Quote Originally Posted by Odin View Post
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...qqa-Syria.html


    Just as President Trump promised, ISIS is on it's last ropes, fortunately. I'm glad our Special Forces have done a superb job training the soldiers over there, to reclaim their land from these tyrants. It is as it should be. Back in April, ISIS attacked a base where more than 100 Special Forces "advisers" are stationed, and took a two hour beating from both the air and the ground, while the good guys took no casualties.
    I am a bit concerned of what these US backed Syrian Forces are?? They could be radicals possibly,, I mean who are they and what do they stand for?

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    it wont collapse
    the very essence of it is an idea

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