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US reports exodus of Daesh terrorists from Syria's Raqqah after airstrikes

File photo of a US-led coalition airstrike in Raqqah, Syria

The US Defense Department claims that its bombing campaign in the Daesh-held Syrian city of Raqqah is leading to an exodus of the terrorist group's top leaders.

ISIL (Daesh) leaders "are beginning the process of leaving Raqqah and moving their operations farther downriver," said Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis, adding that an unspecified number of ISIL "bureaucrats" are heading east along the northern bank of the Euphrates River toward the eastern city of Dayr al-Zawr, since they see "the end is near in Raqqah."

Davis further asserted that "We are seeing now an exodus of their leadership,” describing it as “a very organized, orderly withdrawal of a lot of their non-combatant support people."

The US Central Command, meanwhile, announced that the US-led coalition forces conducted 17 strikes near Raqqah on Thursday and also launched 11 airstrikes near Dayr al-Zawr, destroying 20 oil tanker trucks, six oil wellheads, as well as numerous tunnels and military staging areas.

According to local reports, while President Barack Obama's strategy in Syria was to recruit, organize and enable local Syrian Kurdish and Arab militants to recapture Raqqah rather than using US combat forces, the Trump administration is now reevaluating that approach and considering options that could include a more direct American combat role.

'Libya strike bore key intelligence'

Meanwhile, senior US military authorities have stated that the massive American airstrikes that killed more than 80 ISIL terrorists in southern Libya last month have produced critical computer data, documents and information from interrogation of captives which the US can use to track down and target more militants.

Chief of US Africa Command Marine General Thomas Waldhauser told AP on Friday that the US obtained “significant intelligence” from the camps after the bombings, adding that "there's some things we're working on," without elaborating.

The head of the US Africa Command Marine General Thomas Waldhauser (R) (Photo by AP)

The report, however, cited a senior US military official as saying that the intelligence came after interrogation of several ISIL militants that survived the January 18th strikes.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, further stated that the intelligence collected at the Daesh camp confirmed that the militants “had direct communication” with the core ISIL group in Syria and provided information about how they move through tunnels in the country.

The report also quoted Waldhauser as saying that there are still "a couple hundred" ISIL militants left in Libya, noting that there were over 5,000 of them in the country last year. Their numbers began to decline as Libyan forces, backed by US airstrikes, began to flush the terror elements out of the central coastal city of Sirte.

The new US defense secretary, James Mattis, is tasked with submitting a plan to President Donald Trump on ways to defeat ISIL forces in Iraq and Syria.

Daesh Takfiris were among the militants initially trained by the CIA in Jordan in 2012 to destabilize the Syrian government.


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