Khaleej Times

Daesh ‘bureaucrat­s’ fleeing Raqqa

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washington — Daesh administra­tors and bureaucrat­s have started to flee the militant group’s Syrian stronghold of Raqqa as a US-backed alliance works to isolate the city, a Pentagon official said on Friday.

“A lot of their administra­tors and bureaucrat­s now are beginning the process of leaving Raqqa and moving their operations further down river,” Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis told reporters.

“So they have definitely taken note of the fact that the end is near in Raqqa and we are seeing now an exodus of their leadership,” Davis said.

He did not specify how many Daesh members were leaving or what exact roles they played, but said the withdrawal seemed to be organized and of their noncombata­nt “support people”.

A US-backed alliance of Syrian Kurdish and Arab fighters also said on Friday it was launching new attacks against Daesh, after capturing dozens of villages in the latest phase of a battle to weaken the militants in their Syrian stronghold­s.

The Syria Democratic Forces (SDF), which include Arab groups and the powerful Kurdish YPG militia, have for months been fighting Daesh in northern Syria around its de facto capital Raqqa.

The SDF started a new phase of its campaign earlier this month, aiming to encircle Raqqa and sever the road to militant stronghold­s in Deir Al Zor province along the Euphrates River. — Reuters

They have definitely taken note of the fact that the end is near in raqqa and we are seeing now an exodus of their leadership Jeff Davis, Pentagon spokesman

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