Calgary Herald

How tipoff led to terror chief’s takedown

‘Flawless’ raid on Baghdadi weeks in planning

- JOSIE ENSOR AND NICK ALLEN

The eight American stealth helicopter­s, carrying Delta Force and Navy Seals, came in fast and low over the olive trees in Barisha, a village of a few thousand people in Idlib province near the Turkish border.

In the darkness around midnight they were fired on from the ground but quickly obliterate­d the source, before the special forces troops rappelled to the ground near the compound housing Abu Bakr al-baghdadi, the world’s most wanted terrorist.

Watching in the Situation Room at the White House, Donald Trump was flanked by Mike Pence, the vice-president; Mark Milley, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff; Robert O’brien, the national security adviser; military generals and CIA officials. Trump said it was “as though watching a movie.”

The CIA had been tracking Baghdadi for several weeks after receiving informatio­n about his whereabout­s from sources in Iraq.

A senior Iraqi official told The Daily Telegraph that they had obtained details about Baghdadi’s location from members of his inner circle, who were arrested in Iraq in September.

The official said: “We arrested one of Baghdadi’s wives, his nephew, and the wife of one of Baghdadi’s couriers.”

The Telegraph understand­s that the courier’s wife led operatives to a location in the desert of Al-qaim, on the Iraqi side of the Syria-iraq border, where Baghdadi was thought to have been hiding out after the fall of Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s self-styled caliphate.

At the site they found two barrels full of personal items, including medicine, and documents containing the co-ordinates of the terrorist leader’s location in Idlib.

As the U.S. began tracking him, there were several false starts, as Baghdadi headed for locations in or near Barisha, only to change his mind at the last minute. Finally convinced he was in the compound, Trump gave the order for the raid.

Sources indicated that the mission had to be rushed after the U.S. feared it would lose leverage in Syria after pulling out of its forces last week. It also involved “deconflict­ing” with all the other main global players in the war-torn country.

To get to Barisha the U.S. helicopter­s had to fly for an hour and 10 minutes through dangerous areas of northern Syria controlled by Russia and Turkey.

Both nations were informed in advance that the U.S. would be operating, but were not told why. For the commanders, the flight was considered perhaps the riskiest part of the mission.

After landing successful­ly, Seals set up a perimeter and Delta Force approached the compound wall.

The intelligen­ce had been so detailed that the troops knew the main gate was booby trapped. Instead, they blew holes in several locations along the wall before going in. They also attacked a car outside the compound, which, it is believed, may have been intended for an escape attempt.

According to Trump’s account, there was a last stand by some of Baghdadi’s closest cadre inside the compound. Half a dozen terrorists were killed, with no dead or injured among the American soldiers.

As they cleared the compound, the U.S. forces found two of Baghdadi’s wives, wearing suicide vests, dead. They had not detonated and it was not clear if they were killed in a fire fight or had taken their own lives. The U.S. forces removed 11 children to safety away from the compound.

The intelligen­ce had also identified a series of tunnels under the compound. One was believed to be an open-ended escape route to the outside, and a unit of U.S. forces was stationed there to prevent Baghdadi getting away. He instead fled down one of the dead-end tunnels, taking three children with him.

U.S. military dogs led the chase, followed by soldiers, down the tunnel.

Cornered, Baghdadi detonated the suicide vest he was wearing, killing himself and the three children. Trump said: “He was whimpering and crying and screaming all the way. He died like a dog. He died like a coward.”

It was the “judgment of God,” the president added.

HE WAS WHIMPERING AND CRYING ... HE DIED LIKE A DOG. HE DIED LIKE A COWARD.

The explosion caused the tunnel roof to collapse on top of Baghdadi and the children. A DNA test was carried out on Baghdadi on site 15 minutes later and the result was positive.

Meanwhile, U.S. teams combed the compound and found records relating to both the origins and future of ISIL. After the helicopter­s took off, the compound was hit by an air strike to prevent it from becoming a shrine.

Baghdadi’s presence in Idlib, the last remaining anti-assad stronghold, came as a surprise to some, as the province is controlled by groups hostile to ISIL.

Barry Mccaffrey, a retired U.S. Army general, said: “It was flawless. The fact we had no casualties is astonishin­g.”

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