Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Airstrikes’ toll said to top 10,000

American official touts ‘enormous losses’ for Islamic State

- BASSEM MROUE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Adam Schreck, Lori Hinnant and Darlene Superville of The Associated Press.

BEIRUT — More than 10,000 Islamic State fighters have been killed by American-led airstrikes in Iraq and Syria in nine months, a U.S. official said Wednesday, offering a body count for a campaign that has yet to blunt the militants’ advance.

Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken announced the figure after a Paris conference on how to stop the extremists ended without any new strategy to halt their campaign. It also comes months after the Pentagon dismissed such counts as “simply not a relevant figure” in the fight against the Islamic State.

Speaking on France Inter Radio a day after the Paris conference, Blinken said the airstrikes have been effective.

“We have seen enormous losses for Daesh,” Blinken said, using an Arabic acronym for the group. “More than 10,000 since the beginning of this campaign. That will end up having an effect.”

Blinken did not offer any figure for civilian casualties.

In September, the CIA said the Islamic State had up to 31,500 fighters. But the extremists continue to attract recruits from around the world to expand its self-declared caliphate, or state ruled by Islamic law, in Syria and Iraq.

It’s not clear why Blinken offered the figure now. Adm. John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, declined to offer them in January when asked by a reporter.

“The less of these guys that are out there, certainly that’s the better, but the goal is to degrade and destroy their capabiliti­es,” Kirby said at the time. He added: “It’s simply not a relevant figure.”

White House spokesman Josh Earnest, asked about Blinken’s figure, said he had “no reason to believe” the number was inaccurate, saying 1,000 Islamic State fighters were killed in the fight for the Syrian border town of Kobani alone.

Late Tuesday, the Islamic State group attacked the predominan­tly Kurdish city of Hassakeh in northeaste­rn Syria, according to activists and Syrian state media. Kurdish fighters have captured dozens of towns and villages in the region with the help of U.S.-led airstrikes and are getting close to Tel Abyad, a major Islamic State-held border town near Turkey.

Hassakeh is split between government forces and Kurdish defenders.

Syrian state television said Wednesday that extremists were battling for control of a youth prison still under constructi­on on Hassakeh’s southern edge and had attacked it with five suicide car bombers.

The TV report said government warplanes struck the Islamic State stronghold of Shaddadeh, south of Hassakeh. An Islamic State-affiliated Facebook page said the airstrikes on Shaddadeh destroyed seven homes without causing any casualties.

Syria’s state-run news agency SANA said another suicide car bomber targeted the city’s power station, causing damage and a power failure.

Activists also reported intense fighting Wednesday in the northern Aleppo province between Islamic State fighters and other insurgent groups including al-Qaida’s branch in Syria, the Nusra Front. The Islamic State has been on the offensive in the area and has captured several towns and villages over the past days.

Also Wednesday, nine prominent jihadist ideologues issued a fatwa, or religious edict, in which they called on Muslim militants to fight the Islamic State because they have attacked insurgents.

“As the nation of Islam was waiting for more conquests by the holy warriors, the Baghdadis were stabbing the holy warriors in the back,” read the Fatwa that was posted on several jihadist accounts on social media, referring to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. “They stopped the holy warriors’ march against the regime.”

The fatwa was signed by religious figures including Jordan’s top pro-al-Qaida ideologues Abu Qatada and Abu Mohammed al-Maqdisi, as well as Abdullah al-Mheisny of Saudi Arabia, who is now in Syria with the Nusra Front.

In the Qatari capital of Doha, U.S. envoy John Allen said Iraq’s so-called Popular Mobilizati­on Forces — which include Iranian-backed Shiite militias — have a role to play in helping take back territory from Islamic State militants in the Sunni-dominated Anbar province but that they must fall under Baghdad’s control.

Speaking at the U.S.-Islamic World Forum, Allen said leaders in Anbar “do not view these forces through strictly a sectarian prism” and understand they do not only include Shiite hard-liners.

“But we also remain very attentive to and concerned about extremist militia elements frequently influenced and led by the Iranian leadership,” he said. “It is critical that all forces in the battle space fall under the command and control of the government of Iraq.”

The role of the militias is contentiou­s among many Sunnis in Iraq, who fear they could enhance Shiite powerhouse Iran’s influence in the country and exacerbate sectarian tensions.

“We have seen enormous losses for Daesh. More than 10,000 since the beginning of this campaign. That will end up having an effect.” — Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken

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