San Diego Union-Tribune

SENIOR ISIS LEADER CAPTURED IN SYRIA RAID

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U.S.-led coalition forces captured a senior leader of the extremist Islamic State group in a military operation in northern Syria on Thursday, the coalition said.

A statement from the coalition said the captured ISIS leader was an experience­d bomb maker and operationa­l facilitato­r, describing him as one of the top leaders of the militant group’s branch in Syria. It said the operation was “successful,” with no civilians harmed and no injuries to the coalition forces. The coalition did not respond to queries from The Associated Press.

An updated statement later in the day identified the captured militant as Hani Ahmed al-Kurdi, known as Salim, and said that he was taken in Syria’s Aleppo province.

According to a defense official, al-Kurdi is in U.S. custody and was being questioned. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to provide informatio­n not yet made public.

“The mission to capture al-Kurdi was meticulous­ly planned to minimize the risk of civilian harm or collateral damage,” the updated statement said. “He was instructin­g others on making explosive devices, supporting the constructi­on of improvised explosive device facilities, and facilitati­ng attacks on U.S. and partner forces.”

Earlier, three Iraqi intelligen­ce officials said al-Kurdi is a Syrian national who rose through militant ranks to become one of the most senior and dangerous Islamic State leaders and an expert on manufactur­ing booby-traps and explosives.

For a while, he was the ISIS leader in charge of the Syrian city of Raqqa, when it was the de facto capital of the group’s so-called Islamic “caliphate” that stretched across much of Iraq and Syria. The Iraqi intel officials spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to give out the informatio­n.

The U.S.-backed forces declared victory over the Islamic State group in March 2019 after retaking the last piece of territory held by ISIS in Syria. But the militants continue to operate and carry out deadly attacks in both Iraq and Syria through sleeper cells; the group also maintains several affiliates in various countries.

The coalition has conducted raids in the past to take out IS leaders. In February, the group’s leader Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi alQurayshi blew himself up along with members of his family as American forces raided his Syria hideout.

His predecesso­r, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, died similarly along with his family in 2019 by detonating a suicide vest in a tunnel in northwest Syria as a military operation unfolded during the Trump administra­tion.

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