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Trump confirms death of Islamic State chief Baghdadi in US raid
By Sebastian Smith with Omar Haj Kadour near Barisha
Washington (AFP) Oct 27, 2019

Iraq says it provided Baghdadi's location to US for raid
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 27, 2019 - Iraq's intelligence services provided US forces with the location of elusive Islamic State group chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi ahead of the raid that killed him, the security forces said Sunday.

In a statement distributed to journalists, the forces said intel units had created a "specialised team" that worked for a year to track Baghdadi.

"The Iraqi national intelligence service, according to precise information, located the hideout of Daesh chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi," it said, using the Arabic acronym for IS.

"On this basis, US forces in coordination with Iraqi intelligence carried out a military operation that led to the elimination of Abu Bakr and those with him," it added.

US President Donald Trump announced Sunday that a special operation by American forces had targeted the jihadist supremo in northwest Syria.

Troops cornered Baghdadi in a tunnel, where he set off a suicide vest and killed himself, with three of his children also dying in the blast.

Trump acknowledged several countries had contributed to the operation, saying Iraq had done "very well" without providing details.

An Iraqi intelligence source told AFP the service had been closely tracking Baghdadi's movements across Syria but could ultimately pin down his location due to a phone call from one of his multiple wives, who was with him.

A second Iraqi official said the intelligence services relied on information from two women in custody: another one of Baghdadi's wives as well as the wife of one of his couriers.

President Donald Trump on Sunday said that elusive Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was killed, dying "like a dog," in a daring, nighttime raid by US special forces deep in northwest Syria.

Trump told the nation in a televised address from the White House that US forces killed a "large number" of Islamic State militants during the raid which culminated in cornering Baghdadi in a tunnel, where he set off a suicide vest.

"He ignited his vest, killing himself," Trump said.

"He died after running into a dead end tunnel, whimpering and crying and screaming all the way," Trump said, adding that three of Baghdadi's children also died in the blast.

Trump said that the raid -- which required flying more than an hour by helicopter in both directions from an undisclosed base -- had been accomplished by help from Russia, Syria, Turkey and Iraq.

Special forces "executed a dangerous and daring nightime raid in northwestern Syria and accomplished their mission in grand style."

At its height, Islamic State controlled swaths of Iraq and Syria in a self-declared state known as a caliphate, characterized by the brutal imposition of a puritanical version of Islam.

In addition to oppressing the people it governed, Islamic State planned or inspired terrorism attacks across Europe, while using expertise in social media to lure large numbers of foreign volunteers.

It took years of war, in which Islamic State became notorious for mass executions and sickening hostage murders, before the caliphate's final slice of territory in Syria was seized this March.

The death of Baghdadi comes as a big boost for Trump, whose abrupt decision to withdraw a small but effective deployment of US forces from Syria caused fears that it would give Islamic State remnants and sleeper cells a chance to regroup.

Trump took a storm of criticism, including from his own usually loyal Republican Party.

In keeping with his liking for showmanship, Trump had teased the news late Saturday with an enigmatic tweet saying merely that "Something very big has just happened!"

- Scorched vehicle -

A war monitor said US helicopters dropped forces in an area of Syria's Idlib province where "groups linked to the Islamic State group" were present.

The helicopters targeted a home and a car outside the village of Barisha in Idlib province, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in Britain but relies on a network of sources inside Syria for its information.

The operation killed nine people including an IS senior leader called Abu Yamaan as well as a child and two women, it said.

An AFP correspondent outside Barisha saw a minibus scorched to cinders by the side of the road, and windows shattered in a neighbor's house surrounded by red agricultural land dotted with olive trees.

A resident in the area who gave his name as Abdel Hameed said he rushed to the place of the attack after he heard helicopters, gunfire and strikes in the night.

"The home had collapsed and next to it there was a destroyed tent and vehicle. There were two people killed inside" the car, he said.

From the outskirts of Barisha, an inhabitant of a camp for the displaced also heard helicopters followed by what he described as US-led coalition air strikes.

They "were flying very low, causing great panic among the people," Ahmed Hassawi told AFP by phone.

Another resident, who gave his name as Abu Ahmad and lives less than 100 meters away from the site of the destroyed house, said he heard voices "speaking a foreign language" during the raid.

The AFP correspondent said the area of the night-time operation had been cordoned off by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a group dominated by members of Syria's former Al-Qaeda affiliate controlling Idlib.

Between the trees, bulldozers could be seen at the site, clearing out the rubble.

- 'Joint intelligence'-

Turkey, which has been waging an offensive against the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in northeast Syria in recent weeks, had "advance knowledge" about the raid, a senior Turkish official said.

"To the best of my knowledge, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi arrived at this location 48 hours prior to the raid," the official told AFP.

The commander-in-chief of the SDF, who have been fighting IS in Syria, said the operation came after "joint intelligence work" with American forces.

Trump also said that Iraq had been "very good" over the raid.

He said no US soldiers were wounded, despite "doing a lot of shooting" and "a lot of blasting." The only US casualty was a military dog in the tunnel with the trapped Islamic State leader.

Long pursued by the US-led coalition against IS, Baghdadi has been erroneously reported dead several times in recent years.

- $25 million reward -

Baghdadi -- an Iraqi native believed to be around 48 years old -- was rarely seen.

After 2014 he disappeared from sight, only surfacing in a video in April with a wiry grey and red beard and an assault rifle at his side, as he encouraged followers to "take revenge" after the group's territorial defeat.

His reappearance was seen as a reassertion of his leadership of a group that -- despite its March defeat -- has spread from the Middle East to Asia and Africa and claimed several deadly attacks in Europe.

The US State Department had posted a $25 million reward for information on his whereabouts.

In September, the group released an audio message said to be from Baghdadi praising the operations of IS affiliates in other regions.

It also called on scattered IS fighters to regroup and try to free thousands of their comrades held in jails and camps by the SDF in northeastern Syria.

Trump describes daring US raid as like 'a movie'
Washington (AFP) Oct 27, 2019 - It started with eight helicopters flying low in the dark across hostile territory. It ended two hours later with one of the most wanted men in the world cornered by US soldiers, then blowing himself up.

And thousands of miles away in the White House Situation Room, President Donald Trump says he witnessed Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's end on video in amazement.

"As though you were watching a movie," he said.

In extended questions and answers Sunday after announcing the raid, Trump said that Baghdadi had been "under surveillance for a couple of weeks."

As soon as confirmation came in about his location, the raid by special forces swung into motion Saturday.

"A large group" took part, with "eight helicopters, and we had many other ships and planes," Trump said.

First, they had to cross hostile territory from a still-undisclosed location into northwest Syria, flying about one hour and 10 minutes.

"We flew very, very low and very, very fast. But it was a big -- it was a very dangerous part of the mission. Getting in and getting out," Trump said.

"There was a chance that we would have met unbelievable fire," he said.

And when they landed at the targeted compound, "all hell broke loose," according to Trump.

- 'Only one person' left -

"A large crew of brilliant fighters ran out of those helicopters and blew holes into the side of the building" to avoid booby traps in any doors, he said.

That "was something really amazing to see," he said about his experience in the Situation Room, where he was joined by Vice President Mike Pence and senior military and national-security officers. "We watched it so clearly."

"They were greeted with a lot of firepower," he said.

A "large number" of Baghdadi's supporters died in the return fire, Trump said, but no US troops.

Commanders relayed back their progress, step by step: Eleven children had been taken out alive, they said. Prisoners were being taken. Baghdadi's wives were dead.

And then came the call everyone was waiting for.

"Sir, there's only one person in the building. We are sure he's in the tunnel trying to escape but it's a dead-end tunnel," Trump recounted being told.

It was Baghdadi.

Knowing beforehand that there would be tunnels and that the fugitive was likely wearing a suicide vest, the US forces had brought a robot. But it never got used.

"We were moving too fast," Trump said. "They were chasing."

Baghdadi had taken three of his children down into the tunnel, Trump said. Their presence wasn't going to stop the inevitable, though.

"It was brutal," Trump said.

The US troops sent dogs down the tunnel and the Islamic State mastermind "blew himself up."

"He reached the end of the tunnel as our dogs chased him down. He ignited his vest, killing himself and the three children," Trump said.

"He didn't die a hero, he died a coward, crying, whimpering and screaming and bringing three kids with him to die. Certain death. And he knew the tunnel had no end," Trump said.

The US soldiers took samples from the mutilated leader's body for DNA identification, loaded back up and left.

Trump said the troops were in the compound for about two hours.

"We lost nobody, think of that," he said.

There was one casualty on the US side, in fact.

"Our dog was hurt," he said.


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