NEW DELHI, June 16: The US coalition forces on Thursday claimed to have captured a senior Islamic State of Iraq and Syria group bomb maker in a pre-dawn raid. Witnesses said they saw troops in helicopters swoop down on an isolated house in rebel-held north-western Syria.
A war monitor said two military helicopters touched down for only a few minutes, and several shots were fired in a village in an area controlled by Turkish-backed rebel groups.
“The captured individual is an experienced bomb maker and operational facilitator who became one of the top leaders of Daesh’s Syrian branch,” said the US-led coalition battling the jihadist group in Syria and Iraq, using another name for ISIS.
The coalition did not name the target in the statement but a coalition official said the man captured was Hani Ahmed Al-Kurdi, who was the ISIS leader of Raqa when it was the de facto capital of IS in Syria.
Such operations by US forces are rare in parts of north-western Syria that are under the control of Turkish-backed rebels and non-IS jihadist groups. A previous raid by special forces in early February led to the death of the group’s leader Abu Ibrahim al-Qurashi, who detonated a bomb vest to avoid capture.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitoring group with a vast network of sources on the ground, could not confirm the identity of the ISIS operative captured on Thursday. Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said two military helicopters landed in Al-Humayrah and took off seven minutes later, adding that only a few shots were fired. “The US operation was quick and smooth,” he said, adding it took place in the village of Al-Humayrah, northeast of Aleppo and four kilometres from the Turkish border.
The coalition said “the mission was meticulously planned to minimise the risk of collateral damage, particularly any potential harm to civilians. “There were no civilians harmed during the operation nor any damage to coalition aircraft or assets.”
Mohamed Youssef, a local witness to the raid, said it targeted a house on the outskirts of the village where displaced people from the Syrian city of Aleppo were living. He reported busy activity in the skies during the night time operation. “About eight aircraft flew for more than an hour and a half,” he said. “When they left, we headed to the house and found the women tied up and the children in a nearby field.”
He said the women told them that coalition forces had arrested “a man named Fawaz.” Other residents said about four men and six women had lived in the house, but that they did not know whether they were a family, and that they did not mix with the rest of the village. Other eyewitnesses said a pro-Turkish Syrian group arrested two other men after the operation.
After ISIS lost its last territory following a military onslaught backed by the US-led coalition in March 2019, its remnants in Syria mostly retreated into desert hideouts. ISIS cells have since ambushed Kurdish-led forces and Syrian government or allied forces, also carrying out similar attacks in Iraq.
The group’s top leaders however often take cover in areas controlled by other forces. Qurashi’s notorious predecessor, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, was killed in a US special forces raid in north-western Syria, far from ISIS’s area of operations.
Little is known about new leader Abu Hasan al-Hashemi al-Qurashi, the jihadist group’s third chief since its inception. Media reports that he was captured in Istanbul last month were never confirmed, with a Turkish official only saying that a senior but unidentified ISIS member had been detained.
(Manas Dasgupta)