Rare US Raid in Syrian Government-held Village Kills ISIS Official

 An Apache helicopter seen flying above US soldiers patrolling the countryside of Tal Tamr in northeastern Syria in December 2021. (EPA)
An Apache helicopter seen flying above US soldiers patrolling the countryside of Tal Tamr in northeastern Syria in December 2021. (EPA)
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Rare US Raid in Syrian Government-held Village Kills ISIS Official

 An Apache helicopter seen flying above US soldiers patrolling the countryside of Tal Tamr in northeastern Syria in December 2021. (EPA)
An Apache helicopter seen flying above US soldiers patrolling the countryside of Tal Tamr in northeastern Syria in December 2021. (EPA)

A rare US helicopter raid on a government-held village in Syria’s northeast killed an ISIS official hiding out there on Thursday.

The United States has carried out previous raids in Syria against ISIS militants, but Thursday’s would be the first known operation in a zone held by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad.

Early on Thursday, US special forces carried out a rare operation on the government-held village of Muluk Saray in the northeastern province of Hasakah, Syrian state television said in its Telegram channel.

It said one person was killed and others were captured. It gave no further details on their identities.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) Spokesman Col. Joseph Buccino told Reuters that the US forces conducted a “raid” overnight Wednesday, targeting a “senior ISIS official.”

Buccino added that more information would be released once operational details were confirmed.

Two security sources told Reuters that the man who was killed was an ISIS official wanted by the United States.

“The airborne operation targeted a key ISIS leader present in the areas controlled by the Syrian government. It was successful,” one of the security sources said.

The source said the slain man was responsible for coordinating across ISIS sleeper cells in the area.

“This operation aims to expand the scope of targeting this organization’s members across different parts of Syria,” the source added.

The second source confirmed the man killed was an ISIS official and said the US forces had taken his body with them as they retreated.

A local source said the man had moved to Muluk Saray village in recent years from Taif, a town near the border with Iraq that was once an ISIS stronghold.

“People thought he was a shepherd - no one knows his true identity,” said the source.

The local source said US forces also raided a building used by Syrian security and detained “several people” there.

Other residents of the area confirmed the raid to Reuters.

One said that US helicopters landed in the village after midnight and told residents by loudspeaker to stay indoors and keep their lights off.

The resident said the operation lasted several hours and that there was no exchange of fire with the US troops.

Citing reliable sources, the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also said one unidentified man was killed during a US airdrop near the village of Moluk Sarray.

It stated that the person killed in the operation was “an Iraqi national and likely a senior ISIS member who was killed after refusing to surrender to US forces.”

The war monitor reported that two families along with the head of a local security headquarters were arrested during the operation, which was said to have taken place about 17-km south of Qamishli city.



Armed Clashes Erupt in Libya’s Tripoli After Reported Killing of Armed Group Leader 

Members of the police are seen in the Libyan capital Tripoli. (EPA)
Members of the police are seen in the Libyan capital Tripoli. (EPA)
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Armed Clashes Erupt in Libya’s Tripoli After Reported Killing of Armed Group Leader 

Members of the police are seen in the Libyan capital Tripoli. (EPA)
Members of the police are seen in the Libyan capital Tripoli. (EPA)

Armed clashes erupted on Monday evening and gunfire has echoed in the city center and other parts of the Libyan capital Tripoli following reports that an armed group leader was killed, three residents told Reuters by phone.

The leader, Abdulghani Kikli, known as Ghaniwa, is the commander of Support Force Apparatus SSA, one of Tripoli's powerful armed groups, based in the densely populated Abu Salim neighborhood.

SSA is under the Presidential Council that came to power in 2021 with the Government of National Unity (GNU) of Abdulhamid al-Dbeibah through a United Nations-backed process.

The GNU's interior ministry called on citizens in a short statement to stay at home "for their own safety."

Following the ministry's call, drivers started speeding and honking in many Tripoli streets.

The GNU media platform said early on Tuesday that the defense ministry had fully taken control of Abu Salim neighborhood.

"I heard heavy gunfire, and I saw red lights in the sky," a resident said on condition of anonymity.

The other two residents said the gunfire was echoing all over their neighborhoods of Abu Salim and Salaheddin.

The University of Tripoli Presidency announced on Facebook the suspension of studies, exams, and administrative work at all faculties, departments and offices until further notice.

The UN Mission in Libya urged all parties to "immediately cease fighting and restore calm," reminding them of their obligation to protect civilians.

"Attacks on civilians and civilian objects may amount to war crimes," it said.

Libya, a major oil producer in the Mediterranean, has had little stability since a 2011 uprising backed by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The country split in 2014 between warring eastern and western factions.

Major fighting paused with a ceasefire in 2020 but efforts to end the political crisis have failed, with major factions occasionally joining forces in armed clashes and competing for control over Libya's substantial economic resources.

Tripoli and the northwest, where the GNU and most major state institutions are based, are home to rival armed factions that have repeatedly fought.