Cheryl Pellerin at the DoD News
offers the below piece:
WASHINGTON, Aug. 7, 2017 —
Tomorrow marks the third anniversary of the U.S.-led coalition air campaign
against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, during which millions of people
have been freed from ISIS control, Pentagon spokesman Navy Capt. Jeff Davis said
today.
Briefing the Pentagon press
corps, Davis said the air campaign was a response to a terrorist army that came
seemingly out of nowhere and emerged as one of the most well-funded,
fastest-growing and most capable terrorist networks anywhere in the world.
“On Aug. 8, 2014, two FA-18
[Super Hornet] jets launched from the USS George W. Bush in the [Persian] Gulf
and dropped the first 500-pound laser-guided bombs on fighters near Irbil,”
Iraq,” Davis said.
ISIS was more than just an
insurgency, he added. They were capable of holding 40,000 square miles of
territory and able to launch external attacks in Europe and the United States.
At one point they held an
area the size of Ohio, Davis said, “and … 8 million people were being
ruthlessly held captive by their rule, living in misery, many fleeing their
homes, many forced into refugee status, many forced into slavery. And we saw
their depravity in videos that they posted on YouTube.”
Although 5 million people are
now liberated from ISIS control, ISIS still presents a great threat, he said.
“We know that they continue
to murder and wound innocent people -- using them as human shields and
displacing families into refugees. And we know that they're spreading to other
places. We've seen their attacks in Europe … [and] we've seen their influence
shift into places like Afghanistan, Mali, and now even the Philippines.”
Defeat-ISIS Coalition
In the three years since that
first air strike, Davis noted, “we've worked very methodically over time with
our defeat-ISIS coalition, and ISIS' control has been reduced significantly.”
In Iraq, about 70 percent of
the territory ISIS once held is now liberated. In Syria, 50 percent of the
territory they once held is liberated, and ISIS has not retaken one inch of
territory liberated by the coalition, Davis said.
“This includes places where
external operations were [being] hatched and that served as hubs for the flow
of foreign fighters in and terrorists out. Places like Manbij, and now Raqqa,
their capital in Syria, which is surrounded and collapsing quickly,” he added,
noting that all was done with the cooperation of a large coalition.
The coalition now includes 73
partners -- 69 nations plus the European Union, NATO, the Arab League and
Interpol, he said.
“The coalition is progressing
and ISIS is facing its inevitable defeat. We will win and they will lose. Our
campaign against ISIS has been done with the utmost care to minimize civilian
casualties,” Davis said, adding that although this campaign has been the most
precise in the history of warfare, “Civilians do die in war and that's a sad
truth.
“But the 5 million innocent
people liberated from ISIS would still be living under that brutality and the
death toll would be even higher but for our efforts against ISIS,” he said.
Syria and Iraq
In Raqqa today it is day 64
of Syria operations, Davis said.
“Yesterday the [Syrian
Democratic Forces] liberated about a square kilometer of terrain in Raqqa,
continuing to work on the three axes that we've talked about before -- west,
east and south.
“And the east-west
deconfliction line south of the Euphrates is holding as regime forces remain
south and SDF forces remain north of that agreed-upon line,” Davis added.
Over the weekend strikes were
conducted in Abu Kamal, Shaddadi, Dar Azar and Raqqa. The 24 strikes included
11 ISIS tactical units and destroyed 30 fighting positions, two vehicles, two
command-and-control nodes, two mortar systems, a tunnel, a heavy machine gun,
an improvised explosive device facility and a vehicle-borne-bomb facility and
damaged six fighting positions, he said.
“Meanwhile in Iraq, hold
forces are in place in Mosul. This is a combination of Iraqi forces including
the Federal Police, the 16th Iraqi Army Division, and [Counter Terrorism
Service] battalions that remain in east and west Mosul and continue to assess
security requirements,” Davis said.
The coalition continues to
support the [Iraqis] as they reset and prepare for follow-on operations in Tal
Afar, he said, “which is effectively surrounded at this point and we'll
continue to see that tighten as time goes on.”
More strikes took place over
the weekend in Huwayjah, Kisik, Rawah and Tal Afar, Davis said.
Note: In the above U.S. Army photo taken by Staff Sgt. Jason Hull U.S. Army Cpl. Dean Craig chats
with a truck crew in Mosul, Iraq on June 8, 2017, before moving to an advise and
assist patrol base in a neighborhood liberated from the Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria.
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