Jim Garamone at the DoD News
offers the below piece:
WASHINGTON, April 18, 2018 —
Iraqi security forces and Syrian Democratic Forces continue to contain Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria fighters in areas of the middle Euphrates River valley,
an Operation Inherent Resolve spokesman said yesterday.
Army Col. Ryan Dillon briefed
reporters at the Pentagon from Baghdad and said that SDF forces, with coalition
support, “continue to look for opportunities to exploit ISIS weaknesses and
conduct strikes and attacks against these remaining terrorists.”
Syrian forces are continuing
to secure areas they have liberated, especially in and around Raqqa, which was
the capital of the self-proclaimed ISIS caliphate. Syrian internal security
forces are removing thousands of improvised explosive devices and weapons
caches the terror group planted, Dillon said.
Some Territory Under ISIS
Control
ISIS does continue to control
some territory, the colonel said. “These are near Hajin, which is along the
Euphrates River north of Al Bukamal, and in Dashisha, near the Syria-Iraq
border,” he said.
In Iraq, security and
stability operations continue, and Iraqi security forces continue to search for
ISIS terrorists. While ISIS has gone underground in an attempt to regroup, it
is still a threat in the country, Dillon said.
“The ISF know their enemy.
They know that they are a threat,” he said. “And they are planning and
implementing security measures with coalition support in this critical period
leading up to parliamentary elections in May.”
More Work Remains
More work remains to be done
in Iraq, Dillon said, noting that ISIS is an adaptive and determined enemy.
“The coalition remains focused on enhancing our Iraqi partners' capacity to
sustain their operations and protect their citizens against these terrorists,”
he added.
While ISIS has been expelled
from most areas in eastern Syria, the terror group is changing and attacking
pro-regime forces in the West.
“ISIS is starting to conduct
more attacks on the west side of the Euphrates River outside of Abu Kamal
against pro-regime forces,” the colonel said. “And then we've also seen … the
retaking of neighborhoods in southern Damascus.
ISIS has been defeated
militarily, Dillon said, but the group hasn’t given up. “Many have run … back
into the desert areas and into these vast rural areas to hide and attempt to
regroup,” he told reporters. “But that doesn't mean that they're exclusively
just in these desert areas. Others have attempted to go back into and blend
back in with population centers as well.”
This is why there is still a
residual presence of the group in northern Syria, and Iraqi security forces
continue to search for and arrest ISIS operatives on their territory, the
colonel said.
Note: In the above U.S. Army
photo taken by PFC Anthony Zendejas IV a soldier scans a sector of fire from a
military fighting vehicle while escorting the United Kingdom Bridge Training
Team to a bridge being built in Mosul, Iraq on March 21, 2018. The soldier,
supporting Operation Inherent Resolve, is assigned to the 4th Infantry
regiment’s 2nd Battalion.
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