50,000 Daesh members killed in Iraq, Syria: official
Washington: At least 50,000 Daesh jihadists have been killed by the
US-led coalition since it began operations in Iraq and Syria in late
2014, a senior US military official said Thursday.
A relentless
operation using planes and drones from a dozen or so members of the
anti-Daesh coalition since August 2014 has conducted some 16,000 air
strikes against the jihadists in Iraq and Syria — two-thirds of them in
Iraq.
In addition, the coalition has provided training and weapons to local forces fighting Daesh.
“I
am not into morbid counts but that kind of volume matters, that kind of
impact on the enemy,” the official said, calling the 50,000 number a
conservative estimate.
The official, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said the air campaign had been the “most pristine” ever in
terms of avoiding civilian casualties, with almost all the bombs dropped
so far being smart weapons that can be steered to a precise target.
The coalition tally of civilians killed in the operations is 173 — though critics say the real figure is far higher.
The
official said the coalition had diminished Daesh’s ranks to such a
level that the simultaneous attacks being waged on Mosul in Iraq and
Raqa in Syria — the jihadists last remaining major power centres — have
been possible.
Coalition spokesman Colonel John Dorrian said
earlier that in Mosul, Daesh was turning to adolescent fighters as its
hardcore warriors got wiped out.
“As this effort goes on with each
passing day, Daesh has fewer fighters and fewer resources at their
disposal,” Dorrian said in a video call.
He added the jihadists
appeared to have run out of armored suicide car bombs, and estimated
“many hundreds” of fighters had been killed in Mosul.
“It doesn’t
mean that it’s not still an extraordinarily dangerous situation. They
are not going to go quietly, but they are going to go.”
The
coalition has previously said it “does not use a casualty count as a
measure of effectiveness in the campaign to ultimately defeat (Daesh) in
Iraq and Syria”.
Despite this assertion, such figures are periodically announced.
Airwars,
a London-based collective of journalists and researchers, uses local
sources, photographs and media accounts to keep a detailed list of every
known coalition air strike.
They have praised Pentagon efforts at
accountability compared with other actors in Syria such as Russia and
the regime of President Bashar Al Assad. But the group says the number
of likely civilian deaths from coalition strikes is 1,957 at a bare
minimum.
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