US airstrikes kill ‘Islamic State’ militants linked to Paris attacks

Deutsche Welle
2 Min Read

The men had planned attacks on Western targets at the time they were killed, a US official said. Germany has warned of increased attacks on European soil amid large-scale operations to uproot the group in Iraq and Syria.The Pentagon on Tuesday said a US drone strike in Syria killed two leaders of the self-declared “Islamic State” (IS) linked to attacks committed in Paris in November 2015, along with another French militant.

“A coalition precision airstrike conducted on December 4 in Raqqa, Syria, resulted in the deaths of three ISIL leaders directly involved in facilitating external terror operations and recruiting foreign fighters,” said Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis.

“The three were working together to plot and facilitate attacks against Western targets at the time of the strike,” he added.

The Pentagon identified the militants as Salah-Eddine Gourmat and Sammy Djedou, who partially facilitated the Paris attacks, and French national Walid Hamman, who Belgium in 2015 convicted in absentia for involvement in a foiled terror plot.

The three men were killed when a drone fired on a vehicle transporting them together, Davis said.

‘Raised the threat level’

Earlier this week, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said large-scale counter terrorism operations in Iraq and Syria “has raised the threat level in our country.”

Iraqi forces backed by coalition airstrikes have launched a campaign to recapture Mosul after it fell to the “Islamic State” in June 2014.

Last month, Washington said efforts to liberate Syria’s Raqqa, the militant group’s de facto capital, would likely take place concurrently to the Mosul operation.

The “Islamic State” rose to notoriety in 2014, when it took over large swathes of land in Syria and Iraq during a swift offensive. However, the militants have lost a vast amount of territory due to a US-led coalition against the militant group.

ls/jm (Reuters, AFP)

Share This Article
Leave a comment