Wednesday, December 31, 2025 - The US military announced on Tuesday that at least seven ISIS fighters were k!lled and a dozen members of the terrorist group were captured in Syria this month following an ambush that killed two US troops and an American civilian interpreter.
US Central Command, which oversees the Middle East, said in
a statement that 11 missions were carried out from December 20 through December
29, following initial airstrikes on IS weapons and infrastructure.
Those airstrikes, conducted in coordination with Jordanian
authorities, struck 70 targets across central Syria.
In the operations since, the US military and other forces
from the region, including Syria, four weapons caches have been destroyed,
Centcom said.
'We will not relent,' Adm. Brad Cooper, who leads the
command, said in the statement. 'We are steadfast in commitment to working with
regional partners to root out the ISIS threat posed to US and regional
security.'
US forces will now continue 'to hunt down terrorist
operatives, eliminate ISIS networks and work with partners to prevent an ISIS
resurgence,' Cooper vowed.
Targets ranged from senior Islamic State (IS) members who
were being closely monitored by military officials to lower-level foot
soldiers, according to a US official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to
discuss sensitive military operations.
The official said a growing collaboration between the United
States and Syria's relatively new government meant that American forces were
able to attack IS in areas of the country where they previously did not
operate.
Syrian forces were the driving force behind some of the
missions against the militant group this year, the official added.
The US's latest operations came as retaliation for a
December 13 ambush that occurred near the ancient city of Palmyra while
American and Syrian security officials had gathered for a meeting over lunch.
Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres Tovar, 25, of Des Moines, Iowa, and
Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard of Marshalltown, Iowa, were k!lled in the attack
as well as a civilian interpreter from Michigan.
Both soldiers were members of the Iowa National Guard, which
began deploying roughly 1,800 troops to the Middle East as part of Operation
Inherent Resolve, the US mission to defeat ISIS.
Three other Iowa National Guard members were also injured in
the December 13 attack, as were members of Syria's security forces.
Authorities have since said that the gunman, who was killed,
joined Syria's Internal Security forces as a base security guard. He had
recently been reassigned over suspicion he might be affiliated with ISIS,
though the terrorist group has not claimed responsibility for the
attack, according to CNN.
Following the attack, US President Donald Trump vowed
retaliation, saying there would be 'a lot of damage done to the people that did
it.
'We had three great patriots terminated by bad people and
not the Syrian government - it was ISIS,' he said

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