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Turkey’s intelligence agency has killed the head of ISIS, Erdogan said

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Sunday that a suspected leader of the Islamic State group was killed in an operation by Turkey’s MIT intelligence agency.

“The suspected leader of IS, codenamed Abu Hussein al-Qurashi, was neutralized yesterday in an MIT-led operation in Syria,” he announced on television, using the Islamic State group’s Arabic acronym.

The Islamic State group announced the death of its previous leader, Abu Hassan al-Hashimi al-Qurashi, on November 30, to be replaced by Abu Hussein al-Qurashi.

An AFP correspondent in northern Syria said Turkish intelligence agents and local military police, backed by Turkey, sealed off an area in Jindires, northwest of Afrin, on Saturday.

Residents told AFP that one operation targeted an abandoned farm that was being used as an Islamic school.

Since 2020, Turkey has deployed troops in northern Syria and controls the entire region with the help of Syrian allies.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, with his wife Emin Erdogan, greets his supporters at a rally ahead of the May 14 presidential and parliamentary elections, April 30, 2023 in Ankara, Turkey.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, with his wife Emin Erdogan, greets his supporters at a rally ahead of the May 14 presidential and parliamentary elections on April 30, 2023 in Ankara, Turkey.

Cagla Gurudogan/Reuters

The United States carried one Helicopter attack An operation in northern Syria in mid-April said the Islamic State group was planning attacks in Europe and the Middle East.

US Central Command said it killed a senior leader of the IS group in the operation. They named him Abd-al Hadi Mahmud al-Haji Ali.

On April 16, suspected Islamic State group fighters killed at least 41 people, including 24 civilians, in Syria.

In the first week of April, US forces said they had killed a leader of the IS group responsible for planning attacks in Europe, identified as Khalid Aid Ahmad al-Jabri.

When it was at the height of its power, controlling large parts of Iraq and Syria, the IS group claimed responsibility for a series of attacks in Europe.

In October 2019, Washington announced that it was The dead IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi On an expedition to north-west Syria.

Despite being driven from areas it once controlled, the Islamic State group is still carrying out attacks in Syria.

The fight against ISIS

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