Iraqi airstrikes killed nine suspected ISIS militants, including four Lebanese, in retaliation for an ISIS attack on Iraqi army barracks earlier this month, officials said Sunday.
ISIS gunmen in Iraq broke into a barracks in the mountainous al-Azim district outside the town of Baqouba on Jan. 21, killed a guard and shot dead 11 soldiers as they slept. It was one of the boldest attacks by the militants in recent weeks and came amid an uptick in violence that stoked fears the group has been re-energized.
Yehia Rasool, the spokesman for Iraq’s commander in chief, said the joint military operations room and the air force identified the cell behind the attack as its members hid in al-Azim, north of Baghdad.
Three airstrikes were launched that killed the nine militants, he said.
Also Sunday, Iraqi anti-terrorism units carried out an inspection campaign in seven prisons in Iraq holding ISIS militants. The move comes after a brazen prison attack ISIS militants carried out in northeastern Syria that lasted for over a week.
The attack on the prison in Hassakah province in northeastern Syria was carried out by about 200 militants who were joined by rioting inmates, leaving dozens killed while an unknown number of suspects escaped.
On Sunday, the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces announced the end of its sweep operations in the prison “by eliminating the last pockets in the northern dormitories where (ISIS) terrorists had been barricaded.”
The attack on January 20 was carried out on the largest of a dozen detention facilities in Syria that house militants. More than 3,000 suspected ISIS militants, including over 600 minors, were held there. The Kurdish-led SDF said most of the prison inmates and militants have surrendered, and scores were killed.
ISIS was largely defeated in Iraq in 2017. The group was dealt a final blow in 2019 when it lost its last territory in southeast Syria during the US-led military campaign in cooperation with Syrian Kurdish-led forces.
But thousands of militants melted into the desert and have continued to wage attacks, frequently hitting security forces and military with roadside bombs and firing on military convoys or checkpoints in both countries.