U.S. releases Baghdadi raid video, warns of likely retribution attack
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[October 31, 2019]
By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon on
Wednesday released its first images from last weekend's commando raid in
Syria that led to the death of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
and warned the militant group may attempt to stage a "retribution
attack."
The declassified, grainy, black-and-white aerial videos from Saturday's
raid showed U.S. special operations forces closing in on the compound
and U.S. aircraft firing on militants nearby.
The most dramatic video showed a massive, black plume of smoke rising
from the ground after U.S. military bombs leveled Baghdadi's compound.
"It looks pretty much like a parking lot, with large potholes," said
Marine General Kenneth McKenzie, the commander of U.S. Central Command,
which oversees American forces in the Middle East.
McKenzie, briefing Pentagon reporters, said the idea of destroying the
compound was at least in part "to ensure that it would not be a shrine
or otherwise memorable in any way.
"It's just another piece of ground," he said.
Baghdadi, an Iraqi jihadist who rose from obscurity to declare himself
"caliph" of all Muslims as the leader of Islamic State, died by
detonating a suicide vest as he fled into a dead-end tunnel as elite
U.S. special forces closed in.
McKenzie said he brought two young children into the tunnel with him -
not three, as had been the U.S. government estimate. Both children were
believed to be under the age of 12 and both were killed, he said.
He portrayed Baghdadi as isolated at his Syrian compound, just four
miles from the Turkish border, saying fighters from other militant
groups nearby probably did not even know he was there. McKenzie
suggested it was unlikely that Baghdadi used the Internet or had digital
connections to the outside world.
"I think you'd find (he was using) probably a messenger system that
allows you to put something on a floppy or on a bit of electronics and
have someone physically move it somewhere," he said.
McKenzie said Islamic State would likely try to stage some kind of
retaliatory attack.
"We suspect they will try some form of retribution attack. And we are
postured and prepared for that," he said.
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U.S. special forces move towards the compound of Islamic State
leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi during a raid in the Idlib region of
Syria in a still image from video October 26, 2019. Video picture
taken October 26, 2019. U.S. Department of Defense/Handout via
REUTERS.
WHIMPERING AND CRYING?
McKenzie did not back up or knock down Trump's dramatic account of
Baghdadi's final moments, which the president delivered during a
televised address to the nation on Sunday. Trump said Baghdadi "died
a coward — crying, whimpering, screaming."
Asked about Trump's account, McKenzie said: "About Baghdadi's last
moments, I can tell you this: He crawled into a hole with two small
children and blew himself up as his people stayed on the ground."
"So you can deduce what kind of person he is based on that
activity... I'm not able to confirm anything else about his last
seconds. I just can't confirm that one way or another."
On Monday, Army General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, also declined to confirm Trump's account, saying he presumed
Trump got that information from his direct conversations with
members of the elite unit that conducted the operation. Milley had
not yet spoken with them, he said.
McKenzie suggested the U.S. military had secured a large amount of
intelligence about Islamic State's activities during the raid.
"While the assault force was securing the remains, they also secured
whatever documentation and electronics we could find, which was
substantial," McKenzie said, declining to provide further details.
McKenzie said Turkey's incursion into Syria this month, and the U.S.
pullback from the border, was not a factor in deciding the timing of
the raid. Instead, McKenzie pointed to a host of other factors,
including the amount of moonlight.
"We struck because the time is about right to do it then, given the
totality of the intelligence and the other factors that would affect
the raid force going into and coming out," McKenzie said.
(Reporting by Phil Stewart, additional reporting by Daphne
Psaledakis, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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