By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Oct. 19, 2017 — The Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria is on the run around the globe, chief Pentagon spokesperson Dana W. White
said today at news briefing.
White, speaking to the Pentagon press corps with Marine
Corps Lt. Gen. Frank McKenzie, the director of the Joint Staff, said that the
so-called caliphate in the Middle East is on its last legs and that indigenous
troops aided by coalition capabilities are taking the battle to the terror
group worldwide.
Raqqa, the so-called capital of the caliphate, is almost
totally cleared of the terror group, she said. The Syrian Democratic Forces
have taken the battle to ISIS and just a few last remaining holdouts must be
cleared out. News reports from the battle say that ISIS fighters -- once the
scourge of the region -- are surrendering to SDF personnel.
In Iraq, life is returning to normal in Mosul -- captured by
ISIS in 2014 and cleared by Iraqi forces earlier this year. Iraqi forces have
also liberated Hawija and are taking the battle to the remaining ISIS fighters
in the Euphrates River Valley.
Worldwide Ambitions
But ISIS has worldwide ambitions, and success in one region
-- such as the Middle East -- means ISIS adherents scurry to other areas of the
globe. “In the Philippines, the purported ISIS emir of Southeast Asia and the
Philippines was killed along with several other militants in a firefight with
the Armed Forces of the Philippines,” White said.
She congratulated the Philippine forces for their success
and vowed the United States and the coalition to defeat ISIS will continue to
provide aid to Philippine forces as they battle the terrorists on the island of
Mindanao. “We will continue to cooperate with our Philippine partners providing
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities, as well as advice
and training.”
Earlier this week, a U.S. strike in Yemen against ISIS
decimated many of its senior leaders, she said.
“These events show that our fight against ISIS is global and
that other groups that align with them or adopt their brand will face the same
bad end,” she said. “ISIS is on the run; it is losing credibility, resources
and influence everywhere.”
The struggle against global terrorism does not end with
ISIS, White said. American forces continue to fight against al-Qaida in
Afghanistan, the Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan and al-Shabab in Somalia.
It also continues in West Africa. In Niger, four American
soldiers were killed and two wounded while accompanying a Nigerien patrol.
“These service members were providing advice and assistance to Nigerian
security forces’ counterterrorism operations when they came under fire from
hostile fighters,” she said.
DoD is investigating the incident, defense officials said.
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