By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Dec. 28, 2017 — The coalition’s efforts against
the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria have been successful, but there is still
much to do to eradicate the group, British army Maj. Gen. Felix Gedney told
Pentagon reporters yesterday.
Gedney is based in Baghdad and is the deputy commander for
strategy and support at Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve.
Gedney spoke via video conference and described progress
made against ISIS this year, and what 2018 looks like.
In Syria, ISIS remains a threat, he said. Syrian Democratic
Forces have isolated the remaining pockets of ISIS militants along the east
bank of the Euphrates River and are methodically clearing areas to the east, in
the Syrian desert along the border with Iraq, he said.
“The SDF, with coalition strike support, repelled ISIS
attacks in the vicinity of Abu Hammam, with more than a dozen enemy killed,”
Gedney said. “In total, coalition forces have conducted 23 strikes against ISIS
targets in eastern Syria during the past week, destroying ISIS vehicles,
weapons, explosives and a command-and-control center.”
ISIS has morphed back to its roots as a terror operation,
Gedney said. They retain the ability to strike targets. They are operating more
against the regime of Bashir al-Assad. “The Syrian regime has failed to
demonstrate its ability to prevent the resurgence of ISIS on their own soil,”
he said.
Providing Security, Stability in Liberated Areas
The defeat-ISIS coalition is working long range to ensure
the group dies, the general said. That requires a commitment to security and
stability in liberated areas. “In Raqqa, for example, the SDF and the Raqqa
internal security forces are conducting an important and dangerous mission:
They're bravely searching for and removing the many improvised explosive
devices and booby traps left behind by ISIS terrorists, so local residents can
return to their homes and get back to their lives,” he said.
And this is happening, Gedney said, noting people are
returning to their neighborhoods as they are cleared. “Such efforts to
establish safety and security help pave the way for civilian-led efforts to
address local needs,” he said.
Residents are rebuilding homes, clearing roads and reopening
shops, Gedney said. They are working to rehabilitate schools and get children
back into classrooms.
“Over 830 metric tons of humanitarian aid have been
delivered to more than 40 locations around the city of Raqqa, and local
councils are facilitating the delivery of aid to civilians,” the general said.
In Iraq, forces are tracking down remnants of the group in
Anbar province and in Baghdad, he said.
ISIS: Adaptive, Patient Enemy
ISIS is an adaptive, patient enemy, the general said. “We
know they may attempt to work in smaller cells, and they … certainly will
continue attempting their acts of terror whenever and wherever possible,”
Gedney said. “However, the ISF's ongoing clearance operations should dispel any
ideas that ISIS can simply vanish into the population they once terrorized and
be forgotten about.”
The coalition will continue to support Iraqi efforts against
the group, Gedney said. “To that end, the coalition will continue to partner
with the ISF, advising, training and equipping them in their efforts to fully
eliminate ISIS as a threat to Iraq,” he said. “We will tailor our support based
on Iraqi requirements, with a particular emphasis on the capabilities needed to
hold and secure the liberated areas.”
Like Syrians liberated from ISIS control, the Iraqi people
also are voting with the feet, Gedney said. They are returning to homes,
villages and cities that ISIS once controlled. “For the first time, we have
seen the number of returnees climb above the number of those still displaced:
Just over 2.8 million people have returned and just under 2.8 million remain
displaced,” the general said.
Yet, in Syria, the coalition is disturbed by ISIS forces
operating in areas controlled by the Assad regime with impunity, Gedney said.
The Russian military is also operating in the area, and that complicates
counter-ISIS operations in the Middle Euphrates River Valley. “The coalition
will continue to deconflict with the Russian forces,” he said.
ISIS operations in that region shows the Assad regime “is
clearly either unwilling or unable” to defeat ISIS within their borders, he
said.
“We'll continue to deconflict with the Russians, but we've
got no intention to operate in areas that are currently held by the regime,”
Gedney said.
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