The U.S.-led airstrikes in Syria earlier this week were just the
beginning. There will be more to come, President Barack Obama vowed.
His
words were borne out overnight Tuesday into Wednesday, when airstrikes
were carried out against five more targets, four in Iraq and one in
Syria, a U.S. official told CNN.
In Syria, there was one strike by
a U.S. aircraft and another by a coalition plane on an ISIS staging
area near the Iraqi border but inside Syria, northwest of Al Qa'im,
damaging eight ISIS vehicles.
In Iraq, two airstrikes west of
Baghdad destroyed two ISIS armed vehicles and a weapons cache. Two
airstrikes southeast of the city of Irbil destroyed an ISIS fighting
position.
They come on the heels of major airstrikes in Syria early Tuesday.
Later Wednesday, Obama probably will have to make a case for them.
He
will face the United Nations General Assembly to defend his decision to
bomb terror groups in Syria without approval from the U.N. Security
Council or Congress.
But he will also address the need to tackle
the forces that give rise to the radical group ISIS — extremist
ideology, sectarian conflicts and the need for more alternatives to
terror, a senior administration official said.
In his speech, Obama will also call on more nations to join the coalition fighting terror groups, the official said.
And
as the President takes the world stage, law enforcement agencies are
looking out for possible lone-wolf attack plots in retaliation to the
bombings.
Why not strike the regime?
While some Syrians
celebrated the U.S. airstrikes on radical militants, others expressed
frustration that President Bashar al-Assad's regime, which world leaders
blame for thousands of civilian deaths, goes unscathed.
“I am just wondering why the U.S. didn't bomb the regime's brigades,” Aleppo resident Foaad Hallak said.
“If
the international community is willing to show their good intentions to
Syrians, they have to bomb the regime and its militias and also ISIS,
and also they have to supply FSA (the rebel Free Syrian Army) with
anti-aircraft missiles.”
Muhammad al-Dleby said he was frustrated
that after three years and more than 100,000 deaths in Syria, the
international community only stepped in because radical militants were
“a threat to its interests.”
“Assad is the biggest terrorist in Syria, and he did crimes that even … extremists didn't do,” he said.
Tuesday's airstrikes
The
airstrikes early Tuesday came in three waves, with coalition partners
participating in the latter two, Army Lt. Gen. William Mayville Jr. said
Tuesday.
The first wave mostly targeted the Khorasan Group, whom Obama described as “seasoned al Qaeda operatives in Syria.”
U.S.
officials said the group was plotting attacks against the United States
and other Western targets. The plots against the United States were
discovered by the intelligence community in the past week, an
intelligence source told CNN.
The source did not say what the
Khorasan Group's target may have been, but said the plot may have
involved a bomb made of a nonmetallic device like a toothpaste container
or clothes dipped in explosive material.
The second wave of airstrikes Tuesday involved planes striking ISIS targets in northern Syria.
The third wave involved planes targeting ISIS training camps and combat vehicles in eastern Syria, Mayville said.
Bahrain,
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Jordan took part in
airstrikes on the ISIS targets, the U.S. military said, while Qatar
played a supporting role.
In all, 200 pieces of ordnance were dropped by coalition members, a U.S. official told CNN.
The toll
It's too early to say what effect the U.S. strikes had against the Khorasan Group, Mayville said.
The
attacks on ISIS, however, destroyed targets including training
compounds, command-and-control facilities, a finance center and supply
trucks, the U.S. Central Command said.
The airstrikes apparently
took a toll on another terror group, killing the leader of the al
Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front, according to a statement from the group.
Al-Nusra
Front identified the leader as Abu Yousef al-Turki, also known as “The
Turk.” It posted a statement on Twitter, accompanied by a so-called
proof-of-death — a photograph — of al-Turki.
But the United States has not identified al-Nusra as a group targeted in the strikes.
Possible retaliation
Now,
concern over possible backlash by the terror groups has prompted the
Department of Homeland Security to warn law enforcement agencies of
potential lone-wolf terror attacks in the United States, a U.S. law
enforcement official with knowledge of the warning told CNN.
The
bulletin calls for vigilance as well as scrutinizing social media for
anyone encouraging violence in response to the strikes. It points to the
use of social media as a tactic by ISIS to spread its message and call
for violence.
It also advises agencies to look for changes in appearance or behavior in those they're tracking, the official said.
Fears on the ground
Al-Halabi, one of the activists from Aleppo, said residents have two fears about upcoming strikes in Syria.
“The
first is that they are afraid of having civilian casualties because
ISIS' members and fighters are among civilians,” al-Halabi said.
“And
the second concern is that what will happen after that? Who will
replace ISIS, especially that the regime is ready to take control of
ISIS' areas
Wednesday, 24 September 2014
Obama To Defend Airstrikes At U.N. As Syrians Speak Out About ISIS Hits
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
-
For ...
-
Late Sadela Nigeria’s oldest clergyman, Samuel Sadela, died recently at the age of 113 years, after preaching the gospel for 81 years...
-
K9 releases official video to ‘Care About Us’ which he features ‘Sound Sultan; On it. Watch & Download K9 Ft. Sound Sultan – Care Abou...
-
Aisha Buhari was in the shadows ...
-
Below is what the new president said; I am immensely grateful to God Who Has preserved us to witness this day and this occasion. To...
-
A 25-year-old pregnant woman was stoned to death by her family outside one of Pakistan’s top courts on Tuesday in a so-called “honor” k...
-
Former president Jonathan and wife pictured on their way out of Abuja back to their home in Otuoke, Bayelsa state after the inaugur...
-
Ekiti State Governor, Mr. Ayodel...
-
New First lady Mrs Buhari with her daughters and step daughters. Beautiful ladies...
-
During his inaugural speech, President Muhammadu Buhari said Nigerians will not regret giving his administration their mandate. He a...
0 comments:
Post a Comment