Iraqi forces have killed nine Islamic State group commanders, including the militants’ top figure in the country, Baghdad announced Tuesday, with the Pentagon saying two U.S. troops were injured during the raid.
Iraq’s Joint Operations Command said in a statement that counterterrorism forces “killed nine terrorists, among them the so-called governor of Iraq” for IS, naming him as Jassim al-Mazroui Abu Abdel Qader.
The statement said the raid in the northern Hamrin Mountains was carried out “with technical support” and intelligence provided by the U.S.-led anti-jihadi coalition and said that “large quantities of weapons” were seized in the operation which was “still ongoing.”
Pentagon spokesman Major General Pat Ryder said that U.S. Central Command and Iraqi forces “conducted a partner raid in Iraq targeting several senior ISIS leaders” overnight.
“The raid resulted in the death of multiple ISIS operatives,” he told journalists, using an acronym for the Islamic State group.
“We do have reports of two U.S. service members that were injured,” Ryder said, adding that “both of them are in stable condition being treated for their injuries.”
The IS group overran large swaths of Iraq and neighboring Syria in 2014, proclaiming its “caliphate.”
It was defeated in Iraq in 2017 by local forces backed by the international military coalition, and in 2019 lost the last territory it held in Syria to U.S.-backed Kurdish forces.
But remnants of the group remain active in Iraq and continue to launch sporadic attacks.
A statement from the office of Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani announced “the killing of the so-called governor of Iraq and eight senior leaders of the terrorist Daesh organization,” using the Arabic acronym for IS.
Sudani said the operation targeted IS hideouts in the Hamrin Mountains, vowing to “pursue … and eliminate” jihadists wherever they may be in Iraq.
Iraqi security forces, supported by the U.S.-led coalition, have carried out numerous raids on suspected IS hideouts.
The U.S. military announced on Friday that “precision airstrikes” conducted by Iraqi forces earlier this month had killed a senior IS leader and three other militants.
At the end of August, a joint operation by U.S. and Iraqi forces killed 15 IS group fighters in Iraq’s western desert.
A report by United Nations experts published in July estimated there were around 1,500 to 3,000 militants remaining in Iraq and Syria.
The United States has about 2,500 troops in Iraq and 900 in Syria as part of the coalition, which Washington and Baghdad announced last month will end its decade-long military mission in Iraq within a year.