U.S. wants to bolster fight against Islamic State after its leader’s death

WASHINGTON/MOSCOW,  (Reuters) – The United States wants to bolster a coalition fighting Islamic State in northeastern Syria, a senior State Department official said yesterday, after the leader of the jihadi movement, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, was killed in a weekend operation.

World leaders welcomed his death, but they and security experts warned that the group, which carried out atrocities against religious minorities and horrified most Muslims, remained a security threat in Syria and beyond.

The official said that President Donald Trump, by announcing the withdrawal of U.S. forces from northern Syria on Oct. 6, did not suggest that Washington was abandoning the fight against Islamic State.

“There was never an idea that we would abandon the mission of going after ISIS. … This is a major effort that is continuing,” the official told reporters.

Foreign ministers will meet in Washington on Nov. 14 to discuss the mission.

“The United States is determined to prevent a resurgence of ISIS in Syria and Iraq and continues to work with the Global Coalition to destroy ISIS remnants and thwart its global ambitions,” the U.S. State Department said in a statement.

It said the Washington meeting’s discussions would have a “particular focus on recent developments in northeast Syria and their relationship to stability and security of the region.”

Trump has softened his pullout plans for Syria after a backlash from Congress, including from fellow Republicans, who say he enabled a long-threatened Turkish incursion on Oct. 9 against Kurdish forces in Syria who had been America’s top allies in the battle against Islamic State since 2014.

U.S. special forces carried out the Syrian operation in which Baghdadi killed himself and three of his children by detonating a suicide vest when he was cornered in a tunnel.

Trump said on Monday he may declassify and release part of the video taken on Saturday of the raid. The video is believed to include aerial footage and possibly footage from cameras mounted on the soldiers who stormed Baghdadi’s compound.

Trump said on Sunday that Baghdadi had died “whimpering and crying” in a raid that fulfilled the president’s top national security goal.

The United States has given the remains of Baghdadi a burial at sea and afforded him religious rites according to Islamic custom, three officials told Reuters.