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Friday, 11 December 2015

ISIS finance chief killed in Iraq air strike

A coalition air strike killed an ISIS finance chief in Iraq last month, the US military said on Thursday, hailing it as another scalp in its bid to blow apart the extremists' financial network.

Abu Saleh was killed in late November, US military spokesperson Colonel Steve Warren said in a videoconference from Baghdad, calling him "one of the most senior and experienced members" of the group's nefarious financial system. 

"Abu Saleh was the third member of the finance network that we have killed" recently, Warren added, likening him to a finance minister for the extremist group, which grabbed swathes of Iraq and Syria in a brutal offensive of beheadings and forced religious conversions.

Abu Saleh was killed along with two associates as part of the US-led coalition's campaign to destroy the extremists' financial infrastructure, Brett McGurk, Washington's envoy for the anti-IS fight, said on Twitter.


Real name Muwaffaq Mustafa Muhammad al-Karmush, the US State Department's terrorist blacklist describes him as a 42-year-old Iraqi. "Killing him and his predecessors exhausts the knowledge and talent needed to coordinate funding within the organisation," Warren said, adding that two other henchmen in IS fundraising networks also were killed in coalition air strikes in Iraq in late November.

They were identified as Abu Mariam, an enforcer and senior leader in ISIS group extortion networks, and Abu Waqman al-Tunis, who Warren said coordinated ISIS's transfer of people, weapons and information.
Abu Mariam appears on the State Department terrorist list as Mounir Ben Dhaou Ben Brahim Ben Helal, a 32-year-old Tunisian.

"These strikes are an example of how we are able to decimate networks," Warren said. The coalition has been targeting ISIS leaders in Syria and Iraq with air strikes to try to pick apart its command structure.

After the attacks in Paris last month, the United States said it was deploying a special operations unit in Iraq that will be able to mount raids into Syria to capture or kill IS leaders. "We want this expeditionary targeting force to make ISIS and its leaders wonder when they go to bed at night: who's going to be coming in the window," US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told a Senate hearing.

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