• Breaking News

    Sunday, October 30, 2016

    ISIS days are numbered in Mosul city as Iraqi, Turkish and Kurdisd troops hit hard on their stronghold which has led Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi to beg his fighters not to dish out

    Image result for ISIS leader calls for its masked fighters to protect mosul
    Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (ISIS Leader)
    With tension over the offensive attack pulled on ISIS over the last weeks by the Turkish, Kurdish and Iraqi forces, desperate Islamic State leaders have called on its masked fighters to protect Mosul as they are about to be wiped out of the city of Mosul, a town that is highly dominated by the Islamic terrorists.
    ISIS mask fighters
    Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the Islamic leader has ordered the highly-skilled "al-Sham battalion" to head to Mosul from the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa in Syria in order to boost the moral of its fighters in Mosul.

    The terrorist group al-Sham (ISIS masked fighters), one of them was speaking in thick Arabic voice wearing a scaring mask
    Image result for ISIS leader calls for its masked fighters to protect mosul
    Iraqi, Turkish and Kurdish troops
    There have been serious fighting going on between the Islamic terrorist groups and the Iraqi, Turkish and Kurdish troops  for the last few weeks.

    The ISIS leader (Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi) has so much made himself popular with his horrible killings of people not only in Iraq but all over the whole world.
    Image result for ISIS city of mosul being attacked by troops
    The City of Mosul in shambles
    Now it has emerged beleaguered Daesh battle chiefs have called on reinforcements from Syria as US-backed forces close in on the city.

    The battle for the city has hit the jihadis hard, with ground troops reporting an estimated 900 fighters killed.

    It is thought a female fighter charged with recruiting women jihadis has fled the city, draining ISIS' accounts in the process.

    Abu Mu’taz Qahtani is believed to have gone on the run with millions of pounds.

    But crushing the Islamic extremists across the Middle East could make the situation in the region even more volatile, according to a senior analyst.

    Emile Hokayem, a Middle East analyst at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, warned the destruction of Daesh could lead to the resurfacing of “past fault lines”.

    This could end up leading to deadly religious rifts between Sunni and Shia Muslims.

    And a counter-terrorism expert told Express.co.uk ISIS could move to carrying out more frequent terror attacks in the UK and Europe once it is pushed out of Iraq and Syria.

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