
ISIS is facing a major defeat as opposition forces backed by the United States are surrounding their capital city.
U.S. coalition forces are increasing the pressure in their battle against ISIS in Syria.
"Our strategy right now is to accelerate the campaign against ISIS,"
Defense Secretary James Mattis recently told CBS' "Face the Nation."
Mattis says his order from the president of the United States is to eliminate the Islamic terror group once and for all.
"We have already shifted from attrition tactics where we shove them from
one position to another in Iraq and Syria to annihilation tactics where
we surround them," the secretary said.
So now a major battle is underway as Kurdish and Arab fighters backed by
the United States are carrying out an offensive against Raqqa, Syria,
which had served as the so-called caliphate or capital of the Islamic
State.
For several months, U.S.-backed coalition forces have been encircling
the symbolic and strategic city, which ISIS seized in 2014 and has used
as a base to plan attacks abroad.
Up to 4,000 jihadists are reportedly defending Raqqa, and the coalition
forces are wearing them down. Mattis says once the group is completely
surrounded, they'll go in and clean them out.
"Our intention is that the foreign fighters do not survive the fight
to return home to north Africa, to Europe, to America, to Asia, to
Africa, we are not going to allow them to do so. We are going to stop
them there and take apart the caliphate," said Mattis.
Faced with defeat in Raqqa, ISIS is moving its forces elsewhere in the region.
But as ISIS faces major setbacks in Syria and Iraq, the group is telling its followers not to give up.
In one of its recent magazines, the group tells readers to "worship your
lord until death comes to you" and reminds fighters that "hardships
cause a hidden strength."
It goes on to say that Islam needs men who are "inclined to work hard,
find comfort in pain and toil, strong resolutions and those who refuse
to be entangled by weariness… so roll up your sleeve."
In an audiotape released this week, an ISIS spokesman called on
supporters to launch attacks in the US and Europe during Islam's holy
month of Ramadan which began two weeks ago.
Since then, there have been 95 terror attacks by radical Muslims that
have killed roughly 1,100 people, including victims in Britain, Egypt,
Iran and the Philippines.
Source:
George Thomas, CBN News