Daesh group gunmen kill several Iraqi police officers

Security personnel inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Kirkuk, 250km north of Baghdad, on Thursday. (Reuters)
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Updated 19 December 2022
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Daesh group gunmen kill several Iraqi police officers

  • Attack near Kirkuk in the country’s north, where remnants of Daesh group militants are active

KIRKUK, Iraq: Daesh said Sunday they had carried out an attack in northern Iraq killing nine police officers, setting off a roadside bomb before machine-gunning survivors.
The attack in the Kirkuk area — which police said left nine federal officers dead — is one of the deadliest in Iraq in recent months.
Daesh fighters attacked “a police patrol... detonated an explosive device then attacked them with machine guns and hand grenades,” the group said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.
A federal police officer, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said the bomb blast hit a vehicle transporting members of Iraq’s federal police near the village of Shalal Al-Matar.
It was then followed by “a direct attack with small arms,” the officer added.
“An assailant has been killed, and we are looking for the others,” the officer said.
Daesh seized large swathes of Iraqi and Syrian territory in 2014, declaring a “caliphate” where they ruled with brutality before their defeat in late 2017 by Iraqi forces backed by a US-led military coalition.
Daesh lost its last Syrian bastion, near the Iraqi border, in 2019.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani condemned the violence as a “cowardly terrorist attack.”
Security forces should show “vigilance, carefully inspect the roads and not provide any opportunity for terrorist elements,” he said.
The US-led anti-Daesh coalition continued a combat role in Iraq until December last year, but roughly 2,500 American soldiers remain in the country to assist in the fight against the jihadists.
Daesh cells, however, remain active in several areas of Iraq.
On Wednesday, three Iraqi soldiers were killed and three others wounded when a bomb exploded as their patrol vehicle passed through farmland in Tarmiya, a rural municipality about 30 kilometers (20 miles) north of the capital Baghdad that is a known hotspot for Daesh sleeper cells.
Last month a machine gun attack on a remote northern Iraqi military post killed four soldiers near Kirkuk, a military source said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
Iraqi security forces continue to carry out counter-terrorism operations against the group, and the deaths of Daesh fighters in airstrikes and raids are regularly announced.
Despite the setbacks, which has left IS a shadow of its former self, the group has “maintained its ability to launch attacks at a steady pace,” a January report by the United Nations read.
The UN estimates the jihadist organization maintains between 6,000 and 10,000 fighters inside Iraq and Syria, exploiting the porous border between the two countries and concentrating mainly in rural areas.


Syrian government foils Daesh plot to attack churches and New Year celebrations

Updated 02 January 2026
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Syrian government foils Daesh plot to attack churches and New Year celebrations

  • Bomber kills soldier in Aleppo, detonates explosives injuring 2 others

ALEPPO, DAMASCUS: The Syrian Interior Ministry announced on Thursday that it had thwarted a Daesh plot to carry out suicide attacks targeting New Year celebrations and churches, particularly in Aleppo.
The ministry said in a statement that, as part of ongoing counterterrorism efforts and careful monitoring of Daesh cells in cooperation with partner agencies, it had received intelligence indicating plans for suicide attacks targeting New Year celebrations in several provinces, particularly Aleppo, with a focus on churches and civilian gathering areas.
The ministry added that it took preemptive measures, including reinforcing security around churches, deploying mobile and fixed patrols, and setting up checkpoints across the city.
During operations at a checkpoint in Aleppo’s Bab Al-Faraj district, security forces intercepted a suspected Daesh member who opened fire. One internal security soldier was killed, and the attacker detonated explosives, injuring two others.
Daesh recently increased its attacks in Syria, and was blamed for an attack last month in Palmyra that killed three Americans.
On Dec. 13, two US soldiers and an American civilian were killed in an attack Washington blamed on a lone Daesh gunman in Palmyra.
In retaliation, American forces struck scores of Daesh targets in Syria.
Syrian authorities have also carried out several operations against Daesh since then, saying on Dec. 25 they had killed a senior leader of the group.