More than 200 hours of flying by Iraqi, American and British fighters as well as unmanned surveillance aircraft over the past month have been part of a plan to track down the leader of the terrorist organization, Ibrahim Awad al-Badri, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
While a tribal leader confirmed that three parties are looking for al-Baghdadi today and the issue of killing or killing him, in case he was actually within the subject of time no more.
According to a senior Iraqi general in the Ministry of Defense, who preferred anonymity, Iraqi, American and British combat and surveillance and surveillance carried out more than 200 hours of flying in northern and western Iraq last month to track the traces of the leader of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi Nearby.
"Last week, three sites were bombed on the basis of reports sent by surveillance aircraft in the Anbar desert. These sites are likely to contain important leaders from Da'ash, where terrorists have actually been killed, but not al-Baghdadi or one of his senior aides," he said.
He added that "the operations are continuing along with the program of tapping suspicious calls, and tracking and analysis of intelligence teams that travel in different formats and images in the areas of Badu and attended Anbar and Nineveh to obtain any information about Baghdadi or his aides."
The same source said reports that he had fled to areas in the Maghreb or Turkey were unreliable at the present time and could be "misleading".
In the same context, said the leader of the tribes of a prominent anti-organization in the town of Qaim near the border with Syria, "the seekers of the head of al-Baghdadi in Iraq have become many and the most important year of Iraq," as he described.
According to Sheikh Mohammed Mtaab al-Anzi, "three parties are looking for al-Baghdadi today, the US military and the Western alliance with him and Baghdad and the third year of Iraq, and this means that a supporter lost his incubator completely."
"All of us are looking for him today with reward or without reward. This man has caused plundering and plundering in Iraqi Sunni cities and provided great services to Iran that no one else can provide. The first is the annihilation of Iraqi cities that have been disobedient to Iranian influence over the past period, The Syrian regime Bashar al-Assad in his chair after it was about to disappear and succeed the revolution, "according to his saying.
He considered that the issue of his death or detention in the event that he was present in Iraq has already become the subject of no more time.
The Iraqi military reports estimate the number of elements of the current "Daqash" in Iraq about a thousand scattered elements in the form of sleeper cells within cities and others scattered in the Western Sahara and the island and the desert between Nineveh and Anbar and in areas of the mountains of Hamrin in northern Iraq.
Baghdad was able after a fierce fighting for more than 3 years and with wide Western support to break the organization of "Daash", which swept through large areas of the north and west of the country in mid-2014 from Syria, and exploited the popular movement in the provinces of the north and west to protest against the policy of former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, Characterized by sectarianism and repression and arbitrary arrests and exclusion of the sons of the Sunni component in the country.
The occupation of Iraqi cities has resulted in the death and injury of at least a quarter of a million Iraqis, more than 60 percent of them children and women. More than 100,000 soldiers, soldiers, security personnel, members of the Popular Gathering, Peshmerga and clan fighters were killed and wounded during the fighting.
Iraq also suffered huge financial losses estimated at 100 billion dollars, as well as huge destruction in more than 180 administrative units between the province and the district and the province and the town of Anbar, Nineveh, Diyala, Kirkuk, Babil, Wasit and Salahuddin, as well as the belt of the capital Baghdad, apart from the displacement of six and a half million Iraqis From their homes.