Recovered ISIS files show terror plots against Europe: UK Army

The deputy commander of US-led operations against the militants said the files had been retrieved from the former ISIS-stronghold of Manbij in July.
Members of the IS group. (File photo| AP)
Members of the IS group. (File photo| AP)

LONDON: A top UK general who was part of the US-led coalition fighting Islamic State terrorists in the Middle East today said that a large amount of intelligence had been obtained on the dreaded terror group's plans to target Europe.

Major-General Rupert Jones, the deputy commander of the US-led operations against the militants, said the files had been retrieved in July by Western-backed Kurdish and Arab militias from the former Islamic State (ISIS) stronghold of Manbij, in the Aleppo governorate of northern Syria.

Jones told some British newspapers that an even bigger haul of data about ISIS was expected to be uncovered in the terrorists' stronghold of Mosul, in northern Iraq, which he predicted would fall by the early half of next year.

"Manbij was hugely important for external operations. A huge amount of intelligence gathered in Manbij related to threats in Europe and elsewhere," he said.

"I am absolutely certain that an extraordinary amount of intelligence will come out of Mosul. We have ramped up as a coalition our ability to gather and process all that intelligence, because it will be a labyrinth of intelligence and we need to get that into the hands of intelligence agencies," he said.

While specific plots against Britain had not yet emerged, he said he was in no doubt that ISIS, also known by its Arabic acronym Daesh, remained a threat.

"If we want to keep Britain safe, if we want to keep Europe safe, then we need to come and deal with Daesh," Jones said.

Heavy fighting continues in Mosul where Iraqi security forces began an assault to drive out ISIS nearly six weeks ago. The upcoming struggle for Raqqa will be worse, Jones predicted.

"What we are now in the process of doing is starting the isolation of Raqqa. For as long as Raqqa is sitting there, they can orchestrate external operations. So the sooner it is liberated or the sooner Daesh are liberated from there, the better," he said.

Jones stressed that an "extraordinary amount of progress" had been made by Western-backed Iraqi and Syrian forces.

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