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US hostage rescuers dropped from night sky, Syria activist says

Update : 23 Aug 2014, 07:44 PM

It was just after midnight on July 4 when at least two dozen US Delta Force commandos arrived on heavily armed Black Hawk helicopters in Akrishi, a small town near the eastern Syrian city of Raqqa on the bank of the Euphrates River.

Before they landed to search for American hostages including journalist James Foley, they destroyed a crucial target: anti-aircraft weapons at a jihadist base about 3 miles (5 km) southeast of the city, a stronghold of Islamic State militants seeking to build a monolithic Islamic state.

The above account and other details of the raid have emerged from witnesses who spoke with a member of a Syrian opposition activist group, who identified himself as Abu Ibrahim al Raqaoui. Raqaoui told the information to Reuters in an interview via Skype from inside Syria.

His group also posted witness accounts of the raid on Facebook soon after it took place. The posts, which were viewed by Reuters, have since been taken down.

“The raid happened just after midnight,” Raqaoui said. “The helicopters first started destroying anti-aircraft weapons.” Reuters could not verify the account.

The White House publicized details of the raid on Wednesday, a day after Islamic State jihadists posted a video showing Foley being beheaded. The White Housesaid the commandos failed to find Foley or other hostages and that it was prompted to make the announcement after several US news organizations learned of the operation.

The US military incursion into the heart of Islamic State territory, made on US Independence Day, ended in disappointment when the soldiers found no prisoners.

‘Burned the camp’

After landing, the commandos blocked the main road to Raqqa and moved toward a makeshift jail believed to hold Foley and other hostages, Raqaoui said. Discovering Foley wasn’t there, they attacked the base, which the militants had named “Bin Laden,” after the former al-Qaeda leader, Osama bin Laden, Raqaoui said. They lit it on fire, he said.

“According to villagers, they burned the camp and killed all the ISIS fighters,” he said, using one of the acronyms that refer to the Islamic State.

US officials said “many” Islamic State fighters were killed and one American soldier was wounded when a helicopter came under fire. Raqaoui’s account puts the number of wounded US soldiers at two.

The mission was authorized by President Barack Obama and based on US intelligence, including information from hostages who have been released, the administration said. US officials would not confirm that it was on July 4.

It was first direct ground engagement between the United States and Islamic State militants, and the first known US ground operation in Syria since the start of its civil war in 2011.

The raid’s failure to bring hostages home underscores the limits of US intelligence about Syria’s chaotic conflict.

“We believed we had a good case for where they might be,” said one US official who declined to be identified. 

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