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Raids on ISIS camp in Syria yield hundreds of arrests

September 7, 2022 at 8:01 p.m. EDT
A member of the Syrian Kurdish Asayish security forces stands guard during an inspection of tents at the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp, which holds relatives of suspected Islamic State fighters. (Delil Souleiman/AFP/Getty Images)
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Syrian forces allied with the United States have rounded up hundreds of suspected Islamic State operatives this year in raids on a refugee camp that has been a hotbed of violence perpetrated by terrorist sympathizers, operations coordinated and facilitated by the U.S. military.

U.S. Central Command announced Wednesday that, over the last two weeks alone, Syrian Defense Forces (SDF) had apprehended “dozens” of suspects at the al-Hol camp in northeast Syria and dissolved a “major ISIS facilitation network.” The operation is ongoing, according to a U.S. defense official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to detail an unfolding situation.

The raid, characterized as a “full clearing operation,” is the largest carried out at the al-Hol camp since May 2021, the official said. It marked the seventh time this year that SDF units, enabled by their American allies, have raided the sprawling desert complex that houses about 55,000 people — many of them deemed ISIS sympathizers who traveled to Syria and Iraq at the height of the group’s power. Each raid has resulted in the detention of between 40 and 120 suspected ISIS operatives.

Col. Joe Buccino, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command, said in a statement that, as part of the ongoing operation, Syrian forces on Monday rescued four women located in tunnels where they had been chained and tortured.

Contrary to smaller-scale military raids designed to capture or kill targets in the span of a few hours, full clearing operations typically comprise multiple targets and involve lengthy searches of structures, pat-downs, biometric collection and intense questioning. As in this case, they can take weeks.

For this and other efforts undertaken at al-Hol, the U.S. military personnel identified the targets based on intelligence gathered from tipsters, the defense official said. U.S. forces spearheaded much of the planning, coordinating the Syrian Defense Forces with the police and security guard units stationed inside the camp.

It’s unclear how many of the detainees rounded up in recent weeks are children, who account for more than half of the camp’s population. The vast majority of residents at al-Hol — Syria’s largest refugee camp — are women and children considered to be members of ISIS or their relatives.

“This operation will make the camp safer for those residents who remain or wish to return to their countries of origin but are unable to do so,” said Buccino, stressing that officials’ goal is for those at al-Hol to be rehabilitated and repatriated to their home countries.

The process of moving individuals out of al-Hol has lagged. Its residents come from more than 50 countries, not all of which have been eager to bring back identified ISIS operatives and sympathizers, or even their children.

Most Western nations have only recently begun to bring back refugees by the dozens, while Iraq has repatriated nearly 2,500, according to a recent U.S. State Department count.

Almost half of the camp’s residents hail from Iraq, and more than a third come from within Syria — both of which still struggle with challenges stemming from terrorism and instability. As such, there are limitations to how swiftly relocations can occur.

“The SDF will continue its efforts to eliminate the ISIS threat,” Buccino said, “but it remains critical that the international community support this effort through repatriation.”

Alex Horton contributed to this report.