ISIS fighters who fled to the terror group’s Iraqi stronghold of
Mosul after being defeated in Ramadi were burned alive in the town
square.
Sources told FoxNews.com, in an unmistakable message to
fighters who may soon be defending the northern city from government
forces.
Several residents of Mosul recounted the grisly story for
stateside relatives, describing the deadly reception black clad
jihadists got when they made it to Mosul, some 250 miles north of the
city retaken by Iraqi forces operating with cover from US air power.
“They
were grouped together and made to stand in a circle,” a former resident
of northern Iraq now living in the US but in touch with family back
home told FoxNews.com. “And set on fire to die.”
Several Iraqi-Americans and recent refugees with close relatives in
Mosul told of ISIS fighters fresh off defeat in Ramadi being shunned –
and executed – for not fighting to the death in Ramadi.
Michael
Pregent, a terrorism expert and former intelligence adviser to Gen.
David Petraeus in Iraq, said such an act isn’t new for the callous
terror group. A similar fate was meted out to fighters who lost Saddam’s
hometown to Kurdish forces last year.
“There is no surprise on executing ISIS fighters from Ramadi,” he said. “They did the same to fighters after Tikrit.”
The retaking of Ramadi, the capital of the mainly Sunni-populated
Anbar Province which ISIS took over last May, was a major setback for
ISIS. Just 80 miles west of Baghdad, the city was overrun by ISIS in
June, 2014. Iraqi forces, fighting with Sunni tribes and supported by
coalition forces, recently took it back but the city remains in ruins.
Booby-traps, landmines and a broken infrastructure have rendered it
mostly uninhabitable for the time being.
With government, Kurdish
and coalition forces now mustering to recapture Mosul, which fell to
ISIS approximately 18 months ago, an increasingly paranoid ISIS has
stepped up its murders of women and children, according to people
trapped in the city.
“They come to the house and take the
children and accuse them of being spies,” said a stateside Iraqi with
knowledge of the situation. “If the mom cries and gets upset at them,
they accuse of her being a spy too and take her to the jail and later
kill her.”
The terrorist group is feeling the heat of a coming onslaught, said Pregent.
“ISIS
is fracturing, paranoid from within,” Pregent continued, noting that
ISIS has two intelligence directorates – one for internal threats the
other for external ones – and both are focused on unearthing “threats”
to their existence within areas under their thumb.
“They are using women
and children executions to intimidate – the harsher the tactic the more
desperate the leadership is.”
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