The Islamic State
terror group has said a British suicide bomber killed more than two
dozen Iraqi army troops in an attack on Monday, a claim swiftly rejected
by the Iraqi military.
The man, whose nom de guerre was Abu Musa al-Britani, rammed his
vehicle into a gathering of Iraqi army troops and vehicles near al-Asad
air base in the province of Anbar, killing 30 soldiers, the group
claimed on social media. The Britani suffix is used regularly for
militants from the UK.
But the Iraqi military denied the report, saying the attacker had been the only victim of the explosion.
Al-Asad is also used by American marine forces stationed in Iraq. Abu Musa’s real name remains unknown, but an image circulated on social medial
appearing to show him before the operation, clad in Isis’s signature
black garb, smiling and holding a rifle. The Guardian was not able to
verify the image.
Iraqi forces are battling Isis troops entrenched throughout Anbar,
after liberating the province’s capital Ramadi during the winter in a
major setback for the militant group.
Isis controls large swathes of territory in northern Iraq, including
the city of Mosul, after surging into the country in the summer of 2014
and conquering the plains of Nineveh, as well as much of Anbar. In Syria, the group controls much of the country’s eastern regions including its capital of Raqqa and most of Deir Ezzor.
A study carried out last year by
the Guardian and King’s College London found that 50 Britons had died
fighting for militant groups in Iraq and Syria in the previous three
years. The total is since thought to have risen.
Shiraz Maher of King’s College London’s International Centre for the
Study of Radicalisation (ICSR) said on Twitter that Monday’s attack
would take the total number of British fighters known to have been
killed in Syria and Iraq to 62, “of which 10 have been suicide bombers”.
The Soufan Group, a respected security consultancy and thinktank,
estimated in late 2015 that between 27,000 and 31,000 foreign fighters
had traveled to Syria and Iraq to fight alongside militant groups,
including 760 from the UK alone – nearly double the 2014 estimate of 400
fighters.
Isis has prominently featured British foreign fighters in its
propaganda, including Mohammed Emwazi, who appeared in brutal execution
videos that documented the killing of several western journalists and
aid workers.
He was latter killed in a drone strike Last September, prime minister David Cameron said the UK had carried out drone strikes that killed two other Britons fighting for Islamic State.

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