BAGHDAD: Senior Iraqi military commanders hosted their Russian, Iranian and Syrian counterparts in Baghdad on Saturday to discuss security cooperation and information-sharing in the Middle East, where Daesh continues to carry out attacks.
The Iraqi defense ministry said it had received delegations led by their respective deputy chiefs of staff, to “strengthen cooperation and coordination in terms of security and intelligence between these countries.”
Russia is fighting rebels and militants in Syria alongside President Bashar Assad’s forces, while Iran is a key ally of both Baghdad and Damascus.
The four countries had created joint operations rooms to coordinate the fight against Daesh, now driven out of all urban centers in Iraq and largely confined to desert holdouts in Syria.
In a rare address last month, the militant group’s leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi urged his followers to continue their fight.
According to terrorism expert Hisham Al-Hashemi, there are still 2,000 Daesh fighters — nearly all of them Iraqi — active in four regions of Iraq.
Their aim is “to take revenge on those that ousted them,” he said.
Despite major setbacks in Iraq and Syria, in July Daesh managed to carry out a string of coordinated attacks in southern Syria that killed more than 250 people.