SEAL Team 6 commandos that killed Bilal al-Sudani practiced raid in similar ... trends now

SEAL Team 6 commandos that killed Bilal al-Sudani practiced raid in similar ... trends now
SEAL Team 6 commandos that killed Bilal al-Sudani practiced raid in similar ... trends now

SEAL Team 6 commandos that killed Bilal al-Sudani practiced raid in similar ... trends now

The two dozen members of SEAL Team 6 that killed ISIS leader Bilal al-Sudani last month practiced their raid in a similar manner to the commandos who conducted the successful raid on Osama bin Laden's compound in 2011. 

The details of operation raid that killed al-Sudani, responsible for the Kabul airport bombing in 2021 that claimed the lives of 13 US troops, were first revealed in a report from The New York Times. The raid was approved by President Joe Biden

According to the report, the SEAL Team 6 members rehearsed the raid extensively before heading aboard Army MH-47 Chinook helicopters, which are operated by a team known as the Night Stalkers, to a non-descript US Navy ship that was resting off of the coast of northern Somalia. 

From there, the team landed 'some distance' from al-Sudani's cavernous layer in an area known as Puntland so as not to set of warnings. The group then engaged with the ISIS fighters in the region, killing ten, not including al-Sudani. The firefight lasted for an hour. 

The al-Qaeda off-shoot al-Shabab has a much larger footprint in Somalia than ISIS. There are thought to be less than 300 members of the Islamic State in the troubled east African country

The al-Qaeda off-shoot al-Shabab has a much larger footprint in Somalia than ISIS. There are thought to be less than 300 members of the Islamic State in the troubled east African country 

Following the raid, the commandos recovered a 'trove of material' that included laptops and cell phones that could be linked to future ISIS operations. 

The al-Qaeda off-shoot al-Shabab has a much larger footprint in Somalia than ISIS. There are thought to be less than 300 members of the Islamic State in the troubled east African country. 

No civilians were injured or killed in the operation, Pentagon officials said. One American involved in the operation was bitten by a military dog, but was not seriously hurt. 

The Times report details that it was only when US intelligence figures learned of al-Sudani's role in the Kabul bombing as well as his activities in fund-raising for ISIS in Europe, Asia and Africa, that he became top of the catch-or-kill list. 

In reference to the Kabul airport bombing, a US official

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