WASHINGTON, July 12 (Reuters) - The leader of Islamic State in Syria, one of the top five leaders of the militant group, has been killed in a US air strike, the US military said on Tuesday (Jul 12).
In a statement, US Central Command said Maher al-Agal had been killed in a drone strike in northwestern Syria and a close associate of his was seriously injured.
"Extensive planning went into this operation to ensure its successful execution. An initial review indicates there were no civilian casualties," the statement added.
It said al-Agal was responsible for developing Islamic State networks outside of Iraq and Syria.
Reuters had earlier reported on the killing, citing US officials.
It would be another blow to the insurgent group's efforts to reorganise as a guerrilla force after losing large swathes of territory.
The United States has roughly 900 troops in Syria, mostly in the east of the country splintered by a decade of civil war, although President Joe Biden's administration has yet to detail its long-term plan for the eight-year-old mission.
The Syrian Civil Defence, a humanitarian organisation operating in opposition-held areas, said an unidentified drone targeted a motorcycle in the village of Khaltan in the northern countryside of the Aleppo region, killing two people.
In February, the top leader of Islamic State blew himself up during a US military raid in Syria.
At the peak of its power from 2014 to 2017, Islamic State ruled over millions of people and claimed responsibility for or inspired attacks in dozens of cities around the world.
Its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, declared a caliphate over a quarter of Iraq and Syria in 2014, before he was killed in a raid by US special forces in northwestern Syria in 2019 as the group collapsed.
The US-led coalition fighting Islamic State said in mid-2019, after the group's battlefield defeat, that it retained 14,000 to 18,000 members, including 3,000 foreigners, though precise numbers are as elusive as Islamic State itself.
"ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) continues to represent a threat to the US and partners in the region," a US Central Command spokesman said in the statement about the drone strike.
Analysts say many local fighters may have slipped back into normal life, ready to reappear when an opportunity emerges.