Prominent Iran Guards Commander Killed in Syria Ambush
Two members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) were killed in an ambush set by ISIS in central Syria.
ISIS ambushed a military convoy in
al-Sukhnah area, east of Palmyra city in the eastern Homs countryside, killing
IRGC military adviser Hassan Abdullahzadeh and his companion Mohsen Abbasi.
Iranian media announced the death
of both IRGC members on Thursday.
Sources said Abdullahzadeh was the
security officer at the Sayyida Zainab region, south of Damascus, then
Alboukamal area, and was one of the most prominent Iranian military advisors
during the Damascus and Aleppo battles.
The Fars News Agency reported that
both militants died in an ambush set up by ISIS in the desert area between Deir
Ezzor and Palmyra.
A picture published by Mehr News
Agency showed Abdullahzadeh with slain Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani,
who was killed in a US strike near Baghdad airport in early 2020.
Syrian opposition media sources
had reported about a large-scale attack launched by ISIS on Thursday, targeting
a military convoy of seven Iranian militia vehicles in al-Sukhnah area.
According to the sources, some 25
of the convoy members were killed, including the senior IRGC commanders.
The desert areas east of Homs and
Deir Ezzor are areas under Iran’s influence, with Alboukamal, on the border
with Iraq, as its stronghold.
IRGC forces and Iran-backed
militias, including the Fatemiyoun Division, Zainabiyoun Brigade, Iraqi
Hezbollah and Lebanese Hezbollah, as well as Syrian regime forces and their
allied militias are all deployed in the region.
ISIS cells are present in various
hideouts in Syria’s desert and they have been intensifying their attacks there.
Hours after the al-Sukhnah area
ambush, the ISIS targeted Fatemiyoun militants on the outskirts of Shoula town
in northern Deir Ezzor, killing and injuring several militants and detaining
others.
In April, the Russian air force launched a military campaign to support regime forces and its allied militias to pursue ISIS cells in the desert.