As ISIS anticipates one noteworthy attack in Mosul, Iraq, the self-proclaimed caliphate has lost its control of a typical fortress in north Syria.
The Free Syrian Army (FSA), a Turkish-sponsored group, reclaimed Sunday the town of Dabiq from ISIS, Turkish state media and a checking bunch said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based association, said it got reports that gatherings of ISIS warriors had pulled back from Dabiq overnight.
Despite the fact that ISIS constrains left, Turkish security sources told Anadolu's journalist the recover of Dabiq was the hardest part so far for Operation Euphrates Shield.
Presently the FSA operation will keep, as indicated by Turkey's state-run Anadolu, as contenders look to clear the town of mines, booby-traps and IEDs.
The little city, which is situated around 10 km (a little more than 6 miles) south of the Turkish-Syrian outskirt, is considered by some Islamic predictions to be the site of a prophetically calamitous fight amongst Christians and Muslims. ISIS has even named its smooth English dialect magazine used to conspicuously include purposeful publicity "Dabiq."
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