US-led air strikes against the Islamic State (ISIS) terrorist group in Syria have killed more than 1,600 people, mainly jihadists, since they began five months ago, a monitor said on Monday.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said almost all of those killed were jihadists from ISIS and Al-Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate Nusra Front, though it also documented the deaths of 62 civilians, reports AFP.
The Britain-based monitor said the strikes that began on September 23 had killed 1,465 members of the Islamic State group, most of them non-Syrians.
Another 73 fighters from Nusra Front were killed, along with a man from a rebel group being held prisoner by ISIS in the group’s de facto capital Raqa.
Washington and a small coalition of Arab countries began strikes against ISIS in Syria last year, expanding US-led operations with a broader coalition already underway against ISIS in Iraq.
ISIS emerged in Syria in 2013, growing from Al-Qaeda’s former Iraqi affiliate.
But it broke with Al-Qaeda and declared an Islamic “caliphate” in territory it controls in Syria and Iraq, attracting a steady stream of foreign fighters and carrying out horrific abuses including mass rape and beheadings.