Four additional senior leaders of ISIS’ Afghan affiliate were killed in a July 11 drone strike, U.S. Forces Afghanistan revealed Sunday.

The Pentagon previously announced the death of Abu Sayed in the strike, the third leader of ISIS’s Afghan affiliate killed by the U.S. government. Sayed was only at his post for approximately six weeks before being taken out in the drone strike, Pentagon Spokesman Capt. Jeff Davis told reporters after the announcement. The additional ISIS leaders killed in the strike are identified as senior commanders who played key roles in leading the terrorist organization.

USFOR-A identifies additional ISIS-K Leaders killed on July 11, 2017 strike. #ForAFG pic.twitter.com/VC8U788SHu — USForces Afghanistan (@USFOR_A) July 30, 2017

ISIS in Afghanistan has morphed from a nascent band of militants in 2015 to a full-fledged threat in the eastern province of Nangarhar. The group controls a relatively small amount of territory but has used it to launch multiple complex attacks on the capital city of Kabul, killing hundreds with its brutal tactics.

“It’s not getting better in Afghanistan in terms of ISIS. We have a problem, and we have to defeat them and we have to be focused on that problem,” Pentagon Chief Spokesman Dana White declared in a July interview with Voice of America. White’s statement stands in contrast to the Pentagon’s recent report on the state of war in Afghanistan, which claims that the Afghan National Security Forces’ (ANSF) recent efforts as well as “pressure from the Taliban, and a lack of support from the local populace have diminished ISIS-K’s influence and caused it to decline in size, capability, and ability to hold territory.”

ISIS is just a small facet of the problem facing the U.S. and ANSF in the Afghan war. Taliban insurgents control more territory in Afghanistan than at any time since the war began in 2001, and ANSF is suffering historic casualties.

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