Sally Jones (pictured) has shot up the Pentagon's kill list

British ISIS bride Sally Jones has shot up the Pentagon's kill list as it is revealed she and her late husband were responsible for planning a dozen terror plots.

Jones, a 49-year-old mother-of-two from Kent, is considered to be a 'high priority' for assassination in Syria.

The failed punk rocker's extremist husband Junaid Hussain, a computer hacker from Birmingham, was wiped out by an American drone strike in Raqqa in 2015.

One foiled plot hatched by the pair involved kidnapping a former US soldier and beheading him on camera, according to The Sunday Times.

Another plan was to be carried out by a teenager shooting at hundreds of people at a nightclub or concert.

Jones abandoned her disastrous career as a punk rocker to convert to Islam before joining ISIS in 2013.

The convert has previously hinted that she might fancy becoming a suicide bomber herself, writing earlier: 'I know what I'm doing. Paradise has a price and I hope this will be the price for Paradise'.

It is believed that Jones recruited dozens of women to ISIS via social media before her accounts were shut down.

Jones, a 49-year-old mother-of-two from Kent, is considered to be a 'high priority' for assassination in Syria

One foiled plot hatched by Jones and her late husband involved kidnapping a former US soldier and beheading him on camera

She is also believed to be using her 11-year-old son Jojo as a human shield.

After her husband's death, it is thought she received a monthly salary from ISIS of £520, plus a bonus of more than £200 every couple of months for being the widow of a 'shahid' or martyr.

According to one activist she is yet to remarry because 'she is considered old and ISIS fighters prefer young girls.'

The failed punk rocker's extremist husband Junaid Hussain (pictured), a computer hacker from Birmingham, was wiped out by an American drone strike in Raqqa in 2015

Just yesterday it was revealed that ISIS has claimed responsibility for the largest number of terrorism attacks in the world this year.

A map, created by Esri Story Maps and PeaceTech Lab, shows that Islamic State has claimed responsibility for most of the attacks so far on the map - 140 in total - while a group listed as 'other', such as lone wolves, closely follow behind with 130 attacks.

As a result, Islamic State is responsible for 1,180 deaths that have occurred as a result of terrorism this year, with the total number of deaths being 2,841 by 8am on May 7.