France responded with fury to the terror attacks on Paris, unleashing a series of airstrikes that destroyed an ISIS command post and a training camp in Syria on Sunday, officials said.

The “massive” operation pounded sites in and around the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa, and involved 12 aircraft — including 10 fighter jets — launched simultaneously from bases in Jordan and the United Arab Emirates, a French official said.

The air fleet dropped 20 bombs in total. One target was used as a “command post, jihadist recruitment center and arms and munitions depot,” the French Defense Ministry said in a statement.

A second target “held a terrorist training camp,” it said.

ISIS insisted it suffered no casualties and said the 20 targets were “abandoned sites,” the Guardian reported.

Meanwhile, an international manhunt was under way for a suspected eighth attacker, who escaped the three hours of carnage that killed 129 people at six sites in and around Paris on Friday.

The suspect breezed past cops who stopped him near the Belgian border Saturday morning.

The French National Police released a photo of Salah Ab­deslam, 26, whose brother, Ibrahim, 31, blew himself up with a suicide vest at the Comptoir Voltaire cafe.

A third brother, Mohamed, was among seven suspects arrested in Brussels following the attacks.

An arrest warrant described Salah as very dangerous. Anyone spotting him was warned, “Do not intervene yourself.”

Four French officials told The Associated Press that cops questioned and released Salah hours after the attacks, when he and two other people were stopped while traveling together in a car.

The bungle came even though Salah had been identified as the person who rented a Volkswagen Polo hatchback that was used in the attacks, the AP reported.

Officials were also seeking an unidentified suspect who may have been “directly involved” in the attacks, The Washington Post reported.

At least 129 people were killed in a series of unprecedented terror attacks in Paris on Nov. 13. Getty Images Rescue personnel work near the covered bodies of victims outside the Carillon bar on Nov. 13. Reuters French rescuers help a man who was injured at the Bataclan theater on Nov. 13. Reuters AP Reuters The scene inside the Bataclan concert hall minutes after the Paris terror attacks. Mirrorpix.com The Eagles of Death Metal perform at the Bataclan theater moments before the terror attack began on Nov. 13. Getty Images Two women hang from the outside of the Bataclan as they try to escape the gunmen inside. Getty Images Getty Images People cover a body near the Cafe Bonne Biere. Getty Images Getty Images Getty Images AP AP Reuters Getty Images The scene outside the Stade de France in Paris after a suicide bomber attacked the stadium during a soccer match. Zumapress.com Getty Images Getty Images Getty Images Getty Images EPA Zumapress.com Reuters Rescue personnel help victims of the Paris terror attacks on Nov. 13. Zumapress.com AP Getty Images Reuters EPA Reuters French President Francois Hollande (rear, center), protected by armed bodyguards, arrives to inspect the carnage at the Bataclan theater early on Nov. 14. Getty Images EPA Supporters invade the pitch of the Stade de France stadium during the match between France and Germany on Friday night. AP Getty Images AP Getty Images AP The lights of the Eiffel Tower were turned off on Nov. 14 in honor of the victims of the previous day's terror attacks. Getty Images Bullet holes fill a cafe's window near the Casa Nostra pizzeria in Paris on Nov. 14. Getty Images A note reading "Your wars our deads" lies on the pavement near what appears to be bloodstains near the Bataclan theater on Nov. 14. Getty Images A man holds his head in his hands as he lays flowers in front of the Carillon cafe in Paris on Nov. 14. AP Discarded shoes lie on the sidewalk outside the Bataclan on Nov. 14. Getty Images A forensic scientist inspects the scene outside the Cafe Bonne Biere on Nov. 14. Getty Images Getty Images A woman cries near Le Petit Cambodge restaurant in Paris on Nov. 14. Getty Images A woman cries outside of the Consulate General of France in New York on Nov. 14. Getty Images Parisians light candles and lay tributes on a memorial at the Place de la Republique on Nov. 14. Getty Images Getty Images A flower is placed in a bullet hole in the window of Le Carillon restaurant in Paris on Nov. 15. Getty Images Getty Images Getty Images Reuters Ad Up Next Close Johnny Manziel's head nearly ripped off in vicious facemask https://twitter.com/jemelehill/status/665970079033647104 Thanks to a strong neck, Johnny Manziel will not... 52 View Slideshow Back Continue Share this: Facebook

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