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ISIS exploiting Syria’s chaos as US strikes expose growing threat

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U.S. and partner forces killed or captured nearly 25 Islamic State operatives in Syria in the days following a large-scale U.S.-led strike on Dec. 19, according to a new statement from U.S. Central Command, underscoring Washington’s assessment that ISIS remains an active and persistent threat inside the country.

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CENTCOM said those forces conducted 11 follow-on missions between Dec. 20 and Dec. 29, killing at least seven ISIS members, capturing the remainder, and eliminating four ISIS weapons caches. The operations followed Operation Hawkeye Strike, when U.S. and Jordanian forces hit more than 70 ISIS targets across central Syria using over 100 precision munitions, destroying infrastructure and weapons sites linked to the group. 

«We will not relent,» CENTCOM commander Adm. Brad Cooper said, adding that U.S. forces remain «steadfast» in working with regional partners to dismantle ISIS networks that pose a threat to U.S. and regional security.

The scope of the follow-on raids highlights a reality U.S. commanders and analysts have been warning about for months: ISIS no longer controls large swaths of territory, but it retains the ability to organize, strike and regenerate inside Syria’s fragmented security landscape.

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SYRIANS MARK FIRST YEAR SINCE ASSAD’S FALL AS US SIGNALS NEW ERA IN RELATIONS

U.S. Army soldiers prepare to go out on patrol from a remote combat outpost on May 25, 2021, in northeastern Syria. U.S. forces, part of Task Force WARCLUB operate from combat outposts in the area, coordinating with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in combatting residual ISIS extremists and deterring pro-Iranian militia. (John Moore/Getty Images)

Syria remains divided among competing forces, militias and foreign-backed armed groups, with no single authority exercising full control over large parts of the country. Analysts say that vacuum continues to provide space for ISIS cells to operate quietly, recruit and exploit overstretched local forces.

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Analysts note that Syria’s security environment remains shaped by former jihadist networks that were never fully demobilized after the war. The country’s transitional leadership, including President Ahmed al-Sharaa, emerged from armed Islamist factions that relied heavily on foreign fighters and militias, according to regional security assessments. While those groups are not synonymous with ISIS, experts say the incomplete dismantling of extremist networks has left gaps that ISIS cells continue to exploit.

«ISIS today doesn’t need a caliphate to be dangerous,» said Bill Roggio, told Fox News Digital. «We’ve always been quick to declare terrorist organizations defeated and insignificant, and that couldn’t be further from the truth.»

Roggio said the group has adapted rather than disappeared, shifting away from holding territory toward smaller, more covert cells capable of carrying out lethal attacks. He pointed to ongoing ISIS activity not only in Syria and Iraq, but also in Afghanistan and other regions, citing United Nations reporting that estimates roughly 2,000 ISIS fighters remain active in Afghanistan alone.

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«That’s not what a defeated group looks like,» Roggio said, noting that ISIS continues to recruit, indoctrinate and inspire attacks even without the visibility it once had.

FROM SYRIA TO SOMALIA, US TROOPS REMAIN DEPLOYED THIS HOLIDAY SEASON UNDER MISSIONS THAT NEVER FORMALLY ENDED

Kurdish fighters from the People's Protection Units (YPG) run across a street in Raqqa, Syria, July 3, 2017. Goran Tomasevic: "They were members of Kurdish YPG militia. They were running across the street because ISIS fighters' positions were nearby. I shot the picture in a last day of my assignment. I was lucky to have that picture as YPG fighters were giving very restricted access to media." REUTERS/ Goran Tomasevic/File Photo SEARCH "POY IS" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "REUTERS POY" FOR ALL BEST OF 2017 PACKAGES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY - RC164AFF4C20

ISIS terrorists in Syria. (Reuters)

One of the most sensitive vulnerabilities remains the network of detention facilities in northeastern Syria holding thousands of ISIS terrorists and supporters. Those prisons are guarded primarily by Kurdish-led forces backed by a small U.S. military presence, estimated at roughly 1,000 troops, according to Reuters.

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U.S. and coalition officials have repeatedly warned that any major disruption to prison security could allow hardened ISIS operatives to escape and reconstitute networks across Syria and beyond. Kurdish officials have also raised concerns about funding shortages, manpower strain and pressure from rival militias operating nearby.

While U.S. officials have not publicly linked the recent strikes to prison-related threats, analysts say the broader environment of fragmented control increases the risk of coordinated attacks, insider assistance or prison unrest.

The danger is not theoretical. ISIS has previously staged mass prison break operations in Syria and Iraq, including a 2022 assault on the al-Sinaa prison in Hasakah that required days of fighting to contain.

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The U.S. strikes also come amid continued instability inside Syria, where multiple armed actors operate with overlapping authority. Analysts note that clashes among militias, sectarian violence and unresolved command structures have weakened overall security and diverted attention from counterterrorism efforts.

US, SYRIAN TROOPS COME UNDER FIRE WHILE ON PATROL: REPORT

U.S. soldiers attached to the Iowa National Guard sign GBU-31 munitions systems in the U.S.

U.S. soldiers attached to the Iowa National Guard sign GBU-31 munitions systems in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility Dec. 18, 2025 as the U.S. military launched large-scale strikes against dozens of Islamic State targets in Syria in retaliation for an attack on U.S. personnel, U.S. officials said.  (Air Force Photo/Handout via Reuters)

Bombings in neighborhoods of Damascus, including Mezzeh, and unrest in minority areas have further illustrated the gaps ISIS and other extremist groups can exploit, according to regional security assessments and open-source reporting.

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«Syria’s chaos is the accelerant,» Roggio said. «ISIS thrives where no one is fully in charge.»

U.S. officials and analysts stress that ISIS activity in Syria is part of a wider pattern rather than an isolated flare-up.

Sources in the Israeli Mossad told Fox News Digital of continued ISIS-linked activity across multiple theaters, including recruitment networks and small-scale attacks designed to test security responses and maintain operational relevance.

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In Turkey, security forces recently clashed with Islamic State militants during counterterrorism operations, wounding several officers, according to Reuters on Monday. Turkish authorities said the raids targeted ISIS cells suspected of planning attacks inside the country.

DEADLY STRIKE ON US TROOPS TESTS TRUMP’S COUNTER-ISIS PLAN — AND HIS TRUST IN SYRIA’S NEW LEADER

Syria clashes

Security forces loyal to the interim Syrian government ride in the back of a vehicle moving along a road in Syria’s western city of Latakia on March 9, 2025. Syria’s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa called for national unity and peace on March 9, amid growing international backlash following the killing of civilians along the country’s coast in the worst violence since the overthrow of former president Bashar al-Assad. (Omar Haj Kadour/AFP via Getty Images)

«These are signals, not spikes,» Roggio said. «ISIS operates across regions, adapting to pressure and exploiting weak governance wherever it finds it.»

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The renewed U.S. military action raises difficult questions for policymakers about how long the current containment strategy can hold.

While U.S. officials say the Dec. 19 strikes delivered a significant blow to ISIS infrastructure, they have also acknowledged that counterterrorism operations alone cannot eliminate the underlying conditions that allow the group to persist.

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People celebrate in Damascus after fall of Assad regime

People wave guns in the air as they gather to celebrate the fall of the Syrian regime in Umayyad Square on Dec. 8 in Damascus, Syria.  (Ali Haj Suleiman/Getty Images)

«Just because we want to declare the war against terror over doesn’t mean it’s over,» Roggio said. «The enemy gets a vote.»



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Finlandia sospecha que un barco extranjero provocó una nueva rotura de cable submarino en el mar Báltico

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La Policía finlandesa investiga a un buque como sospechoso de la rotura de un cable submarino de telecomunicaciones que conecta Finlandia y Estonia a través del mar Báltico, en lo que podría ser un nuevo episodio de sabotaje de infraestructuras críticas en la zona.

En colaboración con otras autoridades, la policía inició la investigación después de que la teleoperadora finlandesa Elisa notificara este miércoles que había detectado una avería en uno de sus cables submarinos dentro de la zona económica exclusiva de Estonia.

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La Guardia de Fronteras identificó al buque sospechoso de provocar la avería y más tarde envió a la zona una lancha patrullera y un helicóptero, que lo retuvieron tras constatar que navegaba con una de sus anclas sumergidas en el mar.

Según un comunicado de la Policía, la guardia fronteriza ordenó al buque que izara el ancla y se trasladara a un fondeadero en aguas territoriales finlandesas.

«Las autoridades finlandesas han tomado el control del barco como parte de una operación conjunta», informó la policía, negándose a nombrar el barco o su nacionalidad, o dar más detalles sobre el barco y su tripulación.

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La Fiscalía General ya presentó una acusación formal contra el buque, al que considera sospechoso de un delito grave de sabotaje y otro de interferencia agravada en las comunicaciones.


Además de la Policía y la Guardia de Fronteras, también participan en las labores de investigación las Fuerzas Armadas finlandesas, la agencia de Aduanas, la Agencia de Transporte y Comunicaciones (Traficom) y el operador de la red eléctrica finlandesa, Fingrid.


Asimismo, las autoridades finlandesas están colaborando con las de otros países, sobre todo con Estonia, para intercambiar información.

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«Las autoridades finlandesas han investigado a un barco sospechoso de causar daños en un cable en el Golfo de Finlandia», indicó el presidente de Finlandia, Alexander Stubb en un mensaje en su cuenta de X.


«Finlandia está preparada para desafíos de seguridad de varios tipos, y respondemos ante ellos del modo necesario», agregó el jefe de Estado finlandés, que citó en su mensaje a la Policía, la Guardia Fronteriza y otras autoridades vinculadas a la investigación del caso, a las que el presidente agradeció su labor.

«Seguimos la situación en cooperación con el Gobierno», señaló Stubb, al tiempo que el primer ministro finlandés, Petteri Orpo, escribió en X que mantuvo una conversación con su homólogo estonio, Kristen Michal. «Nuestras autoridades están trabajando con buena cooperación», indicó Orpo.

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Ocho países de la OTAN bordean el mar Báltico, que también limita con Rusia. Estos países han estado en alerta máxima tras una serie de cortes en los cables eléctricos, las conexiones de telecomunicaciones y los gasoductos que recorren el lecho marino relativamente poco profundo desde que Rusia invadió Ucrania en 2022.

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Finlandia ha sido víctima en los últimos años de varios incidentes en los que resultaron dañadas en extrañas circunstancias infraestructuas submarinas críticas, entre ellas el gasoducto Balticconnector y varios cables de telecomunicaciones y de alta tensión.

La mayoría de estas averías se produjeron después del inicio de la invasión rusa de Ucrania, por lo que las autoridades finlandesas sospechan que se trata de sabotajes orquestados por el Kremlin.

En diciembre de 2024, Finlandia abordó el petrolero Eagle S, vinculado a Rusia, que, según los investigadores, dañó un cable eléctrico y varias conexiones de telecomunicaciones en el mar Báltico al arrastrar su ancla.

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En octubre, un tribunal finlandés desestimó la causa penal contra el capitán del Eagle S y otros tripulantes, dictaminando que la fiscalía no logró demostrar la intencionalidad y que cualquier presunta negligencia debía ser investigada por el estado de abanderamiento del buque o los países de origen de la tripulación.

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Trump says ‘Triumphal Arch’ monument construction to begin within 2 months in DC: report

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President Donald Trump revealed Wednesday how soon an Arc de Triomphe-style monument will be constructed in the nation’s capital to commemorate America’s 250th anniversary in 2026.

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Trump on Wednesday said the construction of the monument, nicknamed the «Arc de Trump,» will begin «sometime in the next two months,» according to a report from Politico.

«It hasn’t started yet. It starts sometime in the next two months. It’ll be great. Everyone loves it,» Trump reportedly told the outlet during a phone call from Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. «They love the ballroom too. But they love the Triumphal Arch.»

The newest monument, which resembles Paris’ historic Arc de Triomphe, will be bankrolled privately, with funds left over from the new White House ballroom project, Fox News Digital previously reported.

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TRUMP ADMIN FIGHTS IN COURT TO KEEP WHITE HOUSE EAST WING DEMOLITION, $300M BALLROOM BUILD ON TRACK

President Donald Trump holds a model of an arch during a ballroom fundraising dinner in the East Room of the White House on Oct. 15, 2025. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

The exact location of the new landmark has not yet been confirmed, though the report notes it may be situated near the Lincoln Monument.

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Details about the amount of time it will take to build, the cost of construction, the funding amount and who is heading the project have not yet been released by the White House.

Trump signed Public Law 116-217 in December 2020 authorizing the Women’s Suffrage National Monument to be built on federal land in Washington, D.C., leading to the subsequent signing of the Women’s Suffrage National Monument Location Act during former President Joe Biden’s final week in office.

TRUMP PUSHES BACK AFTER MICHELLE OBAMA KNOCKS EAST WING RENOVATION, CALLING OLD ARRANGEMENT ‘A DISASTER’

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A model of President Donald Trump's proposed triumphal arch

A model of President Donald Trump’s proposed triumphal arch to commemorate the country’s 250th anniversary is seen on the Resolute Desk on Oct. 15, 2025. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

The Women’s Suffrage National Monument Foundation (WSNMF) announced Dec. 4 it received final and unanimous approval from the National Capital Planning Commission for a permanent two and a half acre site on the National Mall in Constitution Gardens, according to the foundation’s website.

Foundation leaders noted the women’s suffrage monument went through a «multi-step, rigorous review process,» including gaining approval from the National Capital Memorial Advisory Commission and the Commission of Fine Arts.

The foundation also completed a public comment period with the National Park Service as part of the public scoping process, according to its website.

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TRUMP TAPS NEW ARCHITECT TO RESHAPE WHITE HOUSE AS $300M BALLROOM BUILD ACCELERATES

It is unclear if Trump’s newest proposed monument received similar approval.

The Women’s Suffrage National Monument will be located at the intersection of 19th St. and Constitution Avenue NW, and the next project phase will focus on creative development and design.

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Washington monument is seen in with US Capitol Building in Washington D.C, USA on October 18, 2021.

The new monument is rumored to be built on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. (Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu Agency)

«The enthusiasm behind this project has been inspiring,» WSNMF President and CEO Anna Laymon wrote in a Dec. 4 statement announcing final approval. «We are so grateful for the dedicated support from so many who made this possible, including President Trump; President Biden; our honorary chairs Mrs. Melania Trump, Dr. Jill Biden, Mrs. Michelle Obama, Mrs. Laura Bush, and Secretary Hillary Clinton; our bipartisan and bicameral Congressional sponsors, Senator Blackburn, Senator Baldwin, Congresswoman Lesko, Congressman Neguse and their dedicated staffs; our incredible Board of Directors; and all our partners and supporters.»

TRUMP BREAKS GROUND ON MASSIVE WHITE HOUSE BALLROOM PROJECT WITH PRIVATE FUNDING FROM ‘PATRIOTS’

The most recent major monument built on the National Mall was the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial, which was completed in 2011.

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The granite memorial was inspired by a line from King’s «I Have a Dream» speech, delivered nearby on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the «March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom» in 1963.

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The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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Fox News Digital’s Amanda Macias contributed to this report.

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Putin vows victory in Ukraine in New Year’s address amid Trump-backed peace talks

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Russian President Vladimir Putin used his New Year’s address to deliver a blunt message to the West and to his own troops: Russia is not backing down in Ukraine.

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As 2026 arrived in Russia’s far eastern regions, Putin vowed victory in the nearly four-year war, praising Russian soldiers and framing the conflict as a fight for the nation’s survival — even as the United States ramps up diplomatic efforts aimed at ending the bloodshed.

«We believe in you and our victory,» Putin said in remarks broadcast nationwide and released by the Kremlin on Wednesday. Addressing troops directly, he congratulated «all our soldiers and commanders» and pledged continued support for what Moscow calls its «special military operation.»

TRUMP TOUTS ‘TREMENDOUS PROGRESS’ BUT SAYS HE’LL MEET PUTIN AND ZELENSKYY ‘ONLY WHEN’ PEACE DEAL IS FINAL

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Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers his New Year’s address from the Kremlin, vowing victory in the war in Ukraine. (East2West)

Putin cast the war as a struggle for Russia’s homeland, «truth and justice,» signaling determination to press ahead despite mounting losses and international pressure.

In a separate message, ex-President Dmitry Medvedev — Putin’s security council deputy — said of victory in Ukraine: «I sincerely believe that it is near.» Echoing Putin, he spoke of «our great and invincible Russia.»

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The defiant tone comes as the war approaches grim milestones. On Jan. 12, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will surpass the 1,418 days the Soviet Union fought Nazi Germany in Europe during World War II. On Feb. 24, the conflict will enter its fourth year. Western estimates place the number of killed and wounded at more than 1 million — a figure the Kremlin disputes.

TRUMP MEETS WITH ZELENSKYY; TALKS COULD UNLOCK FIRST ZELENSKYY-PUTIN CALL IN FIVE YEARS: SOURCE

A woman mourning

The mother of a Russian soldier who was killed in a military action in Ukraine, kneels near a planted tree in memory of her son at the Alley of Heroes in Sevastopol, Crimea, Saturday, Feb. 25, 2023. (AP Photo)

Putin’s rhetoric stood in sharp contrast to renewed diplomatic activity led by Washington.

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with U.S. President Donald Trump at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Sunday, as the White House explores possible paths to end Europe’s largest land war since World War II.

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U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

U.S. President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky shake hands at a news conference following a meeting at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club on December 28, 2025 in Palm Beach, Florida. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

After the meeting, Trump said Ukraine and Russia were «closer than ever» to peace, while acknowledging that major obstacles — particularly territorial disputes — remain unresolved. Reuters separately reported that Trump and Zelenskyy discussed potential U.S. troop involvement as part of broader security guarantees, though no decisions were announced.

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Reuters contributed to this report.



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