Top US commander says that there is no evidence that Islamic State's main leader is still alive
While Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told Reuters on Tuesday that it had "confirmed information" that Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has been killed, ISIS itself has also not released any statements as they have when high-profile militants have been killed in the past.
Shy of confirming the death, Army Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend told a group of reporters that there was no evidence to suggest that al-Baghdadi, who once led ISIS fights to capture entire cities in Iraq and Syria, is alive.
"I really don't know. ... I don't have reason to believe that he's alive. I don't have proof of life," Townsend said.
Last month, al-Baghdadi went into hiding after the US offered a $25 million reward to anyone able to bring him to justice. While his death would mark a significant step in ISIS' reported loss of a stronghold in Syria and Iraq, national security strategist Fred Kagan told Politico that it would not mean that the danger of the terrorist group has passed.