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ISIS brutes shot me after picking off my comrades… I fear terror army's return but wouldn't hesitate fighting them again

ISIS brutes shot me after picking off my comrades… I fear terror army's return but wouldn't hesitate fighting them again

The Sun15-05-2025

AS a merciless ISIS fighter shot dead two of his squad, Macer Gifford assumed his death was just seconds away.
But as a bullet ricocheted off his armour, the former Brit banker's heart pounded as he hurled himself to the ground to take cover.
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It was one of just hundreds of times the volunteer fighter narrowly cheated death as he battled ISIS in Syria - and later Russia in Ukraine.
Rewind to 2014, and Macer had what many would deem an idyllic life.
Living in Battersea, central London, the banker-turned-fighter had a girlfriend and was working in the foreign exchange business.
As Mosil, the second largest city in Iraq, fell and thousands of Yazidi girls became trapped on Sinjar Mountain before being murdered or sold into sexual slavery, Macer made a life-changing decision.
Then just 27, he ditched both his job and his girlfriend to travel 3,000 miles to Syria - where a bloody war was raging.
Over a traumatic three years, Macer watched friends die, jihadists use babies as human shields and civilians massacred.
Speaking as part of Life Stories, The Sun's YouTube series which sees ordinary people share their extraordinary experiences, he said: "I fought ISIS all the way for those three years, from the edges of the desert all the way to the capital city Raqqa.
"It was absolutely horrifying to see this absolutely beautiful country with a history that stretches back thousands of years completely ripped apart by sectarianism.
"A death cult had emerged in Syria that was determined not only to destroy the diversity of the country, but its history, its culture.
"The threat ISIS posed at the time was monumental and unprecedented.
I waded through bodies in Ukraine's No Man's Land to infiltrate enemy trenches - then Russians found me & unleashed hell
"It wasn't just a case of me working for a charity and dealing with the effects of ISIS.
"I knew that the real partners on the ground, the Kurds, were the ones who had the answer to defeat ISIS and restore peace in the region."
The former public schoolboy, who grew up in rural Cambridgeshire, said in the three hellish years he spent in Syria, he was almost killed "a thousand times".
Recalling one heart-stopping incident, Macer, 38, said: "I was patrolling in Raqqa at midnight and we came across a man who was calling to us to say his family was trapped in a house across the road.
"We had no idea whether that man worked for ISIS, but when my commander and a couple of other guys crossed this road, including myself, we were ambushed by an ISIS fighter with a PK machine gun.
"They shot left to right, killing the first two guys in the squad. I was the third, and my plate was struck by a bullet.
"I flung myself to the ground and crawled off the road to return fire and seek cover.
"And that unleashed 24 hours of hell.
"I had to run back onto this road where there were a lot of ISIS fighters shooting at us to grab hold of my commander, to drag him to safety.
"Sadly, he would die in my arms just hours later."
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Macer told how dozens of ruthless IS fighters suddenly swarmed their position - with many of his comrades brutally killed.
Brave Kurds desperately tried to fend off the attack by shooting terrorists one by one as they ran up the stairwells.
Macer added: "The U.S. Air Force was on our side and they were able to air strike all the ISIS positions around us, including tunnels where they were emerging just 10 meters away from where we were hiding.
"So for 24 hours we fought without water, which was by far the worst thing as far as I'm concerned, because every time the Americans dropped a bomb, it kicked up all the dust, which was absorbed into our lungs.
"We were coughing so much. Some of the guys were getting nosebleeds. They were coughing up blood because there was so much.
"They had drunk nothing for 24 hours and there was so much dust in the air.
"And then finally we grabbed the bodies of our comrades, put them in the back of Humvees, jumped in and were able to escape.
"But there were moments in time where we were very close to death.
"I was scared, particularly when your life is no longer in your hands, that you don't have any chance to seek cover, that you really are just pinned in the open with people shooting at you.
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"And there have been many moments where people that I know, good friends of mine, have gone one way and died. I've gone the other way and survived. It is pure luck sometimes.
"Much better people than me, men and women, have died because they kicked down the wrong door or they went on a mission that I was asked to sit behind for."
After relentless fighting in Raqqa - the epicentre of ISIS - for six months, Macer rejoiced as the city was liberated in October 2017.
"As I sat there on this rooftop after six months of fighting, I saw them [terrorists] limp out of the hospital, broken and destroyed.
"These fanatics, these absurd, psychopathic fanatics were once so full of hate and so full of victory in those early days, thinking they were going to conquer the world.
"They were completely deluded. And I saw them for the first time utterly broken, and I realised they were going to flee into the desert.
"The Americans, the Brits, the Kurdish forces that I'd been fighting alongside would continue to chase them and hunt them down.
"But my time in Syria had come to an end, because the sacrifices I was making away from my family, the worry it was causing them, it had to be for a reason.
"And after three years, I could no longer see a good enough reason for me personally to be there, so I came home.
"Coming to terms with your experiences after seeing such brutality and giving up so much of your life is very difficult."
Returning back to the UK, Macer settled back in by taking up a Master's in international relations, peacebuilding and security, and writing his first book - Fighting Evil.
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Then in 2022, as Vladimir Putin's forces and tanks massed at the Ukraine border and all-out war loomed, Macer felt the urge to help.
Days before Russian troops invaded, Macer went to Ukraine to dish out aid - and was on the ground when the first bombs slammed into Ukraine.
Macer travelled back to the UK to rally a team of comrades who went back and trained dozens of people in combat casualty.
But after witnessing horrific scenes, he felt compelled to pick up his rifle again and joined the 131st Separate Reconnaissance Battalion.
Macer fought in the fields between Mykolaiv and Kherson, the islands of Dnipro and the forests of Lyman - and came under severe bombardment.
Fortunately, he escaped any serious injury.
One of Macer's most important roles as part of the 131st was gathering intelligence by risking his life on the frontline, looking for minefields and preparing the way for Ukrainian assaults.
But back home Macer's dad was battling Parkinson's and was rushed into hospital, so he decided it was time to head home at the start of start of January 2024.
By Henry Holloway, Deputy Foreign Editor
ISIS could unleash a new wave of terror by springing fighters from camps like the one holding Shamima Begum, a top general who helped defeat the death cult has revealed.
General Mazloum Abdi, who leads the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) - a Kurdish-led US-backed militia, sounded the alarm over the resurgent terror group.
Speaking to The Sun in an interview with documentarian and ex-soldier Alan Duncan, Abdi said there are currently 10,000 male fighters in prisons ready to bring devastation back to the Middle East.
General Abdi revealed SDF believe that ISIS forces - which were bravely driven back by his troops - are currently organising a prisonbreak of fighters still held in Syria.
He also warned the threat of ISIS continues in the West.
General Abdi said: "The threat of jihadist groups - not just ISIS - will exist until the fundamentals they were founded on are destroyed.
"We must continue our struggle."
He also called on the West to do more to bring these fighters to justice - and to support trials and convictions for the atrocities they committed in the Middle East.
General Abdi told The Sun: "The threat of ISIS in detention centres and camps is increasing and there is an increase in the movement of ISIS in general.
"There is a need to intensify efforts to continue to fight against ISIS if we don't want to see a resurgence."
Macer said: "I rushed back to see my father and sadly on my birthday, 20 days later, on January 21 he died.
"And it gave me a new perspective on life. It made me realise that I'd gone out to Ukraine with a purpose. I'd fought. I'd raised money. I'd built infrastructure.
"If you go out without a plan to a war zone, you will lose yourself. And I didn't want to lose myself. I wanted to go out, complete my mission, come home and move on. And that's exactly what I've done."
Macer said his life now revolves around writing, his family and fundraising. Last year he raised around £75,000 that went out to units in Ukraine.
Despite everything he's been through, Macer revealed he would be prepared to return to the battlefield if ISIS "rose up tomorrow".
And Macer warned this is a very real possibility.
The return of ISIS could be devastating. There are 70,000 prisoners that are just as fanatical today as they were when they were first captured.
"I fear a resurgence from the Islamic State," he said.
"I have watched Syria over the last seven, eight years, since I was last there, with growing horror as Britain has played second fiddle to the Americans.
"The Americans have taken their eye off the ball, have taken resources out of Syria and Iraq.
"My biggest fear is that unless we give people in Syria something to fight for and to dream for, ISIS will simply return.
"The return of ISIS could be devastating. There are 70,000 prisoners that are just as fanatical today as they were when they were first captured.
"There are people who have committed the most appalling human rights abuses. They have committed genocide."
Macer added: "This death cult is something that won't just go away unless we start dealing with the root causes of it.
"If they were to break out of those prisons, it could grow as quickly as it did in 2014 when I first went out.
"So we could be at square one literally within a year. I would definitely go out and fight again.
"If the IS rose up tomorrow and became a threat to the Zidi, Christian, and Kurdish communities, the Arab communities of Syria, Iraq, it would take very little for me to go out there again, pick up a rifle, work with the local people and fight back."
ISIS jihadis return to UK without facing justice
By Ryan Sabey, Deputy Political Editor
MORE than 400 IS jihadis have returned to the UK but not faced justice, a damning report finds.
Fighters carried out killings, terror attacks and genocide after joining the banned terror group in Iraq and Syria.
Lord Alton, head of the Joint Committee on Human Rights, said ministers cannot 'wash their hands' of crimes because they happened overseas.
The committee said the Government has to make sure the jihadis are put on trial in the UK.
Lord Alton said: 'We know that British nationals committed the most horrendous crimes in Iraq and Syria under the Daesh [IS] regime and we have a duty to see them brought to justice.
'We want to see more action from the Government in identifying the perpetrators, some of whom may have returned to Britain, others likely detained in camps in Syria.'

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Charlie says in the documentary: 'He shot into the ground and said, 'Britain has raped Iraq and you are going to know what it feels like'.' The first Gulf War On August 2, 1990, tyrant Saddam Hussein ordered the invasion and brutal occupation of neighbouring Kuwait in a row over oil and loans. US President G W Bush put together a 39-nation coalition of 670,000 troops - the largest military alliance since World War II - to liberate Kuwait, with full backing from the United Nations. Bush said: 'Iraq will not be permitted to annex Kuwait. That's not a threat or a boast that's just the way it's going to be.' Britain sent 53,462 military personnel in its largest single deployment since WWII. It cost over £2billion with most of the tab picked up by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Some £200million of British kit was lost or written off. The coalition's efforts against Iraq were carried out in two key phases. The first, Operation Desert Shield, marked the military build-up from August 1990 to January 1991. Iraq was given an ultimatum to withdraw, with a deadline of January 15. The second, Operation Desert Storm, began with an aerial bombing campaign against Iraq on January 17, 1991, which lasted for five weeks. It ended with the American-led liberation of Kuwait on February 28, 1991, after the coalition launched a major ground assault into Iraqi-occupied Kuwait. There was a constant fear that Saddam would use his stockpile of chemical weapons against coalition troops. There were many false alarms but the Iraqi despot didn't repeat his chemical attack on the Kurds in Halabja in 1988 which killed as many as 5,000. Gulf War One was the first truly televised war with audiences astonished by the accuracy of a new generation of smart bombs and precision guided munitions. RAF man John Nichol adds: 'You had reporters on the ground filming aircraft taking off, and landing, which went live on air. 'It was astonishing and brand new. Journalists were living in the hotel with the aircrew and buying them beers.' One of the defining moments in British coverage was when the BBC's John Simpson breathlessly told the nation a cruise missile had just flown past his Baghdad hotel window and was "turning left at the traffic lights". The Flight 149 crew and passengers were among 3,000 foreign hostages described by Saddam as 'guests'. Gradually, under international pressure, the dictator started to release women, children and the sick. B George was told there was a scheme for people with Arab heritage, which he had, to get out of Kuwait. He signed up for the scheme, but it was just a 'trick' to get him out of the safety of the embassy in November 1990. B George is tearful as he recalls in a Zoom call: 'They interrogated me. They put a gun to my head and told me they would take me to the desert and shoot me.' 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Six weeks later Kuwait was liberated in Operation Desert Storm, when British and US troops attacked Saddam's forces. 14 A search for answers In the aftermath of that victory, the suffering of the human shields has largely been forgotten. But they are still determined to find out why they were put in harm's way. An anonymous member of the black-ops team later claimed that he was on Flight 149. Clive, who worked for British Airways for 34 years before retiring in 1994, has been told by sources in the air industry that only one person could have ordered an SAS team to land in a war zone on a passenger flight. He says: 'They said, 'We think there's only one person who could authorise that sort of thing to go straight away, and that must be the Prime Minister, Maggie Thatcher '.' Thatcher, who died in 2013, denied there was a covert operation and all governments since have maintained there was no cover-up. But with the lawyers bringing legal action claiming they have new evidence, this story is not over yet. Flight 149: Hostage of War is on Sky Documentaries and Now TV on June 11. 14 14 14

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