The Royal Air Force has obliterated around 170 Islamic State fanatics in just one week, leaving the brutal terror regime on its last legs.
Analysts claim that footage from Tornado and Typhoon gets suggest the death toll could be in the hundreds following a week of the RAF bombarding Daesh targets in their Iraqi strongholds – but the Ministry of Defence refuses to give exact figures.
However Government officials have shared the hit count from March 21, revealing how clinical British forces have been in the assault against the jihadi regime.
UK forces wiped out ISIS groups firing rockets at Kurdish forces as well as three other terrorist sects that were planting improvised bombs in the Kisik areas in northern Iraq.
Well planned reconnaissance work in Syria also identified a major weapons cache in a warehouse belonging to the jihadi group.
RAF Tornados and Paveways quickly annihilated the stash, bringing the warehouse and three support buildings down in its wake.
A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "On the ground, British training teams continue to play an important role in the large coalition programme to help the Iraqi security forces become ever more effective in their successful efforts to drive the terrorists from their country."
British soldiers are helping to rid reclaimed areas of "thousands" of booby-traps left by ISIS when they were pushed out of cities they had claimed.
The jihadis hid explosives in fridges and even Korans in a sick attempt to prevent civilians from resuming their normal lives in a free country.
Further British assaults on the cowardly terrorists have also proven successful.
UK missiles took out a number of key ISIS positions in northern Iraq and in a Reaper drone blasted a car carrying a Hellfire missile.