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A 2014 photo showing Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi, delivering a sermon at a mosque in Iraq during his first public appearance. Image Credit: AP

Washington: Recent losses and airstrikes haven’t weakened Daesh, the group’s reclusive leader purportedly said in an audio message, even as the militants lose ground to Iraqi forces in a key city.

The 24-minute audio message, which appeared Saturday on social media accounts and websites used by Daesh, was the first said to come from Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi since May. Al Baghdadi said his group had sustained setbacks before in Iraq and Syria, only to return stronger.

Iraqi troops backed by US airstrikes are closing in on Ramadi, the capital of Al Anbar province, which the terror group captured in May. The US has promised to send additional special forces to Iraq and Syria to combat the group, and along with allies has stepped up airstrikes.

The fall of Ramadi would deal a setback to the Al Qaida breakaway group at a time when it is also facing intensified coalition airstrikes in Syria after claiming an attack in Paris in November than killed more than 120 people.

“It is unprecedented in the history of our Ummah (Islamic nation) that all the world came against it in one battle, as it is happening today. It is the battle of all the disbelievers against all the Muslims,” Al Baghdadi said.

He said the U.S.-led alliance does “not scare us... nor do they scatter our resolve because we are the victors in any event.”

US officials have said aerial bombing alone can’t defeat Daesh and ground forces are needed. But Al Baghdadi said the US and its allies wouldn’t dare to send ground forces to fight Daesh after being bogged down in lengthy conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Daesh has declared a caliphate in areas of Syria and Iraq it has seized, prompting the US to carry out airstrikes against the group in both countries and put together an international coalition to join the fight. The US is undertaking a significant effort to find and kill Al Baghdadi, who is in hiding, an Obama administration official said earlier this month.

Al Baghdadi was also dismissive of a newly announced Islamic alliance against terrorism, led by Saudi Arabia.

“If this coalition was Islamic, it would have staged a war against the Alawites and the Russians in Syria, it would have announced war against the Shiites and the Kurds in Iraq,” Al Baghdadi said, calling on Saudi citizens to join Daesh.

He threatened Israel by saying, “we haven’t forgotten you” and “we are getting closer to you” every day. To Israeli Jews, he said that they “will hide behind trees and stones” from Deash.

- with inputs from Agencies