US airstrikes on ISIS in Syria (illustration)
US airstrikes on ISIS in Syria (illustration)Reuters

At least 2,000 people, mostly Islamic State group terrorists, have been killed in Syria by a US-led air campaign in the past seven months, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Thursday, according to AFP.

"At least 1,922 fighters from ISIS, mostly foreigners, have been killed since September 23, 2014 in raids and aerial attacks by the international coalition on ISIS positions and oil refineries" throughout Syria, the observatory said. 

The strikes targeted ISIS positions in the central province of Homs, as well as Aleppo in the north, Hasakeh in the northeast, and Deir Ezzor to the east.

They also struck the northern province of Raqa, where the provincial capital of the same name has become the centre of ISIS's self-styled
"caliphate".

The toll also included 90 fighters from ISIS's jihadist rival and Al-Qaeda Syrian affiliate Al-Nusra Front, most of whom were killed in coalition strikes on their strongholds in northern Syria. It also included one Islamist rebel who was being held by ISIS.

At least 66 civilians, including 10 children, have been killed in the campaign, the Britain-based Observatory also noted.

The coalition air strikes have provided significant support to Kurdish forces, helping them to expel ISIS terrorists from the flashpoint town of Kobane on the Syrian-Turkish border in January.

Syria's conflict began with peaceful protests in March 2011, but devolved into a civil war after a bloody crackdown by the government.

The war became even more complex in 2014 with the rise of terror groups, particularly ISIS, which controls swathes of territory in northern and eastern Syria.

More than 220,000 people have been killed and at least 11.2 million displaced since the beginning of the war.