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Shahidullah Shahid, ISIS commander in Afghanistan, killed by U.S. drone strike

The Afghan intelligence agency on Thursday said a third top Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) commander in Afghanistan was killed in a U.S. drone strike in the country's east this week.

5 other militants also killed, Afghan intelligence says

In this Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013 photo, Shahidullah Shahid, right, arrives with his bodyguard for an interview at an undisclosed location in Pakistani tribal area of Waziristan along Afghanistan border. (Ishtiaq Mahsud/Associated Press)

The Afghan intelligence agency on Thursday said a third top Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) commander in Afghanistan was killed in a U.S. drone strike in the country's east this week.

Shahidullah Shahid, a former member of the Pakistani Taliban who defected to ISIS and was operating in Afghanistan, was killed along with five militants on Tuesday, an official said.

"He wanted to expand [ISIS's] operation in the country and with his death, it will have an impact on their activities," Hasib Sediqi, spokesman for the Afghanistan National Directorate of Security (NDS), told Reuters.

Shahid was killed in the same strike that killed ISIS's No. 2 in Afghanistan Gul Zaman, along with 49 militants in the eastern Achin district of Nangarhar province where Islamic State militants have recently gained ground after pushing out the Taliban. One other commander was also killed.

Bordering lawless areas inside Pakistan, Nangarhar is one of the provinces where ISIS militants are most active.

Islamic State loyalists, mostly former Taliban disillusioned by the movement's unsuccessful bid to return to power in Kabul, are often accompanied by dozens of foreigners, hoisting black flags in several districts in the province.

A small but increasing number of mostly ex-Taliban militants are pledging allegiance to ISIS in Afghanistan, making them a target of deadly strikes there by the U.S. unmanned aircraft.