The Borneo Post

US deploys more troops into Syria, turning up heat on IS

-

WASHINGTON: The United States turned up the heat on the Islamic State group Thursday, sending an additional 400 US troops into Syria to support an offensive to retake Raqa, the jihadists’ de facto capital.

The administra­tion also announced a high level meeting on March 22 of the 68 countries in the US-led coalition to discuss plans to accelerate IS’s defeat.

The announceme­nts in Washington come as US-backed forces tighten their hold around jihadist bastions in Iraq’s northern city of Mosul and in Raqa.

More than two and a half years after the start of a US air war against IS, the jihadists are under siege in western Mosul, abandoned to their fate by IS leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi.

And a US-backed coalition of Arab-Kurdish fighters are closing in on Raqa, maneuverin­g to isolate the city from the rest of Syria’s jihadist- controlled territory.

But the battle there is not yet won, and the Pentagon wants to make sure that the city of 300,000, a onetime propaganda showcase for IS, falls.

Among the additional US troops deployed in Syria is a Marine Corp artillery battery equipped with 155mm howitzers, according to the Pentagon.

A US military spokesman on Thursday said that the extra troops were “temporary,” and their deployment would not lead to a long-term increase in American troop levels in Syria.

But the movement comes as President Donald Trump weighs options for an intensifie­d anti-IS campaign.

US media reports say the Pentagon is proposing the deployment of additional special

We are trying to take actions to prevent that from occurring.

operations forces, artillery and attack helicopter­s in support of an offensive by local ground forces.

Complicati­ng the US strategy is the fact that NATO ally Turkey is dead set against Raqa falling to an Arab- Kurdish force grouped under the Syrian Democratic Forces.

Trained and advised by US special operations troops, the SDF has proved to be the most reliable US ally on the ground in Syria, and the only local force it considers capable of rapidly taking Raqa.

But Turkey regards the SDF as a cover for the Kurdish YPG militia, branded as a terrorist organizati­on by Ankara.

Asked about the impasse at a hearing Thursday of the Senate Armed Services Committee, the top US commander in the region, General Joseph Votel, acknowledg­ed that tensions between Ankara and the Kurds are near breaking point.

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joseph Dunford, has made two recent trips to Turkey to sort out the impasse.

“We are trying to take actions to prevent that from occurring,” Votel told Republican Senator John McCain.

Efforts have been made to address the issue at a military level, “and there has to be an effort at the political level to address this,” he added.

But McCain questioned whether the Trump administra­tion recognized the seriousnes­s of

General Joseph Votel

the situation, or how important Turkish cooperatio­n is to US efforts to retake Raqa.

“Unless something changes, I foresee a train wreck here,” he said.

The Syrian dossier is not the only military issue on the Trump administra­tion’s front burner.

Votel said US troop levels in Afghanista­n need to be increased, after years of a declining US military presence in the country. More American troops were needed to break the stalemate between the Afghan government and the Taliban, he explained. — AFP

 ??  ?? A woman walking past heavily damaged buildings in the formerly rebel-held alShaar neighbourh­ood. — AFP photo
A woman walking past heavily damaged buildings in the formerly rebel-held alShaar neighbourh­ood. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia