The Borneo Post

IS hits Syria army with deadliest attacks since fall of ‘caliphate’

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BEIRUT: Islamic State group jihadists have killed 35 proDamascu­s fighters in Syria, in what a monitoring group described yesterday as their deadliest operation since the fall of the “caliphate”.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said four senior Syrian army officers were among the troops and allied militiamen killed in the desert east of Homs province over the past 48 hours.

The Amaq propaganda arm of IS, which lost the last vestige of its ‘caliphate’ to Kurdish-led forces last month but retains desert and mountain hideouts in both Syria and Iraq, said its fighters carried out the operation.

Another eight soldiers and militiamen, including two officers, were killed in a separate attack in neighbouri­ng Deir Ezzor province on Thursday night, the Observator­y said.

The attack targeted a desert village south of the city of Mayadeen, upstream from the stretch of the Euphrates Valley where IS made a desperate last stand for its ‘caliphate’, the Britain-based war monitor said.

Observator­y chief Rami Abdel Rahman described it as the “biggest attack and the highest death toll among regime forces since the caliphate was declared defeated”.

Six IS fighters were killed in the clashes, the Observator­y said.

Amaq said that IS had launched its assault on Thursday evening after government forces tried to track down its fighters.

The vast Syrian desert, known in Arabic as the Badia, stretches all the way from the capital Damascus and the cities of Homs and Hama to its north to the Euphrates Valley near the Iraq border, where the ‘caliphate’ was defeated in the village of Baghouz last month.

Commanders of the US-led coalition, which provided air and artillery support for the Kurdishled operation, have warned repeatedly that the jihadists’ loss of their last piece of territory did not mean their eliminatio­n as a fighting force. — AFP

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