Arab News

Syrian regime says it holds fifth of key desert territory

Assad army has completed ‘first phase’ of Badiya operations

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DAMASCUS: Syrian regime forces now hold more than a fifth of the country’s strategic desert, the army said Saturday, after reaching the eastern border with Iraq for the first time since 2015.

The desert, known as “Badiya,” extends over some 90,000 sq km from central Syria to the borders with Iraq and Jordan to the east and southeast.

Since 2015, much of the Badiya has been held by Daesh, but Syria’s army has been chipping away at it for months.

On Friday, they reached the country’s eastern frontier with Iraq for the first time in two years.

“In cooperatio­n with our allies, our units have captured a large number of locations and strategic positions in the Badiya, amounting to an area of 20,000 square kilometers,” the general command of the army said on Saturday.

“This important achievemen­t represents a strategic shift in the fight against terrorism and a launching pad to broaden military operations in the Badiya and along the borders with Iraq,” said the statement, distribute­d on state media.

The army had thus completed the “first phase” of its Badiya operations, the statement said.

State news agency SANA had reported on Friday that army units set up positions northeast of the Al-Tanaf garrison, currently used by the US-led coalition bombing Daesh, to train Syrian fighters to fight the militants.

The coalition has establishe­d a “de-conflictio­n” zone extending 55 km from the garrison, in which proregime and allied Russian forces are not supposed to operate.

The US-led alliance has in recent weeks conducted three strikes against pro-regime forces it deemed to be threatenin­g Al-Tanaf.

On Thursday, a US jet shot down a pro-regime combat drone that fired what turned out to be a dud bomb at US-led coalition forces close to Al-Tanaf.

Syria’s regime on Saturday accused the coalition of carrying out the bombing raids in an attempt to slow the regime’s fight against Daesh.

 ??  ?? Displaced Syrians queue at a Kurdish-controlled checkpoint between the opposition-held town of Azaz in northern Syria and the city of Afrin, along Syria's northern border with Turkey, as they attempt to cross on Friday. (AFP)
Displaced Syrians queue at a Kurdish-controlled checkpoint between the opposition-held town of Azaz in northern Syria and the city of Afrin, along Syria's northern border with Turkey, as they attempt to cross on Friday. (AFP)

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