The National - News

SYRIAN ARMY PREPARES FOR LAST OFFENSIVE AGAINST ISIL IN DEIR EZZOR

▶ Government troops with Russian air support maintain pressure on extremists

- DAVID ENDERS Beirut

The Syrian government is preparing an offensive against the city of Deir Ezzor, one of ISIL’s last stronghold­s in the country, after a string of victories that have reshaped the conflict.

The announceme­nt of the offensive came after Syrian government troops backed by Russian air power and allied militias broke a nearly year-long siege on a military airport to the west of the city on Monday.

The victory built on the breaking of another siege last week against a nearby military base, one that had lasted for years.

Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, meanwhile, added his voice to the chorus of those claiming victory for Syrian president Bashar Al Assad and his supporters in Syria’s six-year civil war.

“Our martyrs, our wounded, our families and our people change equations and make the history of the region, not the history of Lebanon,” he said.

“We have won the war ... and what remains are sporadic battles.”

The Lebanese militant group has fought on the side of Mr Al Assad’s government since 2013, becoming an essential part of beating back rebels and helping the government reclaim its territory.

Russian Lt Gen Alexander Lapin said yesterday that the Syrian government now controlled 85 per cent of the country. Russia has been providing air support for the government’s forces since 2015.

The claim appeared to be an exaggerati­on. US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces have recently captured much of the city of Raqqa, as well as the surroundin­g area.

Rebels also hold most of Idlib province in north-west Syria and clashes still occur on a daily basis in most of the country’s 13 provinces.

ISIL remains in control of significan­t parts of eastern Syria, and has recently put up stiff resistance against a Syrian government offensive near Hama, in central Syria.

The Syrian government’s offensive will probably bring it into closer proximity with USbacked forces.

The SDF, with the support of US airpower and artillery, is moving towards Deir Ezzor from the north.

The US and Russia are observing a warfree line that approximat­ely follows the line of the Euphrates River, with Russia backing forces on the west side of the river and the US those on the east.

The war-free line could shift in the coming weeks, said Col Ryan Dillon, spokesman for the US-led military coalition in Iraq and Syria.

“We have been in discussion­s with the Russians as to where the line needs to go to now as we push into this ISIL-held territory,” Col Dillon said.

“That line is being drawn on a daily basis, and then we have the telephone line we talk on nearly every day, from ground commanders to air component commanders, to the commander that runs our side, Lt Gen Paul Funk.”

Andrew Tabler, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said the US had indirectly made the Syrian government’s gains possible by helping to negotiate ceasefires in other parts of the country.

“The recent offensive was made possible by the de-escalation agreement in the south-west brokered by the US and Russia,” Mr Tabler said.

“It allowed the regime to withdraw its armoured divisions out towards Deir Ezzor. The difficulty for the regime comes in holding the east.

“The settled tribes and other residents in the Euphrates Valley know that the forces pulling up from the west are not the Assad regime of old, but a new Iranian and Shia-influenced force.”

While an offensive may be imminent, it will not necessaril­y bring about a decisive result.

In the push towards Deir Ezzor through central Homs province in recent months, Syrian government forces recaptured cities that have changed hands more than once.

Underscori­ng that dynamic, government announceme­nts that ISIL was on the verge of defeat in Hama province last week appear to have been premature.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which monitors the conflict from the UK, said on Monday that pockets of ISIL fighters had pushed back against government troops who are trying to secure a stretch of the country’s main motorway.

The Observator­y yesterday also reported that Russian air strikes around Deir Ezzor killed at least 62 civilians in three days of fighting.

The Observator­y said that the strikes had hit camps for displaced people and boats taking civilians across the Euphrates.

“Citizens use ferry boats to travel between the west and the east banks of the Euphrates River, after most of the bridges over the river were shelled,” according to the Observator­y, which has recorded almost 500,000 civilian and combatant deaths in the conflict.

Our martyrs, wounded and our people make the history of the region, not the history of Lebanon HASSAN NASRALLAH Hizbollah

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates