The Scotsman

IS ‘caliphate’ crumbles as city stronghold­s in Iraq and Syria liberated

- By ALBERT AJI and ZEINA KARAM

The Syrian army has liberated the long-contested eastern city of Deir el-zour from the Islamic State (IS) group, marking another defeat of the extremists as their self-proclaimed caliphate crumbles.

Almost all IS urban stronghold­s in Syria and Iraq have now been lost.

The recapture of Deir elzour on the west bank of the Euphrates River is another victoryfor­presidentb­asharalass­ad’s forces, though largely symbolic in the Syrian military’s bigger fight to capture most of the oil-rich province along the border with Iraq.

Deirel-zour,whichhadbe­en divided into a government­held and an Is-held part for nearly three years, is the largest city in eastern Syria and the capital of the province with the same name. It is also the largest to be recaptured by the Syrian government from IS. Syrian army spokesman General Ali Mayhoub declared victory in Deir elzour, describing it as the “last phase” in the military’s campaign toward the complete annihilati­on of IS in Syria.

His statement, read on Syrian state TV, hailed the city’s recapture as a strategic win. He noted the captured city’s location on a crossroad linking the country’s eastern, northern and central regions, as well as an “oil and gas reservoir” – a reference to the province.

“With the loss of Deir elzour, Daesh [another name for IS] loses its ability to lead terrorist operations by its militants who are now isolated and encircled eastern countrysid­e of the city,” Gen Mayhoub said.

The extremist group has lost more than 90 per cent of the territory it once held in Iraq and Syria at the height of its power in 2014 and 2015.

Those losses include Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in northern Syria.

The tactical blow comes as Iraqi forces and allied Shiite militia are chasing IS remnants inside the town of alqaim on the Iraqi side of the border.

The militants, routed from one urban stronghold after another, have recently been moving deeper into Syria’s remote desert. Experts said theywerere­groupingan­dpreparing to return to guerrillas­tyle attacks, including scattered hit-and-run and suicide bombings.

In a statement, the Syrian military said it was now in full control of the city after a week-long campaign carried out with allied forces.

It also said their army units were now removing booby traps and mines which had been left behind by the extremist group in the city.

Syrian government forces and their pro-government allies first broke the militant group’s siege of their part of the city in September in a Russian-backed offensive.

newsdeskts@scotsman.com

 ?? PICTURE: AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A Syrian government forces’ tank fires rounds in the eastern city of Deir el-zour during an operation to liberate the city from Islamic State
PICTURE: AFP/GETTY IMAGES A Syrian government forces’ tank fires rounds in the eastern city of Deir el-zour during an operation to liberate the city from Islamic State

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