Albuquerque Journal

Syria’s biggest oil field captured from the IS

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BEIRUT — U.S.-backed forces seized control of Syria’s biggest oil field on Sunday, accelerati­ng a race with the Syrian government and its Russian and Iranian allies to take over the last major stronghold­s of the Islamic State in the east of the country.

Kurds and Arabs fighting under the umbrella of the Syrian Democratic Forces captured the al-Omar oil field in Deir al-Zour province after charging about 60 miles through the desert and launching a surprise assault, according to U.S. military and SDF officials.

The capture of the oil field came five days after the SDF declared victory in the Islamic State’s de facto capital, Raqqa, freeing up forces for what is expected to be an intensifie­d effort to drive the militants out of their remaining positions in neighborin­g Deir al-Zour, said Col. Ryan Dillon, a spokesman for the U.S. military.

Deir al-Zour is where most of Syria’s oil is located, and it is emerging as a key front in the wider war for influence in the Middle East, between the United States and its allies and the Iranian and Russian alliance that is backing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

The capture of al-Omar gives the Kurdish-led SDF control over a vital strategic asset that could serve to give it leverage in any future negotiatio­ns over the status of Kurds in Syria and to fund the fledgling autonomous region they are building in northeaste­rn Syria.

It also risks triggering a confrontat­ion with the Syrian government, potentiall­y drawing the United States into a fight with Syria, Russia and Iran.

Syrian government loyalists advancing from the west had reached the outskirts of al-Omar only days before and had seemed poised to take the oil field until the SDF launched its offensive. The oil field contains roughly a quarter of Syria’s oil reserves and had been a significan­t source of income for the Islamic State as it attempted to build a statelike structure in the vast areas it once controlled in Iraq and Syria.

The surprise assault was intended to leave the militant group no time to sabotage the oil field’s infrastruc­ture, as it typically does when retreating from important areas, Dillon said. The U.S. military provided support in the form of intelligen­ce and combat advice, he said. But Dillon declined to say whether U.S. Special Operations forces deployed in Syria alongside the SDF had participat­ed in the operation. “We put our forces where they need to be to support our partners,” he said.

Al-Omar was taken without “significan­t damage” to the oil facilities there, according to a statement issued by Liliwe Abdullah, a spokesman for the SDF operation. SDF fighters are now battling with Islamic State holdouts who retreated to a workers’ housing complex nearby, the statement added.

Dillon said the U.S. military and its allies are not in a race with the Syrian government to take territory from the rapidly disintegra­ting forces of the Islamic State. The battle there, nonetheles­s, is shaping up as a competitio­n between rival powers for control over an area that contains most of Syria’s oil reserves and a key regional trade route.

The next major prize is the town of Bukamal, which straddles the highway linking the Iraqi capital of Baghdad to the Syrian capital of Damascus.

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