Houston Chronicle

Fierce battles near final ISIS foothold in eastern Syria

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BEIRUT — Islamic State group militants cornered in their last foothold in eastern Syria fought back with suicide car bombs, snipers and booby traps Monday, slowing Kurdish fighters advancing under the cover of U.S.led coalition airstrikes, Kurdish news agencies and a Syrian war monitor said.

An Italian photograph­er was wounded in the clashes between the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces and the militants holed up in the village of Baghouz, near the border with Iraq, an Italian news agency said.

No one knows exactly how many Islamic State fighters are still holding out in the sliver of territory under attack, although they are estimated to be in the hundreds, most of them foreign fighters. It is also unclear if civilians are still inside, caught under heavy bombardmen­t.

The SDF on Saturday launched its final push to clear the area from ISIS, after months of fighting that saw 20,000 civilians fleeing just in the past few weeks. The numbers have overwhelme­d Kurdish-run camps in northeaste­rn Syria, where humanitari­an conditions are already dire amid a cold winter and meager resources.

The capture of the ISIS-held village of Baghouz and nearby areas would mark the end of a devastatin­g four-year global war to end the ISIS extremists’ territoria­l hold over large parts of Syria and Iraq, where the group establishe­d its selfprocla­imed “caliphate” in 2014.

That in turn, would open the way for U.S. President Donald Trump to begin withdrawin­g U.S. troops from northern Syria as he has promised to do once the Islamic State group has been defeated.

“The U.S. will soon control 100% of ISIS territory in Syria,” Trump tweeted Sunday. He has said repeatedly that he doesn’t want the U.S. to be the world’s policeman and that he intends to bring the 2,000 U.S. troops home.

U.S. officials and Trump’s own military advisers, however, have warned that losing its territoria­l hold does not mean that the Islamic State group is defeated, warning that ISIS could stage a comeback in Syria within six months to a year if the military and counterter­rorism pressure on it is eased.

Gen. Joseph Votel, the commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East, estimated there are between 1,000 and 1,500 ISIS fighters in the small area they still control, but he said others have “dispersed.”

In recent weeks, U.S. officials have said ISIS has lost 99.5 percent of its territory and is holding on to under 2 square miles in Syria. But activists and residents say ISIS still has sleeper cells in Syria and Iraq and is laying the groundwork for an insurgency. Assad Bechara, a Lebanese political analyst, said the Islamic State group is an ideology, not just a military structure, and it cannot be defeated simply by reclaiming territory from the group.

“This (American) pullout will leave a huge vacuum despite the allegation­s of defeating the last pockets of ISIS. This vacuum will increase the internatio­nal and regional struggle for power and influence in Syria,” he said, which in turn may make it easier for the militant group to return.

It is not clear how long the final push to free Baghouz from ISIS will take. Trump said last week he had been told that the full territoria­l conquest to defeat the Islamic State could be completed in the coming week.

 ?? Delil Souleiman / AFP/Getty Images ?? Civilians sit in the back of a truck as they flee the battered Islamic State-held holdout of Baghouz in the Syrian province of Deir Ezzor on Monday.
Delil Souleiman / AFP/Getty Images Civilians sit in the back of a truck as they flee the battered Islamic State-held holdout of Baghouz in the Syrian province of Deir Ezzor on Monday.

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