Imperial Valley Press

US forces in Syria seen setting up new front-line positions

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MANBIJ, Syria (AP) — A week ago, there was just a single house where U.S. soldiers had hoisted an American flag on a hill not far from a tense front line in Syria.

On Wednesday, there was a growing fortified position with a perimeter of large sand barriers and barbed wire, a new watch tower and a half-dozen armored vehicles. Even as U.S. President Donald Trump spoke of pulling out of Syria “very soon,” an Associated Press team saw American forces setting up front-line positions outside the strategic northern town of Manbij, west of the Euphrates River.

The area is the scene of a tense standoff. U.S.backed Kurdish-led forces who hold Manbij are facing off against Turkish-backed Syrian fighters.

Turkey has vowed to retake Manbij and other Kurdish-held territory along the Syrian-Turkish border; the U.S. troops stationed here are a key reason why they are holding back. The U.S.-led coalition in Syria said last week that there were no U.S. bases in the area and that U.S. patrols were not fixed in one place.

In response to an AP query, Pentagon spokesman Eric Pahon said the coalition cannot discuss specific movements and locations of forces in Syria.

He said that commanders are delegated the authority and the responsibi­lity to position people and resources needed to accomplish the mission and to protect themselves.

“Occasional modificati­ons to force size would therefore be normal,” Pahon said in an email.

The AP team, which was escorted by Kurdish fighters, saw that the new U.S. outpost was a work in progress.

A half-dozen armored vehicles sat on opposite sides of the outpost, each with a soldier on watch. A couple of soldiers at one end plowed the ground to lay sandbags, while another group worked out at the other end. Inside an observatio­n post atop a roof, a soldier scanned the horizon through binoculars. A forklift was parked near some wooden planks, indicating more work remains to be done. The outpost was clearly visible from a main road, with civilians and a mosque nearby.

A front-line commander in Manbij and a member of the Manbij Military Council, the joint Kurdish-Arab body leading the U.S.-allied forces here, said the post went up a week ago.

“We are 1 kilometer from (the village of) Datat, the front line. There is a new U.S. position constructe­d here. It has been here for seven or eight days here,” said the commander, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with the Kurdish-led force’s regulation­s but goes by the nom de guerre of Ali Manbij.

Previously, the U.S. forces only patrolled the front line and kept one position near Manbij, but now more forces are expected at the new post, the local commander said.

 ??  ?? A U.S. soldier sits on an armored vehicle on a newly installed position, near the tense front line between the U.S-backed Syrian Manbij Military Council and the Turkish-backed fighters, in Manbij, north Syria, on Wednesday. AP PHOTO/HUSSEIN MALLA
A U.S. soldier sits on an armored vehicle on a newly installed position, near the tense front line between the U.S-backed Syrian Manbij Military Council and the Turkish-backed fighters, in Manbij, north Syria, on Wednesday. AP PHOTO/HUSSEIN MALLA

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