Syria strike has U.S. in confabs with Russians
OSLO, Norway — The Pentagon is taking additional steps to ensure that U.S. and Russian battlefield commanders are able to directly communicate with one another after an airstrike on U.S. proxy forces near Deir al-zour, Syria, that wounded several fighters Saturday, the United States’ highest-ranking military officer said.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, said Sunday that deconfliction between the United States and Russia “didn’t work” when Syrian and Russian aircraft bombed U.s.-backed Syrian fighters battling the Islamic State east of the Euphrates River.
Russia has denied participating in the strike, despite a U.S. statement Saturday that specifically indicated that Russian aircraft took part in the bombing.
During a Saturday night phone call with his Russian counterpart, Gen. Valery Geramisov, Dunford proposed that the countries’ battlefield commanders in charge of forces in Syria could use the deconfliction line established in 2015 to “address the fact that the enemy moves freely back and forth across the Euphrates River,” he said.
In the past, the deconfliction line was primarily staffed by a Russian and an American colonel responsible for alerting each other about their countries’ air operations, but now with the commander of the U.s.-led coalition, Lt. Gen. Paul Funk, and Col. Gen. Sergei Surovikin in communication, the two countries are likely to have a better understanding of where their forces are arrayed.