Las Vegas Review-Journal

Syria strike has U.S. in confabs with Russians

- By Thomas Gibbons-neff The Washington Post

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.

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