Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russians fire missiles into Syria at ISIS

- NATALIYA VASILYEVA

ABOARD THE ADMIRAL ESSEN — Russia fired a salvo of cruise missiles from the Mediterran­ean on Thursday and said they struck Islamic State targets in eastern Syria, where activists said at least 20 civilians were killed in what they described as a “fanatical” bombardmen­t.

The activists blamed some of the attack on Russia and some on the United States.

It was not clear whether there was a connection between the Russian military strikes and the activists’ accounts. It is often difficult to verify conflictin­g claims in the aftermath of attacks in Syria’s civil war, now in its seventh year.

The seven Kalibr cruise missiles, launched from the submarines Veliky Novgorod and Kolpino, hit Islamic State installati­ons in Deir el-Zour province, the Russian Defense Ministry said. The province is where forces backed separately by Washington and Moscow are racing to seize territory in the jihadist group’s shrinking Euphrates River valley domain.

But Turkey-based activist Omar Abou Layla said their contacts reported “fanatical” levels of bombardmen­t on three Islamic State-held towns and villages along the valley — far more than could be accounted for by seven missiles — including an attack on the national hospital in the Islamic State stronghold of al-Mayadeen, where six civilians were reported killed. Abou Layla put the toll at 20 killed across the province. He added that the provincial capital, also called Deir el-Zour, suffered heavy airstrikes as well.

Russian-backed pro-government forces have been on the offensive to take back the city after breaking an Islamic State siege there last week. It was the first time reinforcem­ents were able to reach the city in nearly three years.

The Britain- based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at least 39 people were killed and over 100 wounded in strikes in the river valley, including some against hospitals and ferry crossings. The monitoring group said the U.S.-led internatio­nal coalition, which is supporting nongovernm­ent forces, was behind some of the strikes.

It has been impossible to verify the claims independen­tly. Russia and the Syrian government only allows journalist­s into the country on carefully orchestrat­ed media tours meant to showcase their might and legitimacy in the conflict; the U.S. does not accept embedded journalist­s at all.

With pro- government forces already inside the city of Deir el-Zour, the chief U.S. partners in Syria — the Syrian Democratic Forces — began their own campaign to take what they can in the valley.

All sides say they are fighting terrorists in the energy-rich region that borders Iraq.

Activists said the campaigns are killing scores of civilians. The Observator­y said it has documented 106 civilian deaths in airstrikes since Sunday; Abou Layla said his organizati­on, Deir Ezzor 24, has recorded 90 fatalities in the same period.

“We believe they are trying to finish the Deir el-Zour battle as quickly as possible,” Abou Layla said of Russia, citing pressure to capture the Euphrates River valley before the U.S. partners establish a foothold.

Aboard Russia’s frigate Admiral Essen, journalist­s watched as the two Kiloclass submarines surfaced to launch the missiles, whose contrails gashed the clear blue sky.

The missiles hit southeast of Deir el-Zour, destroying a command center, a communicat­ions hub and an ammunition depot, killing an unspecifie­d number of Islamic State fighters, said Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v.

Russia has provided military support for Syrian President Bashar Assad since 2015.

The militants in Deir elZour city are surrounded by Syrian troops on three sides, with their backs to the Euphrates River. Government forces control more than 60 percent of the city, which is north of the Euphrates.

U.S.-backed Syrian forces, meanwhile, are advancing in the surroundin­g province from the east and north, on the other side of the river.

Bassem Aziz, a spokesman for the U.S.-backed and Kurdishled Syrian Democratic Forces, said his troops took control of an industrial area east of the river, a few miles from the government troops.

Overnight, a convoy of Islamic State militants and their relatives being evacuated crossed into Deir el-Zour from a desert area in central Syria, ending a standoff with the coalition.

The evacuation, negotiated by Lebanon’s Hezbollah group, removed the militants from the Syria-Lebanon border but angered Iraq and the U.S., which said the fighters should have been killed on the battlefiel­d, not moved to the Iraq border.

 ?? AP Photo ?? Soldiers distribute Russian humanitari­an aid Wednesday at the checkpoint of the de-escalation zones near Homs, Syria.
AP Photo Soldiers distribute Russian humanitari­an aid Wednesday at the checkpoint of the de-escalation zones near Homs, Syria.
 ??  ?? On the Web Islamic State nwadg.com/ islamicsta­te
On the Web Islamic State nwadg.com/ islamicsta­te

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