Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S.-backed Kurdish forces capture Syrian air base from ISIS

Stronghold held by militants since 2014

- By Phillip Issa

BEIRUT — U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish forces captured a strategica­lly important air base from Islamic State militants in north Syria on Sunday in the first major victory for the group since the U.S. airlifted the forces behind enemy lines four days ago.

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces announced they had captured the Tabqa air base, 28 miles west of Raqqa, the Islamic State group’s de facto capital in Syria.

The U.S., which has provided air and ground support to the SDF, ferried hundreds of SDF forces, as well as U.S. military advisers and U.S. artillery, behind Islamic State lines earlier this week.

The airlift was a major developmen­t to the SDF’s multi-front campaign to bear down on Raqqa, as U.S.-backed Iraqi forces simultaneo­usly press their assault to seize Mosul from the militants, in neighborin­g Iraq. SDF forces are within 6 miles of Raqqa from the north.

Tabqa air base was captured by Islamic State militants from the Syrian government in August 2014. Shortly afterward, the group announced it had killed about 200 government soldiers at the base, in a mass killing recorded and distribute­d on video over social media.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group also reported the SDF advance.

Meanwhile there were conflictin­g reports over whether civilians had begun evacuating Raqqa due to concerns over the stability of the nearby Tabqa Dam.

The militants said U.S.-led coalition airstrikes had locked up the dam’s gates, causing the water level behind it to rise. The activist group Raqqa is Being Slaughtere­d Silently reported that IS had ordered Raqqa residents to evacuate, though without their furniture. Tabqa Dam is 25 miles upstream of Raqqa on the Euphrates River.

U.S.-led coalition forces said the dam was structural­ly sound.

U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish forces were in control of a spillway north of the dam “which can be used to alleviate pressure on the dam if need be,” the coalition said in a letter to The Associated Press.

The coalition says the dam has not been structural­ly damaged, to its knowledge, and says it has not targeted the dam.

The Observator­y said there were no evacuation­s happening from Raqqa, as did the activist-run Raqqa 24 media center.

Raqqa 24 said engineers employed by the militants had restored power to the dam’s gates.

The Syrian National Coalition said in a statement that it was “increasing­ly concerned” about civilian casualties in the campaign against the extremist group. The exiled opposition coalition is taking part in U.N.mediated talks in Geneva.

The SNC said it believed coalition forces were behind an airstrike that killed at least 30 civilians sheltering in a school in the countrysid­e outside Raqqa on March 21. The coalition has said it is investigat­ing.

The U.S. has provided substantia­l air and ground support to the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, who are closing in on Raqqa as well as the Tabqa Dam.

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