Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S.-backed forces breach wall of Raqqa’s Old City

Battle still rages for ISIS capital in Syria

- By Liz Sly

BEIRUT — U.S. backed fighters have breached the ancient wall of the Islamic State’s selfprocla­imed capital, the Syrian city of Raqqa, marking new progress in the battle to rout the militants from their most important stronghold­s, the U.S. military said Tuesday.

Arab and Kurdish troops with the Syrian Democratic Forces stormed into the Old City of Raqqa overnight Monday after U.S. warplanes targeted two sections of its eighthth-century wall, blasting holes that enabled fighters to funnel their way through the gaps, according to the U.S. military.

But their foothold in the neighborho­od, one of the city’s most densely populated, does not mean the 4-week-old battle for control of Raqqa is nearing a conclusion, U.S. officials said.

Unlike in Mosul, Iraq, where the Old City has been the scene of the Islamic State’s last stand after nearly nine months of fighting, Raqqa’s Old City is one of the first central city neighborho­ods to be breached by the advancing forces, said Col. Ryan Dillon, the U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad.

“Being in the Old City in Raqqa does not mean the same thing as it does in Mosul, where the Old City was the last bastion for ISIS,” Dillon said, using an acronym for the Islamic State. The neighborho­od also is one of the areas Islamic State fighters had expected to defend most fiercely, relying on the city wall to provide cover and focusing their defenses around two existing breaches.

Had the Syrian Democratic Forces fighters attempted to storm the area through those gaps, they would have encountere­d an array of heavy machine guns, artillery, snipers, mines, booby traps and car bombs, Dillon said. By blowing up two different sections of the wall, U.S. warplanes enabled them to bypass those, he said.

By averting a battle for control of the walls, the attack also may have helped preserve the historic monument, the military statement said.

Known as the Rafiqa wall, the structure is one of the last remaining monuments of the headquarte­rs of the Abbassid caliphate, which was briefly seated in Raqqa before relocating to Baghdad.

It was in part because of its historical associatio­n with the ancient caliphate that the Islamic State declared Raqqa, the first major city its forces conquered, to be the capital of its selfprocla­imed copy of the ancient caliphate it hoped to form.

The advances in Raqqa come as the Islamic State faces defeat in the streets of Mosul, Iraq. A final declaratio­n of victory could be just days away Dillon said.

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