The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S.-led attack kills Russians in Syria

No direct fighting between nations’ forces, U.S. says.

- Ivan Nechepuren­ko, Neil Macfarquha­r and Thomas Gibbons Neff

MOSCOW — Four Russian nationals, and perhaps dozens more, were killed in fighting between pro-government forces in eastern Syria and members of the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State, according to Russian and Syrian officials.

A Syrian military officer said that about 100 Syrian soldiers had been killed in the fighting on Feb. 7 and 8, but news about Russian casualties has dribbled out only slowly, through Russian news organizati­ons and social media.

Much about the attack and the associated casualties has been obscured in the fog of war. For reasons that remain unclear, Syrian government troops and some Russian nationals appear to have attacked a coalition position, near Al Tabiyeh, Syria.

The attack occurred in the vicinity of Deir el-Zour, a strategic, oil-rich territory that is coveted by the Syrians. Most of the fatalities were attributed to a U.S. airstrike on enemy columns that was

called in by U.S.-backed Kurdish soldiers who believed they were under attack.

At no point, a U.S. military spokesman said, was there any chance of direct conflict between U.S. and Russian forces.

“Coalition officials were in regular communicat­ion with Russian counterpar­ts before, during and after the thwarted, unprovoked attack,” according to Col. Ryan S. Dillon, a spokesman for the U.S. military. “Russian officials assured coalition officials they would not engage coalition forces in the vicinity.”

The Kremlin — seeking to play down its involvemen­t in the fighting in Syria and seemingly hoping to avoid escalating tensions with the United States — has sidesteppe­d questions about the episode, even as it faces rare criticism at home over its failure to acknowledg­e the deaths of Russians in Syria.

It has stressed repeatedly since last Wednesday that no members of the Russian armed forces were killed, and that any Russians fighting alongside the Syrians were mercenarie­s.

“We only handle the data that concerns Russian forces servicemen,” Dmitry S.

Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said at a news briefing on Tuesday. “We don’t have data about other Russians who could be in Syria.”

The Kremlin said much the same about the nature of the forces in Crimea and eastern Ukraine in 2014, however, claiming they were volunteers and men on vacation, only to admit later that they were regular soldiers.

President Vladimir Putin has said at least three times since 2016 that combat operations in Syria were winding down, including once during a surprise visit to a Russian air base in Syria last December. Yet there are hundreds if not thousands of contract soldiers in Syria whom the Russian government has never acknowledg­ed.

They were deployed both to help keep the official cost down and to avoid reports of casualties, especially with a March presidenti­al election in Russia fast approachin­g. Even though the Kremlin enacted a law during the Ukraine crisis in 2015 to make battlefiel­d casualties a secret, the funerals for regular soldiers killed in combat need to be more official than those for mercenarie­s, and are thus difficult to hide.

 ?? MAURICIO LIMA / NEW YORK TIMES ?? U.S. soldiers command a post outside Manbij, Syria, last week. There are reports of dozens of Russian nationals killed in fighting between pro-government forces in Syria and the U.S.-led coalition.
MAURICIO LIMA / NEW YORK TIMES U.S. soldiers command a post outside Manbij, Syria, last week. There are reports of dozens of Russian nationals killed in fighting between pro-government forces in Syria and the U.S.-led coalition.

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