The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Mosul to Raqqa? Risky battle against IS

- By Sarah El Deeb

BEIRUT » Simultaneo­us attacks on the Islamic State-held cities of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa, the de facto capital of the militant group’s selfprocla­imed caliphate across the border in Syria, would make military sense: such assaults would make it harder for the extremists to move reinforcem­ents and deny them a safe haven.

When preparing for the Mosul operations this summer, U.S. officials said a push against IS in Raqqa could be almost simultaneo­us, putting additional pressure on the group by stretching its ability to defend two stronghold­s at once.

While the long-awaited Mosul offensive began earlier this week, there’s no sign of an imminent campaign against Raqqa.

Perhaps that’s because Syria is proving to be a more daunting terrain than Iraq. Going after ISheld Raqqa would mean moving deeper into an explosive mix of regional and internatio­nal rivalries, including a proxy war that has pitted the United States against Russia and its allies.

The fight against IS in northeaste­rn Syria also underlines a U.S. reliance on its one effective partner there— Syria’s Kurds. Such an alliance for a Raqqa campaign threatens to ignite a new conflict, with another U.S. partner, NATO member Turkey, and its allied Syrian rebels.

In Iraq, the U.S. offers logistical and other support for the military in its fight against IS.

In Syria, Washington views President Bashar Assad’s government as illegitima­te and cannot partner with him.

Even if IS were to be driven out of Raqqa, finding someone to administer the city would be problemati­c, said Noah Bonsey, a Syria expert with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think tank.

Mosul is the largest city under IS control, with an estimated population of up to one million and no more than 10,000 fighters. Oil-rich Raqqa is home to nearly 200,000 people, most Sunni Arabs, and an estimated 5,000 militants.

Bonsey said retaking Raqqa is key to defeating IS militarily, a U.S. priority, but that among the warring factions in Syria “everybody else has other geostrateg­ic interests that take higher priority.”

In recent weeks, U.S.-led coalition airstrikes targeted half a dozen bridges in Syria’s largely IS-controlled Deir el-Zour province between Raqqa and the Iraqi border. The strikes were aimed at cutting the road between Iraq and Syria for fleeing militants.

Activist Hussam Eesa reported increased IS activity in Raqqa, including more night-time checkpoint­s, and said some wounded and IS families arrived from Mosul before the start of the offensive. He said there was no sign of panic in Raqqa. Most fortificat­ions in Raqqa, such as trenches, were built long ago, said Eesa, who is not in the city and whose group, Raqqa Is Being Slaughtere­d Silently, relies on leaked reports from residents.

Raqqa could serve as a refuge for IS fighters fleeing Mosul, even if roads are harder to access, said Jennifer Cafarella of the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War. Retreating fighters could also hide among fleeing civilians, or travel in small groups to evade coalition aircraft, she said. Others could withdraw to desert areas between Syria and Iraq for staging future attacks.

Since the summer’s discussion­s in Washington about a possible double-strike against IS, Turkey has entered the fray. Starting in August, Ankara has backed Syrian opposition fighters with tanks and aircraft.

This has complicate­d planning for a possible Raqqa campaign and threatened America’s main ally on the ground, the Kurds.

The rivalries are dangerous because IS is deft at exploiting divisions among its enemies, said Cafarella.

Kurdish fighters, mostly the well-trained and highly organized People’s Protection Units, or YPG, have been the U.S. partner in the anti-IS fight in Syria since 2015 when they freed the town of Kobani.

In return for leading the battle for Raqqa, the Kurds demand to be armed by the U.S. and to win political recognitio­n of their right to self-rule.

That would enrage Ankara, which considers the Syrian Kurdish forces as an offshoot of its domestic rebels it deems a terrorist group.

Cafarella said directly arming the Kurdish forces would simplify logistics during planning for a major offensive.

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 ?? BRAM JANSSEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A Peshmerga convoy drives towards a frontline in Khazer, about 19 miles east of Mosul, Iraq on Oct. 17.
BRAM JANSSEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A Peshmerga convoy drives towards a frontline in Khazer, about 19 miles east of Mosul, Iraq on Oct. 17.

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