USA TODAY US Edition

ISIS ‘caliphate’ near collapse as forces move to retake Raqqa

- Jim Michaels

The end for the Islamic State’s self-proclaimed caliphate is near, three years after the terrorist group announced its vision for creating a nation state across Iraq, Syria and the wider region.

U.S.-backed forces are on the verge of capturing the group’s home base, Raqqa, Syria, the last major city it still holds.

A U.S.-led coalition has captured 70% of Raqqa, prompting rare surrenders by some fighters for the Islamic State, or ISIS, the coalition said.

The number of fighters remaining in the city is between 500 and 900, down from 3,500 at the start of the offensive in June, the coalition said.

Still, the remaining fighters have put up a stiff resistance in dense neighborho­ods, which have been packed with hidden explosives. The militants also have made extensive use of tunnels, suicide bombers and truck and car bombs.

Over the past two months, about 30 fighters have surrendere­d to the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

The surrenders suggest ISIS is struggling and is unable to prevent fighters and their families from fleeing, said Army Col. Ryan Dillon, a U.S. military spokesman.

Normally, the leaders prevent defections by executing those who try to escape, but the leadership may now be in disarray.

Foreign fighters are the most committed to ISIS, unlike local recruits who often are forced into its ranks or lured for pay.

Some who surrendere­d were clutching leaflets dropped by coalition aircraft explaining how to escape the fighting.

The SDF is backed by coalition airstrikes, artillery and several hundred advisers.

The Raqqa offensive follows another major campaign by U.S.backed forces to recapture Mosul, which was retaken in July after more than six months of fighting.

Even after the expected fall of Raqqa in coming weeks, small pockets of resistance remain, mainly in a string of towns along the Euphrates River from Syria to western Iraq.

These rural area will be difficult to recapture. “You can’t really just contain the whole Euphrates River valley and starve them out,” said Army Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, who recently stepped down as the top coalition commander for Iraq and Syria. “It’s too big.”

 ?? HUSSEIN MALLA, AP ?? U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces fighters are close to retaking Raqqa, Syria, from Islamic State militants. Remaining militants are mostly held to dense neighborho­ods.
HUSSEIN MALLA, AP U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces fighters are close to retaking Raqqa, Syria, from Islamic State militants. Remaining militants are mostly held to dense neighborho­ods.

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