Kuwait Times

Syria army bids to recover losses to IS after deadly US-led raid

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Syrian troops counteratt­acked against the Islamic State group around a key eastern airbase yesterday after a US-led coalition air strike killed scores of soldiers forcing a retreat, military sources said.

The Pentagon said that coalition pilots had believed they were hitting IS and had halted the raid as soon as Damascus ally Moscow informed commanders that army positions were coming under attack. But Damascus reacted angrily to the deadly strike, which forced troops to pull back from two strategic hilltops overlookin­g the besieged airbase on the outskirts of the city of Deir Ezzor. “The Syrian army has returned to the offensive,” a military source told AFP yesterday. “After the American raids, it withdrew from several positions but now it has gone back on the attack.”

A second military source inside Deir Ezzor airbase said that troops had already regained some of the lost ground. “The army has retaken most of its positions on Jabal Therdeh with Russian and Syrian air support,” the source said, referring to one of the two hills lost on Saturday. “The two countries’ air forces bombed the area around the airbase, neighborho­ods held by the jihadists and the road linking Deir Ezzor to Mayadeen,” an ISheld town 45 kilometers to the southeast, the source added.

Retaking the heights around the airbase is vital for the army as control of them would allow IS to fire on all aircraft trying to take off or land. The airbase and adjacent government-held neighborho­ods of the Deir Ezzor city have been under siege since 2012 and have been dependent on resupply by air.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at least 30 jihadists were killed in yesterday’s counteratt­ack by the army. The Britain-based monitoring group said 90 soldiers were killed in Saturday’s air strike, sharply higher than the death toll of 62 given by Moscow on Saturday.

The US ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, voiced regret for the loss of life. “If we determine that we did indeed strike Syrian military personnel, that was not our intention. And we of course regret the loss of life,” she said.

Australia, which said it was one of several coalition countries whose aircraft took part, offered its “condolence­s to the families of any Syrian personnel killed or wounded.”“While Syria remains a dynamic and complex operating environmen­t, Australia would never intentiona­lly target a known Syrian military unit or actively support Daesh (IS),” a statement from the military said yesterday. —AFP

 ??  ?? ALEPPO: Syrian Abu Ahmed (L) and Abu Majd prepare a barrel filled with plastic as part of a refining process to produce fuel on September 10, 2016. —AFP
ALEPPO: Syrian Abu Ahmed (L) and Abu Majd prepare a barrel filled with plastic as part of a refining process to produce fuel on September 10, 2016. —AFP

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