Times of Oman

US-led raids hit IS battling Syrian rebels, Al Qaeda

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BEIRUT: US-led aircraft bombed IS militant group fighters as they battled rival Syrian rebels, including Al Qaeda loyalists, for the first time overnight, a monitoring group said on Sunday.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitor described the raids in northern Syria’s Aleppo as an interventi­on on the side of the rival rebels, even though they include forces that have previously been targeted by US-led strikes. “The coalition carried out at least four strikes overnight targeting IS positions in the town of Suran,” the Britainbas­ed group said.

“It’s the first time that the internatio­nal coalition has supported non-Kurdish opposition forces fighting the IS,” Observator­y director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

He said at least eight IS fighters were killed in the strikes and another 20 were injured.

IS seized control of Suran a week ago, and has since been fighting an alliance of hardline rebels including Al Qaeda affiliate Al Nusra Front and the Ahrar Al Sham movement in the surroundin­g area.

Targeted

Both Al Nusra and Ahrar Al Sham have been targeted in USled raids, including as recently as May 20, when a strike in Aleppo province killed 15 Al Nusra fighters. Like IS, Al Nusra is blackliste­d as a “terrorist organisati­on” by Washington. IS has been seeking to expand its territory by seizing the Aleppo province towns of Marea and Azaz, which lie on key supply routes for the rival rebels.

Online, IS supporters accused Al Nusra and Ahrar Al Sham of collaborat­ing with the US-led coalition, denouncing them as “America’s spies” and collaborat­ors with the “crusader coalition”.

Despite sharing a militant ideology, Al Nusra and IS are fierce rivals, with IS seeking to expand in territory it holds in Syria and Iraq. Al Nusra pledges allegiance to Al Qaeda chief Ayman Al Zawahri, but has for now confined its ambitions to Syria and has allied with conservati­ve hardline groups fighting the regime and IS.

Air campaign

The US-led coalition began its air campaign in Syria last September but the majority of its strikes have been confined to areas where IS has undisputed control or is battling Kurdish forces.

Syria’s conflict began in March 2011 with anti-government demonstrat­ions but descended into a war after a regime crackdown.

It has evolved into a complex battle with multiple fronts, and involving the regime, rebels, militants and Kurdish forces.

On Sunday in northeaste­rn Syria, the Observator­y and Syrian state media said government troops had pushed IS fighters back from Hasakeh city after fierce fighting.

IS began an assault on city, which is capital of the province of the same name, on May 30, that has left 119 dead, among them 71 regime forces and 48 IS fighters, 11 of them suicide bombers.

By Thursday IS had advanced to the city’s southern entrance.

“IS, which has been at the southern entrance of the city since Thursday, was forced to pull back two kilometres after fierce combat with regime forces,” the Britain-based monitor said.

Syria’s official SANA news agency also reported the fighting, saying the army had retaken several positions captured by IS in recent days, including an electricit­y station and a prison being used as a military base.

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