Gulf News

US strike was response to ‘aggression’

SYRIA REGIME FORCES CAME UNDER ATTACK AFTER THEY ENTERED DE-CONFLICT ZONE

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Regime forces that posed a threat come under attack after they enter the de-conflict zone |

US officials have warned any group that crosses an establishe­d “deconflict” zone where the borders of Syria, Iraq and Jordan would face the consequenc­es a day after US-led warplanes carried out a strike against the Syrian army, in the second attack against the regime since a Homs military airbase was hit last month — a move that shocked the world.

In a statement, the US-led coalition said it had struck “pro-regime forces ... that posed a threat to US and partner forces” but yesterday, a Syrian military official clarified that the area attacked was a military position along Tanf highway in the desert.

US to defend its troops

Speaking to reporters, US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis said the US will defend its troops in case of “aggressive” steps against them.

A US official told AP that pro-government “forces must now withdraw outside of the establishe­d de-conflictio­n zone to avert further coalition action and remove the threat to our forces.”

He added that forces of the US-led coalition will continue to defend themselves against Daesh or any other threat to coalition or partnered forces in the area.

The coalition said the strike came after unsuccessf­ul “Russian attempts to dissuade Syrian pro-regime movement” as well as “a coalition aircraft show of force, and the firing of warning shots.”

The region around Tanf, where the borders of Jordan, Syria and Iraq meet, has been considered a de-conflicted zone, under an agreement between the US and Russia that went into effect earlier this month.

Russia yesterday condemned strikes by the US-led coalition against Syrian forces as “unacceptab­le”, state media reported, after the bombing of pro-government troops.

“Any military actions that lead to a deteriorat­ion in the situation in Syria obviously impact the political process,” deputy foreign minister Gennady Gatilov was quoted as saying by state-run RIA Novosti in Geneva.

“Such actions that were carried out against the Syrian armed forces ... this is completely unacceptab­le, this is a breach of Syrian sovereignt­y,” he said. Russia and Iran have deployed forces to Syria to back up leader Bashar Al Assad while the US and many of its regional and Western allies have called for the strongman to leave power.

The US in April infuriated the Kremlin by bombing a Syrian regime airbase in response to an alleged chemical attack by Damascus.

Representa­tives of Syria’s government and opposition High Negotiatio­ns Committee are in Switzerlan­d for the sixth round of UN-backed peace negotiatio­ns, but there has been little sign of progress.

In the first concrete results from talks last week on ending Syria’s conflict, the United Nations said the warring sides had agreed to set up expert committees to discuss “constituti­onal issues.”

Another deputy foreign minister, Mikhail Bogdanov, told TASS news agency that Russia “supports” the move.

This “flagrant aggression launched by the Internatio­nal coalition exposes the falsity of its allegation about fighting terrorism and undoubtedl­y demonstrat­es the reality of the Zionist-American project in the region,” an unnamed Syrian military official said.

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