The National - News

Assad regime launches drive against ISIS forces in Damascus suburb

▶ Fighting is flaring in areas claimed to have been liberated of militants in December, says David Enders

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The Syrian government has launched an offensive against ISIS-held neighbourh­oods in a Damascus suburb.

The operation, started on Tuesday, comes as the terror group appears to be increasing­ly on the offensive in the country’s east, despite President Bashar Al Assad’s government and its Russian patrons declaring victory over them in December.

Although stripped of most of the land it once controlled in Syria and Iraq, ISIS still holds areas that straddle the border between the two countries and continues to carry out guerrilla attacks on both sides.

On Monday, ISIS-affiliated media announced an attack against a Syrian army checkpoint near the city of Albu Kamal, in addition to a series of assaults on Mr Al Assad’s forces, reportedly killing hundreds and even recapturin­g some territory.

Residents of areas taken back from ISIS last year told

The National that assassinat­ions, bombings and attacks by the group’s fighters remained a threat.

“It is certain that the organisati­on is not far away from the areas it controlled,” said a lawyer from the eastern Syrian city of Deir Al Zour, who asked to remain anonymous.

He said that while he did not support ISIS, the government’s recapture of the area had not been popular with everyone.

Civilians are slowly beginning to come back, he said, “but services are not available in these areas”.

“The forces of the regime and its militias looted everything in the areas they controlled, houses and shops, then burnt them. [The regime] is also pursuing young people of recruitmen­t age for compulsory military service.”

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based group that monitors the country’s seven-year civil war, has recorded the deaths of more than 200 Syrian government troops in the past month in ISIS attacks. It has also reported that the insurgent group still controls some oilwells in the area – at the height of their success, it was oil and gas fields that provided the group with millions in revenue, driving its expansion.

The areas of eastern Syria previously under ISIS control are now split between Russian-backed government forces to the west of the Euphrates River and the Syrian Democratic Forces, a militia supported by the US, on the river’s east side.

The Syrian government forces around Deir Ezzor are an amalgam of Syrian, Iranian, Afghan, Iraqi and Lebanese fighters, as well as Russian troops and military contractor­s.

“We’ve certainly seen some ISIL attacks that have resulted in regime soldiers’ deaths, particular­ly in Albu Kamal,” said Col Ryan Dillon, a spokesman for the US-led coalition fighting ISIS in Iraq and Syria.

While the US air strikes against ISIS are continuing in Syria, American-backed ground operations have stalled since March, when fighters from the largely Kurdish SDF redeployed from positions in eastern Syria to fight a Turkish military incursion farther west, near the predominan­tly Kurdish city of Afrin.

“We as a coalition and the SDF have put up obstacles to contain ISIS in those two locations and are conducting strikes, but [Afrin] has slowed down operations in that area,” Col Dillon said.

Concerned that ISIS is using Syria as a staging ground for attacks in Iraq, Iraqi fighters recently suggested they might cross the border to join Iraqi fighters already fighting alongside the Syrian government in eastern Syria.

Recent attacks forced Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi to admit late last month that the battle against ISIS was in fact far from over despite declaring victory last year.

“We’ve always known that ISIS was not just going to walk away – we’ve always known they’re going to find hiding areas in the desert in Iraq, and even holding out in populated areas,” Col Dillon said.

“They can quietly reconsolid­ate in areas where they are contained. On the western side of the Euphrates, it would be apt to say they operate more freely, because of their ability to transit across the country,” Col Dillon said, referring to territory controlled by the Syrian government and reports that ISIS fighters had moved from eastern to central Syria this month.

“We know that the Iraqis are concerned – they are addressing what is happening in Syria and how it impacts their borders,” Col Dillon said.

 ?? Reuters ?? A Syrian soldier in Eastern Ghouta, in Damascus last month. Government forces have launched an offensive against the ISIS terror group which is resurgent in some areas
Reuters A Syrian soldier in Eastern Ghouta, in Damascus last month. Government forces have launched an offensive against the ISIS terror group which is resurgent in some areas

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