Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Islamic State back in Palmyra in reversal of steady losses

- By LIZ SLY

BEIRUT — Islamic State militants fought their way back into the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra on Saturday nine months after they were driven out by Syrian government forces, in a reminder that the group is still a force to be reckoned with despite major losses of territory elsewhere.

The advance into Palmyra seemed set to reverse a year of steady defeats for Islamic State fighters and came three days after a big offensive launched from three directions in the surroundin­g desert.

Palmyra is the site of an ancient Roman complex of temples that is considered one of the world’s archaeolog­ical treasures, and work had begun on restoring some of the many ruins that were blown up during the Islamic State’s 10-month occupation of the city.

It is also the one place where Russian military interventi­on had made a big difference in the fight against the Islamic State. Russian airstrikes facilitate­d the Syrian government’s recapture of Palmyra in March, and in May the Russian military escorted a planeload of journalist­s on a victory tour of the city.

Syrian activists and human rights monitors said Islamic State fighters entered the city itself late afternoon Saturday after government defenses collapsed. A Syrian activist from Palmyra who uses the name Khaled al-Homsi said that by late evening the militants controlled most of the city. Islamic State fighters were detaining young men and looting stores of weapons, he said.

The offensive was aided by 200 Islamic State fighters who had made their way to the area from the Iraqi city of Mosul, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

With street fighting continuing, it remained unclear whether the militants would be able fully to recapture the city. Russia Today quoted a Syrian military official as saying the Syrian government still has forces inside Palmyra and has not fully lost control despite what the official described as “fierce clashes.”

Islamic State has demonstrat­ed a pattern in the past of launching spectacula­r attacks that catch its enemies unaware, only to be driven back once the defendants regroup.

If the militants were to fully regain control of Palmyra, it would represent a startling reversal of 18 months of setbacks and suggest that the outright defeat of the group may still be a long way away. The Islamic State has not made any significan­t advances in either Syria or Iraq since they captured Palmyra and the Iraqi city of Ramadi in May 2015, and it has lost vast swaths of territory in both countries, including Palmyra and Ramadi.

The Palmyra advance coincides with a major U.S.-backed offensive by the Iraqi army for Mosul, where hopes for a swift victory are fading as the militants put up a stiff fight.

The U.S. military announced Saturday that it was sending an additional 200 special operations troops to northern Syria to help the mostly Kurdish force that is battling the militants there.

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