ISIS suicide attacks highlight perils in Syria
Fake surrender led to multiple deaths in volatile enclave
OUTSIDE BAGHOUZ, Syria — The three Islamic State fighters emerged from the group’s last bastion in eastern Syria on Friday acting as though they wanted to surrender, but when they reached the U.S.-backed forces that have them surrounded they blew themselves up, killing six people.
The attacks underscored the struggles faced by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces as they try to flush the extremists out of a tent camp in eastern Syria built over a labyrinth of caves and tunnels — all that remains of a self-declared caliphate that once sprawled across large parts of Syria and neighboring Iraq.
SDF spokesman Mustafa Bali tweeted that the six killed were among dozens of civilians fleeing the ISIS-held area in the village of Baghouz, on the east bank of the Euphrates River. He said several other people were wounded, including three SDF fighters. The attacks took place at or near a crossing point where evacuees are searched.
Thousands of civilians have left the ISIS-held area in recent weeks and some fighters have surrendered. But the extremists are still putting up fierce resistance, and the SDF says it has slowed its operations out of concern for civilians and scores of prisoners held by the militants.
Friday’s attacks underscore how risky the operations are, and how it can be difficult for forces to tell civilians from combatants.
An SDF official who goes by his nom de guerre, Ciyager Amed, said ISIS militants are still holding some 300 prisoners, both civilians and SDF fighters, adding that their fate is unknown.
The military campaign to uproot the militants from the eastern banks of the Euphrates River began in September, pushing them down toward this last corner in Baghouz, near the Iraqi border. The military operation has been halted several times since Feb. 12 as the SDF said a large number of civilians and hostages were holed up in the ISIS-held territory. This week, the SDF resumed its final push before reducing pressure due to strong resistance from the extremists and the surrender of hundreds of ISIS fighters and family members.
Amed said there are no negotiations underway to secure the prisoners’ release.
On Friday the situation was mostly quiet as aircraft flew over the area controlled by ISIS.
The capture of the last pocket still held by ISIS fighters in Baghouz would mark the end of a devastating four-year global campaign to end the extremist group’s hold on territory in Syria and Iraq — a self-declared caliphate that at the height of the group’s power in 2014 sprawled across nearly a third of both countries.
Also Friday, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights marked the eighth anniversary of the conflict by reporting that more than 570,000 people have been killed since Mar. 15, 2011. The conflict began with prodemocracy protests and escalated into a civil war after a fierce government crackdown and the rise of an insurgency.
Six million people have fled the country while a similar number are internally displaced.