Syria offensive to cut IS supply route launched

Special forces from the Syria Democratic Forces gather in Haj Hussein village, after taking control of it from Islamic State fighters, in the southern rural area of Manbij, in Aleppo Governorate, Syria May 31, 2016. REUTERS/Rodi Said

 

Washington / AP

The US-led coalition fighting the IS group in Syria is trying to strangle it by cutting off a key supply route from Turkey.
The Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdish-led alliance, has just launched an offensive to capture the strategic northern town of Manbij with the help of coalition air strikes, 18 of them in the past 24 hours. Manbij is on the north-south axis between Jarablus, a town on the border with Turkey and controlled by IS fighters, and Raqa, the IS group’s self proclaimed capital in Syria.
That axis is the main supply route to Raqa, said Jennifer Cafarella, Syria analyst for the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington think tank.
If anti-IS fighters take Manbij and then Jarablus, that would sever this axis and leave the extremist group with just a few rural areas further to the west as a way to maintain a link with Turkey, Cafarella said. “Recapturing Manbij and ultimately advancing to Jarablus would disrupt but not eliminate ISIS’s ability to resupply,” she said.
The US-led coalition has long had its eye on the so-called Manbij pocket. But an offensive on this mainly Arab region has run into opposition from Turkey, a key partner in the alliance.
Washington sees the Syrian Democratic Forces—which is dominated by the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG)— as the most effective ground force against IS in Syria.
But Ankara regards the YPG as a branch of the rebel Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), which has fought a three-decade insurgency against the Turkish state.
Turkey does not want to see the YPG, which already controls much of the Turkish-Syrian border, take over the last bit of the frontier that it did not already hold.
On Wednesday Pentagon officials stressed that the attack on Manbij was being led by the Arab component of the Syrian Democratic Forces.
Kurds represent less than 20 percent of the forces on the ground, a US official said. And they will leave after the battle and cede control to their Arab partners, the official said.

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