Syrian army thrusts into IS bastion

Syrian civil defence volunteers help a boy out of the rubble following a reported attack by Syrian government forces on May 30, 2016, in the Tariq al-Bab neighbourhood in the northern city of Aleppo. / AFP PHOTO / AMEER ALHALBI

 

Beirut / AFP

Russian-backed Syrian troops pushed into the IS group’s bastion province Raqa on Saturday, threatening to catch the extremists in a pincer movement as US-backed Kurdish-led fighters advance from the north.
The lightning advance from the southwest with Russian air support brought the army to within 40 kilometres of the Euphrates Valley town of Tabqa, site of the country’s biggest dam, the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights said. The dam, 40 kilometres upstream from the extremists’ de facto Syrian capital Raqa city, is also the target of the Washington-backed offensive which Kurdish-led fighters launched late last month. It was the first time that government troops had entered Raqa province since they were ousted by IS fighters in August 2014.
Regular army troops were backed by militia newly trained by the regime’s ally Russia, Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said.
He said that the twin offensives which threaten to cut off IS-held Raqa from extremist-held territory along the Turkish border raised suspicions that Moscow and Washington were covertly coordinating operations by their respective Syrian allies.
“It seems there has been an undeclared coordination between Washington and Moscow,” he said.
At least 26 extremists and nine government troops and militia were killed in the army’s advance, according to the Britain-based Observatory, which relies on reports from medics and activists on the ground.
Tabqa dam has a huge reservoir named Lake Assad after President Bashar Al Assad’s late father and predecessor Hafez. When IS overran the area with its garrison and airbase in 2014, it summarily executed 160 captured regime troops.

IS under multiple attack
The extremists are facing counter-attacks on multiple fronts.
Arab and Kurdish fighters backed by Washington have launched an assault on the strategic Manbij pocket further up the Euphrates on the Turkish border, regarded as a key entry point for foreign extremists.

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