Turkey says US-backed assault to retake Syria’s Raqqa begins


Bloomberg

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said the US-backed operation to drive IS from its Raqqa stronghold in Syria has begun, state-run Anadolu news agency reported.
The offensive started on the night of June 2 and the US notified Turkey beforehand, Yildirim told reporters, Anadolu said on Sunday. US Army Colonel Ryan S. Dillon, a spokesman for the US-backed coalition against IS, said the Syrian Democratic Forces who would lead the offensive had closed a ring around Raqqa, but he did not confirm the assault had started.
“Raqqa, as with other former IS strongholds, will be liberated and returned to its citizens,” Dillon said, using another acronym for IS. The US-backed coalition will support partner forces with air and artillery strikes throughout the operation, he added.
The city on the northern side of the Euphrates River is IS de facto capital, and retaking it after more than three years would be a symbolic and strategic victory for forces battling to roll back the group’s expansion across northern Syria and Iraq. IS is also under assault from US-backed Iraqi forces and allied militias in Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city.
The U.S. has been preparing for a campaign to free Raqqa for some time and has been arming Kurdish fighters who dominate the SDF for the operation—over Turkey’s objections. The Turkish government considers the Syrian Kurdish force a terrorist group, and is worried that the weapons will be used to support Turkish Kurdish militants who have been battling for autonomy for more than three decades.
The US has told Turkey its support for Syrian Kurdish groups is “not long-term but tactical,” Anadolu cited Yildirim as saying. The US guaranteed that weapons it supplied won’t be used against Turkish security forces and citizens, he said.

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