Date: Nov 19, 2018
Source: The Daily Star
Coalition hits back over Syria deaths
BEIRUT/ANKARA: The U.S.-led anti-militant coalition hit back Sunday at reports its airstrikes on a Daesh (ISIS) holdout in eastern Syria had killed civilians, appearing to accuse regime forces of targeting the area. In war-torn Syria, multiple offensives have now whittled down territory Daesh once controlled to a small pocket in the eastern province of Deir al-Zor on the Iraqi border.

A Kurdish-led alliance backed by the coalition is battling to expel Daesh from that holdout on the eastern bank of the Euphrates, while Russian-backed regime forces have been fighting the militants west of the river.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights activist group said coalition strikes Saturday killed 43 people, including 36 family members of Daesh militants in the village of Abu al-Husn in the militant pocket. But the coalition denied that its air raids there had killed any noncombatants.

U.S. envoy for the coalition Brett McGurk Sunday appeared to blame regime forces stationed “across the river” for bombarding the area.

“Reports of civilian casualties attributed to coalition strikes are false. All other forces should cease uncoordinated fires from across the river immediately,” McGurk said on Twitter.

In a statement late Saturday, the coalition reported 19 coalition strikes on Daesh targets “free of civilian presence” between late Friday and Saturday afternoon in the militant enclave, which includes the town of Hajin.

But the coalition “detected a total of 10 additional strikes in the same area of Hajin that did not originate from the coalition or partner forces,” it added. It called “on all other actors to cease uncoordinated fires across the Euphrates.”

The observatory said regime forces and Daesh militants exchanged fire across the river Saturday, but pro-government shelling did not hit Abu al-Husn. The activist group says it obtains its information from sources inside Syria and determines who carries out airstrikes according to type, location, flight patterns and munitions involved.

The U.S.-led international coalition has consistently denied reports by the observatory in recent weeks that its air raids have killed civilians.

It says it investigates allegations of civilian casualties thoroughly.

Since 2014, the U.S.-led coalition has acknowledged direct responsibility for over 1,100 civilian deaths in Syria and Iraq, but rights groups put the number much higher.

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, who are backed by the coalition, launched an assault to seize the eastern pocket around Hajin from Daesh in September.

The SDF assault was slowed by a fierce militant fightback, and then briefly put on hold to protest Turkish shelling of Kurdish militia positions in northern Syria.

An SDF commander Saturday said his forces were advancing cautiously due to “fields of land mines, trenches, tunnels and barricades set up by Daesh.”

On another front, regime forces Saturday regained control from Daesh of a volcanic plateau in the south of the country after weeks of fighting. Pro-government fighters took over Tulul al-Safa between the provinces of Damascus and Swaida “after Daesh militants withdrew from it and headed east into the Badia desert,” observatory chief Rami Abdel-Rahman said.

State news agency SANA reported regime forces had made “a great advance in Tulul al-Safa” and were combing the area for any remaining militants. Government forces had been fighting Daesh in Tulul al-Safa since a deadly militant attack against the country’s Druze minority in Swaida province on July 25.

In the deadliest attack against the Druze in the 7-year-old war, Daesh killed more than 260 people, most of them civilians, in suicide bombings, shootings and stabbings.

Saturday’s victory in Tulul al-Safa leaves Daesh contained in the Deir al-Zor pocket, although it also has a presence in the vast Badia desert stretching across the country to the Iraqi border.

After pushing back the militants from parts of northeastern Syria, analysts say the SDF, which is led by the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, is also likely to oust Daesh eventually from its eastern holdout.

“[Daesh] does not have great chances to remain in control of the pocket of Hajin,” Julien Theron of the Paris Institute of Political Studies said. The coalition-SDF alliance “has already shown a great efficiency against [Daesh]-held territory in the recent past,” he told AFP.

Meanwhile, Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said he had told U.S. Chief of Staff Joseph Dunford that Turkey expected the U.S. to stop its support for the YPG as soon as possible, according to the state-owned Anadolu news agency.

Turkey has been infuriated with Washington’s support for the YPG, which it views as an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) that has been waging a decadeslong insurgency on Turkish soil.