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IRAQ WARS
Coalition strikes near Palmyra killed 38 jihadists: monitor
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) Dec 17, 2016


Status of main battle fronts in Syria and Iraq
Beirut (AFP) Dec 16, 2016 - Here are the latest developments on the main battle fronts in Syria and Iraq, as of 1830 GMT on Friday:

SYRIA

- Aleppo -

The Syrian government says it has suspended the evacuation of civilians and fighters from the last rebel-held parts of eastern Aleppo, accusing rebels of having violated an agreement for their departure.

The evacuation began on Thursday and continued overnight, with thousands of people leaving in buses and ambulances to areas controlled by the government or Kurdish forces.

The operation began a month into a government assault to regain control of all of the northern city, which had been divided into a rebel-held east and a regime-held west since 2012.

There have been conflicting reports about the number of people evacuated.

Syrian state media said around 8,000 had left while the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights gave a slightly higher figure of 8,500.

Tens of thousands of people are believed still trapped inside.

More than 465 civilians, including 62 children, have died in east Aleppo during the assault, according to the Observatory.

It said 142 civilians, among them 42 children, have been killed by rebel rocket fire on government-held zones in the same period.

- Palmyra -

While regime forces were pushing the assault on east Aleppo, the Islamic State group retook the ancient city of Palmyra in central Syria on December 11, just eights months after the army backed by Russia drove the jihadists out.

On Thursday, US-led coalition aircraft destroyed heavy weaponry the jihadists seized in Palmyra, including an air defence artillery system and 14 tanks, the coalition said.

Palmyra is a UNESCO World Heritage site, and its recapture by IS gave the jihadists an important propaganda boost as they faces assault on two key bastions -- Syria's Raqa and Iraq's Mosul.

- Raqa -

A US-backed Kurdish-Arab alliance is fighting to seize IS's de facto Syrian capital, east of Aleppo.

Backed by US troops and air strikes from a US-led coalition, members of the Syrian Democratic Forces grouping have advanced to within 25 kilometres (15 miles) of the city.

The alliance announced on December 10 it was launching "phase two" of the operation.

IRAQ

- Battle for Mosul -

Iraq's elite Counter-Terrorism Service has advanced into eastern Mosul and retaken almost half of that side of the city in the two months since pro-government forces began an assault on IS's last main Iraqi stronghold.

Federal police and interior ministry forces have mostly been fighting on the southern front, and are stalled within striking distance of Mosul airport, while forces north of the city have also yet to enter it.

Pro-government paramilitary forces have advanced close to Tal Afar, but have not yet begun their assault on the IS-held town west of Mosul, between the city and the Syrian border.

The United Nations says a total of more than 96,000 people have been displaced as a result of the Mosul operation.

At least 38 Islamic State group fighters have been killed in US-led coalition air strikes this week near Syria's ancient city of Palmyra, a monitor said on Saturday.

The jihadists retook Palmyra in central Syria on December 11, just eight months after the army backed by Russia drove them out.

On Thursday, US-led coalition aircraft destroyed heavy weaponry seized by the jihadists when they retook the city, the coalition said.

A statement on Friday said the strikes destroyed an air defence artillery system, 14 tanks, three artillery systems, two IS-held buildings and two tactical vehicles.

Among the Russian weaponry IS captured around Palmyra were thought to be modern surface-to-air missiles, or SAMs, giving jihadists the potential capability to shoot down aircraft, a coalition official told AFP.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group based in Britain, said that "at least 38 IS members were killed in the air strikes".

The strikes, near the Tiyas military air base northeast of Palmyra, helped regime forces gain some ground west of the fabled city, said the Observatory.

Palmyra is a UNESCO World Heritage site, and its recapture by IS gave the jihadists a propaganda boost as they face assaults on two of their key strongholds -- Raqa in Syria and Iraq's second city Mosul.

Coalition strike destroys IS-captured weapons near Palmyra
Washington (AFP) Dec 16, 2016 - US-led coalition aircraft have destroyed heavy weaponry seized by Islamic State jihadists when they retook the Syrian city of Palmyra from regime forces over the weekend, officials said Friday.

The strikes on Thursday destroyed an air defense artillery system, 14 tanks, three artillery systems, two IS-held buildings and two tactical vehicles, the coalition said in a statement.

Among the Russian weaponry the IS group captured around Palmyra were thought to be modern surface-to-air missiles, or SAMs, giving jihadists the potential capability to shoot down coalition jets, a coalition official told AFP.

Earlier on Wednesday, the commander of the coalition forces conducting air strikes against the IS group in Iraq and Syria, Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend, had said that "anything they (IS) seize poses a threat to the coalition, but we can manage those threats and we will."

Thursday's attack took place near the Tiyas military airfield near Palmyra, northeast of the fabled city along a highway.

The IS group overran Palmyra on Sunday, nine months after its fighters were expelled by Russian air strikes and forces loyal to President Bashar Al-Assad.

The jihadists had initially seized Palmyra in May 2015 and went on to blow up UNESCO-listed Roman-era temples and loot ancient relics.

Before the IS group retook the city, it had been the focus of Russian and Syrian counter-Islamic State operations and not an area were the US coalition was particularly active.

The White House has been withering in its criticism of Russia for losing control of the desert town, accusing Moscow of focusing more on helping the Assad regime retake Aleppo than its claim of fighting the Islamic State group -- also known as ISIL.

"(Russia) has only had one operational gain on the ground inside of Syria against ISIL. It has had that -- that gain rolled back," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.

"In fact, the threat that is posed by ISIL is now worse because of Russia's failed strategy inside of Syria, because ISIL didn't just retake Palmyra, they retook Palmyra and all of the military equipment that the Assad regime, backed by Russia, had moved in there."

Despite the rhetorical clashes and arguments over Syria, the United States and Russia have established military back channels to ensure operations outside their usual zones of interest do not result in direct confrontation.


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