Kurdish-Arab Forces Enter IS Syria Bastion of Manbij

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

U.S.-backed Kurdish and Arab fighters advanced Thursday into the Islamic State jihadist group's bastion of Manbij in northern Syria, sparking fierce street fighting as they push to take the city.

Backed by air strikes by the U.S.-led coalition bombing IS in Syria and Iraq, fighters with the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) alliance entered Manbij from the south, a monitoring group said.

The advance marked a major breakthrough in the battle for Manbij, once a key link on the supply route between the Turkish border and IS' de facto Syrian capital of Raqa.

The loss of the city would deal another blow to IS following a string of recent battlefield defeats, including the taking by Iraqi forces earlier this month of the center of the Iraqi city of Fallujah.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said SDF forces were able to break through IS defenses in Manbij a few hours after taking control of a village on the city's southwestern outskirts.

"Fierce street fighting between buildings" erupted as they entered the city, said Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman, whose group relies on a broad network of sources inside Syria to monitor the country's conflict.

An SDF commander at the front told AFP that IS fighters were using car bombs and other explosives to try to slow the assault.

"Our forces, in coordination with the coalition, are determined to advance inside the city and eliminate all Daesh fighters," he said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.

- More than 230 air strikes -

Abdel Rahman said tens of thousands of civilians were trapped inside the city, though some 8,000 had been able to flee since the start of the SDF offensive on Manbij on May 31.

There were fears the jihadists would use civilians as human shields inside the city, which had a population of about 120,000 before the start of Syria's civil war in 2011.

The SDF managed to encircle the city on June 10 but its advance slowed as IS fought back, including with almost daily suicide bombings.

At least 63 SDF fighters and 458 jihadists have been killed since the start of the offensive, according to the Observatory.

The jihadists have held Manbij since 2014, the year IS seized control of large parts of Syria and neighboring Iraq and declared its "caliphate."

The U.S.-led coalition of Western and Arab states launched air raids against IS in both countries the same year and in recent months has stepped up support for ground forces like the SDF.

A statement from U.S. Central Command said the coalition had carried out 73 strikes in the Manbij area last week and a total of 233 since the assault began.

Formed in October 2015, the 25,000-strong SDF is dominated by the powerful Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) but includes an Arab contingent that has been steadily growing to around 5,000 fighters.

As well as air support, coalition countries have provided ground advisers to the SDF, including some 200 U.S. special forces.

- Six dead in Aleppo shelling -

The Manbij assault has coincided with another offensive launched by Syrian regime forces against IS in its stronghold province of Raqa.

Backed by Russian warplanes, government forces re-entered the province this month as part of an offensive to retake Tabqa, another key town on the IS supply route to the Turkish border.

But after advancing to within seven kilometers (four miles) of Tabqa airbase, they were driven back late Monday in a jihadist counter-attack that killed 40 loyalists.

Three Russian soldiers supporting regime troops in the area were seriously wounded on Tuesday when their vehicle hit a landmine, the Observatory said. They were recovered by Russian forces.

Syria's conflict began five years ago with the brutal repression of anti-government demonstrations. It has killed more than 280,000 people and displaced millions.

IS emerged from the chaos of the war, committing widespread atrocities in areas under its control, as well as organizing and inspiring jihadist attacks across the Middle East and in Western cities.

Washington has backed rebel forces in Syria and Moscow is supporting President Bashar Assad's regime, but the rise of IS has seen efforts focus on defeating the jihadists.

Russia and the United States launched a major effort last year to bring about peace talks between Assad and rebel forces, but the negotiations faltered and a partial truce announced in February has all but collapsed.

Clashes have been especially intense in and around Syria's second city of Aleppo, where the Observatory said six people including a child died Thursday in rebel shelling of pro-regime neighborhoods.

Comments 11
Thumb enterprise 23 June 2016, 15:03

part of the U.S plan to divide Syria, Iraq and Yemen along sectarian and ethnic lines.

Thumb Mystic 23 June 2016, 16:44

Syria was a united country under Assad family for the last decades, it was divided when your Turko-Saudi-American-Israeli friends messed things up.

Thumb Mystic 23 June 2016, 16:45

Kurdish and Arab forces? What Arabs belong to the YPG?
All those people are Kurds.

Thumb Mystic 23 June 2016, 17:48

Syrian "democratic" forces is a farce texas, the U.S marines helping them wear YPG badges, what arabs wear kurdish flags on their uniforms?
You seem to love the word farce, because you are the definition of a farce yourself.

Thumb Mystic 23 June 2016, 17:46

"Secterian regime" All the Syrian Government are sunni except Assad.
Most Baath members are Sunni too.
It was even illegal in Syria to identify yourself with your sect before the war happened.

Missing peace 23 June 2016, 19:31

look at miss tic trying to make people believe that sunnis are in charge in syria when all the key posts are held by alawis LOL

pityful braindead hezbi....

Thumb Mystic 23 June 2016, 21:35

Well Syria is a mess now, and it will continue as such.
I really don't care about who is what in a government, sunni or alawite.
What I do care about, is the so called Salafis you support that wants to take the whole of the country and kick all other minorities out.
That is what the people in there are fighting for, if you weren't inspired and guided by Saudi Arabia, Turkey, America etc.

Then there might have been more change in Syria without so much resistance, but because of the fact that it was foreign interference in the first stages of the conflict and it's wider now, is the reason for the continued warfare.

I don't believe all those fighting for Assad loves him from the heart, but they fight under him to survive, because he is 10 times better than you "caliphate" alternative.

Missing peace 23 June 2016, 22:28

the thing is miss tic, the assad lover, that assad is at the origin of the chaos in syria... he let the chaos spread so that naive people like you come now and say there is no other alternative than assad! he planned that from the very beginning!
they used the very same tactics in lebanon! they set up fires and then came as firefighters, nothing new but only brainwashed people cannot see that.....

Thumb Mystic 23 June 2016, 22:51

Yes and I hope Assad will continue to kill and bomb your salafi rebels around Syria.
You people can distinguish between Nusra or FSA, to you they are all moderates and fights for "syrian civilians".
Assad is a good man the way he exposed salafism and butchered it in his own country no not unarmed protesters as you would like to claim, but real takfiris like you in depth are aswell, Saudism and Wahabism.

Missing peace 23 June 2016, 23:38

"Assad is a good man the way he exposed salafism"

sure he is a good man to torture kids who tagged on a wall down with assad regime in 2011... good man to shoot protesters who demanded their release from jail... good man indeed...

pityful hezbis who praise totalitarism, no different from salafis ...

Missing peace 23 June 2016, 19:29

easy to have a "united" country as those hypocrit hezbis say when you impose a regime of terror upon your people... LOL

just like chias in lebanon are "united" under hezbi terror... LOL