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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Syria grows more volatile for US forces

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WASHINGTON: Friday’s strike on a Syrian airbase marks the first direct US attack on the Damascus regime, raising questions about the potential impact on American forces working to defeat the IS group. An immediate sign of potential fallout from the strike came from Moscow, which said it would strengthen Syrian air defences to protect the country’s key infrastructure. Russia already has batteries of sophisticated S-300 and S-400 surface-to-air missiles in place. These were not deployed in the US strike, but if used, such air defences would radically alter Syria’s aerial battlespace, where US planes have largely flown with little fear of getting shot down.


The United States has since late 2014 led a coalition against IS in Iraq and Syria, and flies dozens of sorties daily to bomb extremist targets.


The vast military operation is notionally separate from Syria’s brutal six-year war that has left more than 320,000 dead.


Syria’s conflict began in March 2011 with anti-government protests, but has since spiralled into a bitter and complex civil war that has drawn in international players and extremist fighters.


About 900 US ground troops, the bulk of them special operations forces, are in northern Syria, where they train and advise an Arab-Kurdish alliance fighting IS.


Further raising the stakes, Moscow also said it would cease talking to the United States on a military hotline the two powers use to keep each other apprised of where they are flying.


The channel was established in late 2015 after Russia entered Syria’s conflict to prop up President Bashar al Assad.


Moscow’s move to abandon the hotline could dramatically raise the risk to pilots and ground forces on all sides, with near misses and misunderstandings far more likely in Syria’s crowded skies.


The Pentagon has urged Russia to recommit to the line, and US officials say they will continue to try to use it.


“It is to the benefit of all parties operating in the air over Syria to avoid accidents and miscalculation, and we hope the Russian Ministry of Defence comes to this conclusion as well,” said Major Adrian Rankine-Galloway, a Pentagon spokesman.


Technically, the United States is the interloper in sovereign Syria, whereas the Russians are the invited guests.


But for the most part, the Russia-backed Syria regime has left the US coalition to conduct operations as the two sides focus on different foes in the tangled conflict.


The US-led coalition fighting IS has gone to great lengths to distance itself from the Syrian civil war and left the Russians to their own devices as they pounded rebel areas including east Aleppo.


Experts say that posture is unlikely to change for now, absent a broader and better articulated Syria policy.


— AFP


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