A US-backed Arab-Kurdish alliance on Saturday announced "phase two" of its campaign for ISIL’s Syrian stronghold of Raqqa as Washington said it was sending 200 more troops to back the offensive.
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) officials said US soldiers would be "on the front lines" of the push for the north Syrian city.
US defence secretary Ashton Carter earlier on Saturday told a security forum in Bahrain that Washington was sending the 200 troops to join the 300 it has already deployed to support the campaign.
The SDF will "begin phase two of the campaign, which aims to liberate territory west of Raqa and isolate the city," spokeswoman Jihan Sheikh Ahmed said.
With a pre-war population of about 240,000, Raqqa is the de facto capital of the self-styled caliphate ISIL declared across Iraq and Syria in 2014.
Speaking in the village of Aaliyah, north of Raqqa, Ms Ahmed said the SDF had captured 700 square kilometres of territory since it began its advance on the city on November 5.
The alliance had also grown in size, she said, with more than 1,500 local fighters joining forces with the SDF after being "trained and equipped by the international coalition".
The SDF’s coordination with the US-led coalition "will be stronger and more effective during the second phase of the campaign," Ms Ahmed said.
Both the SDF spokesman Talal Sello and SDF adviser Nasser Hajj Mansour said US soldiers would be taking part in the offensive alongside SDF fighters.
"US forces were on the front lines of the first phase of this offensive, and one member of these forces was killed. Their participation will be even more effective alongside our forces in the second phase," said Mr Sello.
The Pentagon chief said the "200 additional US forces in Syria" would include bomb disposal experts and trainers as well as special forces personnel.
The extremists have used car bombs as well as booby traps and mines as they battle to defend what remains of their territory.
"We’re now helping tens of thousands of local Syrian forces to isolate Raqqa," which has also served as a hub for extremists plotting attacks abroad, Mr Carter said.
Backed by coalition air strikes, the SDF has pushed south from areas near the Turkish border, advancing to within 25 kilometres of the city.
The offensive has been complicated by the deep hostility to the SDF of Turkey, which regards the alliance’s most powerful military component, the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), as an arm of the outlawed rebel Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) that has waged a deadly insurgency in south-eastern Turkey for three decades.
The SDF controls a large swathe of north-eastern Syria along the Turkish border and a smaller enclave in the north-west.
After advances that looked set to link the two areas, the Turkish army entered Syria in August in an operation it said targeted both ISIL and the YPG.
Turkish troops have since attacked Kurdish forces multiple times even as they have suffered losses at the hands of ISIL.
US defence officials said on Thursday they were brokering talks between the two sides towards preventing any further conflict between them disrupting the campaign against ISIL.
Colonel John Dorrian, spokesman for the US-led coalition, said they were "facilitating joint discussions with Turkey, the SDF and other coalition partners to promote de-escalation in the area".
Meanwhile, the Turkish army on Saturday entered ISIL’s bastion of Al Bab to the north-west of Raqqa, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The battle for Raqqa coincides with a vast US-backed offensive to retake Iraq’s second city of Mosul.
Raqqa and Mosul are the last major urban centres under ISIL control after the militants suffered a string of territorial losses in both countries over the past year.
In Syria, ISIL still holds most of Al Bab and Deir Ezzor, to the south-east.
Source: The National
GMT 12:43 2017 Monday ,27 February
As UN talks take place, Syria rebels seize battleground townMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
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Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
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