(Zaman Al Wasl)-
US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces pressed new advances aginst Islamic
State inside Tabqa city; taking blocks in the western neighborhoods,
local activist said Friday.
Muhan Nasser told Zaman al-Wasl the Kurdish-led forces made gains in Wadi Mahouk and al-Qariya districts in the city.
The Syrian Democratic Forces [SDF] said on Tuesday that the Turkish strikes which targeted YPG were an attempt to halt its advance on the ISIS de facto capital of Raqqa, according to al-Araby al-Jadeed.
The toll in Tuesday's Turkish air raids on Kurdish positions in northeastern Syria rose to 28 killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Wednesday.
Muhan Nasser told Zaman al-Wasl the Kurdish-led forces made gains in Wadi Mahouk and al-Qariya districts in the city.
The multi-phased campaign against ISIS was launched in November but has slowed in recent
weeks.
Pushing down from the north, the SDF is
trying to take the Islamic State-held Tabqa area and its adjacent
Euphrates dam, the largest in Syria, some 40 km (25 miles) upstream of
Raqqa.
SDF forces surround Tabqa town, having
cut it off in late March from a swathe of Islamic State territory which
runs across Syria into Iraq.
On Friday the SDF
said it had pushed up into the town and taken the southern neighborhoods
of Nababila and Zahra, having taken Wahab neighborhood to their south
on Thursday.
In recent weeks the SDF has also
squeezed Islamic State's pocket of territory around Raqqa, which the
jihadist group has used as a base to plot attacks and manage much of its
self-declared caliphate since seizing the city in 2014.
The
Kurdish YPG militia is the strongest unit of the SDF and is taking part
in the assault on Tabqa and Raqqa, but it is seen by Turkey as an
extension of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has fought a
three-decade insurgency against Ankara.
The SDF condemned Turkish strikes on the Kurdish
People's Protection Units militia, calling for a no-fly zone to be
established.
The Syrian Democratic Forces [SDF] said on Tuesday that the Turkish strikes which targeted YPG were an attempt to halt its advance on the ISIS de facto capital of Raqqa, according to al-Araby al-Jadeed.
The toll in Tuesday's Turkish air raids on Kurdish positions in northeastern Syria rose to 28 killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Wednesday.
President Tayyip Erdogan said Friday Turkey's southern border
region with Syria had come under serious mortar fire over the last two
days and Turkish forces were retaliating as necessary.
Erdogan
also told a conference in Istanbul that United States support for
Kurdish militia fighters inside Syria was damaging solidarity between
Washington and Ankara, but that relations could turn a page under
President Donald Trump.
"We will continue to
take any measures as long as the threats persist... We will not allow
efforts to form a terror corridor at our southern border," Erdogan said.
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