(Reuters) - The United States and its Arab allies bombed Syria
for the first time on Tuesday, killing scores of Islamic State fighters
and members of a separate al Qaeda-linked group, opening a new front
against militants by joining Syria's three-year-old civil war. In a remarkable sign
of shifting Middle East alliances, the attacks took place with no
objection - and even signs of tacit approval - from President Bashar
al-Assad's Syrian government, which said Washington had notified it in
advance. U.S. Central
Command said Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates participated in or supported the strikes against Islamic State
targets. All are countries deeply hostile to Assad but now fearful of
the fighters that have emerged out of the anti-Assad rebellion they
backed. Warplanes and
ship-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles struck "fighters, training
compounds, headquarters and command and control facilities, storage
facilities, a finance center, supply trucks and armed vehicles," CentCom
said. Washington also said U.S. forces had acted alone to launch eight strikes in another area of Syria
against the "Khorasan Group", an al Qaeda unit U.S. officials have
described in recent days as posing a threat similar to that from Islamic
State. The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the war in Syria, said at
least 70 Islamic State fighters were killed in strikes that hit at least
50 targets in Raqqa and Deir al-Zor and Hasakah provinces in Syria's
east. It said at least 50
fighters and eight civilians were killed in strikes targeting al Qaeda's
Syrian affiliate, the Nusra Front, in northern Aleppo and Idlib
provinces, apparently referring to the strikes the Americans said
targeted Khorasan. The Observatory said most of the Nusra Front fighters
killed were not Syrians. The
air attacks fulfill President Barack Obama's pledge to strike in Syria
against Islamic State, a Sunni Muslim group that has seized swathes of
Syria and Iraq, slaughtering prisoners and ordering Shi'ites and
non-Muslims to convert or die. It
remains to be seen how effective air strikes can be against Islamic
State in Syria, where Washington does not have a strong ally to fight
the group on the ground. U.S.
officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Washington and its
Arab allies would wage a persistent air campaign in Syria, with the pace
of future strikes to depend on finding available targets. "COMMON ENEMY" In
a sign of how Islamic State's rise has blurred lines in Middle East
conflicts, the Syrian government said Washington had informed it hours
before the strikes in a letter from Secretary of State John Kerry sent
through his Iraqi counterpart. A
Syrian foreign ministry statement refrained from criticizing the
U.S.-led action. It said Damascus would continue to attack Islamic State
and was ready to cooperate with any international effort to fight
terrorism. Only a year
ago Washington was on the verge of bombing the Syrian government to
punish it for using chemical weapons, before Obama canceled those
strikes at the last minute. Tightly-controlled
Syrian state TV interviewed an analyst who said the air strikes did not
amount to an act of aggression because the government had been
notified. "This does not
mean we are part of the joint operations room, and we are not part of
the alliance. But there is a common enemy," said the analyst, Ali
al-Ahmad. Residents
reached by telephone in Raqqa, Islamic State's de facto capital in
eastern Syria, said people were fleeing for the countryside after the
bombs started falling overnight. Islamic State vowed revenge against the United States. "These
attacks will be answered," an Islamic State fighter told Reuters by
Skype from Syria, blaming Saudi Arabia's ruling family for allowing the
strikes to take place. The
Sunni fighters, who have proclaimed a caliphate ruling over all
Muslims, shook the Middle East by sweeping through northern Iraq in
June. They alarmed the West in recent weeks by killing two U.S.
journalists and a British aid worker, raising fears that they could
attack Western countries. The
strikes took place hours before Obama goes to the U.N. General Assembly
in New York where he will try to rally more nations behind his drive to
destroy Islamic State. The White House said he would make a statement
before setting off. PITCHED INTO CIVIL WAR The
action pitches Washington for the first time into the three-year-old
Syrian civil war, which began with "Arab Spring" democracy protests but
descended into a sectarian conflict that has killed 200,000 people,
displaced millions and drawn in proxy forces backed by countries across
the region. The Syrian
military pressed its campaign against the rebels unabated on Tuesday,
shelling and carrying out air strikes in the southern province of Deraa
and the outskirts of Damascus, as well as Raqqa and Idlib provinces, the
Observatory said. Rebel and loyalist forces fought in the northern city
of Aleppo. U.S. forces
have previously hit Islamic State targets in Iraq, where Washington
supports the government, but had held back from a military engagement in
Syria where Obama still calls for the downfall of Assad. Washington has
said it would not coordinate action against Islamic State with Assad's
government. Islamic
State's Sunni fighters, equipped with U.S. weapons seized during their
advance in Iraq, are among the most powerful opponents of Assad, a
member of a Shi'ite-derived sect and ally of Shi'ite Iran. They are also
battling against rival Sunni groups in Syria, against the Shi'ite-led
government of Iraq and against Kurdish forces on both sides of the
border. In recent days
they have captured villages from Kurds near Syria's Turkish border,
sending nearly 140,000 refugees across the frontier since last week. The
United Nations said it was bracing for up to 400,000 people to flee.
The Western-backed
Syrian opposition and Syrian Kurdish groups, who are fighting against
both Assad and Islamic State, welcomed the air strikes and said they
need more support. The
targets included Raqqa city, the main headquarters in Syria of Islamic
State fighters who have proclaimed a caliphate stretching from Syria's
Aleppo province through the Tigris and Euphrates river valleys to the
outskirts of Baghdad. "There
is an exodus out of Raqqa as we speak," a resident said by phone. "It
started in the early hours of the day after the strikes. People are
fleeing towards the countryside." The
city's two-storey main administrative building had been hit by four
rockets, which were so precise that nearby buildings were not damaged,
said the resident, named Abo Mohammed. He said hundreds of fighters, who
had been visible in the streets controlling traffic and security, had
now vanished. ARAB PRESENCE KEY, TRADITIONAL ALLIES ABSENT The
presence of Arab allies in the attacks was crucial for the credibility
of the American-led campaign. With the backing of Jordan and the Gulf
monarchies, Washington has the support of Sunni states hostile to Assad. None
of Washington's traditional Western allies has so far joined the
campaign in Syria. Britain, which joined the United States in war in
Iraq and Afghanistan last decade, said it was still considering its
options. France has struck Islamic State in Iraq but not in Syria,
citing legal constraints. NATO
ally Turkey, which is alarmed by Islamic State but also worried about
Kurdish fighters and opposed to any action that might help Assad, has
refused a military role in the coalition. Assad's
ally Russia, whose ties with Washington are at their lowest since the
end of the Cold War, said any strikes in Syria are illegal without
Assad's permission or a U.N. Security Council resolution, which Moscow
would have the right to veto.
US-Arab airstrikes kill 70 militants
Reuters
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