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TERROR WARS
US general dismisses doubts about air war against IS
By Dan De Luce
Washington (AFP) June 5, 2015


IS advances on key Syrian city despite regime air raids
Beirut (AFP) June 5, 2015 - Jihadists from the Islamic State group pressed their campaign Friday to capture Hasakeh, a provincial capital in northeast Syria, in fierce battles with government forces backed by air strikes.

"Fierce clashes continued Friday between regime forces and IS south of Hasakeh city. The regime is violently and intensely bombarding jihadist positions from the air," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The Britain-based monitor said the regime was using barrel bombs -- large containers packed with explosives that are dropped from helicopters -- against jihadists edging towards the city, which is divided between Kurdish and government control.

Since their offensive began on Saturday, IS fighters have advanced to the southern outskirts of Hasakeh with the aid of suicide attacks and heavy mortar fire.

Citing a military source, Syria's state news agency SANA said the army had used "aerial weapons... to destroy equipment belonging to the IS terrorists".

The assault has killed at least 71 loyalists and 59 extremists, including 11 who targeted regime positions with car bombs, IS's signature weapon, the Observatory said.

The jihadists, who have expanded their control in central and eastern Syria and in neighbouring Iraq, seized a number of key posts, including a prison and power plant.

Hasakeh has since been left without power, local activist Arin Shekhmos told AFP.

Kurdish militia, locked in battles with IS in other parts of Hasakeh province, have yet to take part in the clashes south of the city.

"For the moment, the Kurds are not taking part in the fight as the battles have not reached their area," Abdel Rahman said.

A Turkish official said around 4,000 Syrians have sought refuge in Turkey this week, fleeing fresh clashes pitting Kurdish fighters against IS.

Kurdish forces launched an offensive last week against the jihadists in the border province of Raqa.

- UN 'outrage' over barrel bombs -

In New York, the UN Security Council condemned a recent wave of barrel-bomb attacks in Syria's northern Aleppo province that have left scores dead.

Council members "expressed outrage at all attacks against civilians, as well as indiscriminate attacks, including those involving shelling and aerial bombardment such as the use of barrel bombs".

The United Sates, Britain and France have accused President Bashar al-Assad's forces of using barrel bombs, saying only Damascus has helicopters, but he has repeatedly denied using barrel bombs.

The chief of Lebanon's Shiite militia Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, said Friday his fighters had managed to "liberate dozens of square kilometres" in the Qalamun region straddling the Syrian-Lebanese border, pushing back Al-Nusra Front, Al-Qaeda's affiliate in Syria, and its allies.

And he vowed that Hezbollah will next turn its sights on IS.

"The next battle is in the... parts (of Qalamun), which are controlled by Daesh," he said, using the Arabic acronym for IS.

"Daesh is on our borders," he said, branding the group as a threat to Lebanon's existence.

On Friday, the Syrian army said it had seized numerous villages and strategic hilltops in Qalamun with Hezbollah's help.

In neighbouring Iraq, IS jihadists fired 40 rockets on a residential area near Amriyat al-Fallujah, 30 kilometres (18 miles) southwest of Baghdad and one of the few districts of Anbar province still under government control.

The police chief and a medic at the local centre said six women and four children were wounded in the incident.

IS militants used an unprecedented wave of suicide truck bomb attacks to seize Ramadi, capital of Anbar province, in a three-day blitz last month.

A top US Air Force general insisted Friday the American-led air campaign against the Islamic State was effective, rejecting criticism that it was too slow or overly cautious.

The bombing raids against the IS jihadists in Iraq and Syria have had a "profound effect on the enemy" and taken out "more than a 1,000 enemy fighters a month from the battlefield," said Lieutenant General John Hesterman, head of the air fleet under US Central Command.

Coalition strikes have helped ground forces in Iraq and northern Syria regain territory from the IS and destroyed most of the group's oil refining capacity, Hesterman told reporters via telephone from Qatar.

President Barack Obama's administration has come under criticism at home and abroad over the air campaign, with some lawmakers and retired air force officers accusing Washington of imposing too many limits on military pilots.

Despite thousands of US-led coalition bombing raids since August, the IS jihadists have gained ground in Syria and last month captured the Iraqi city of Ramadi in a stunning defeat for the Baghdad government army.

Although air strikes failed to prevent the fall of Ramadi, Hesterman delivered a spirited defense of the coalition campaign, saying it could not be compared to previous air wars with more conventional targets.

The general acknowledged that aircraft in roughly 75 percent of all strike flights return without dropping bombs, but he said that was because the IS militants were not a traditional army and were moving among the local civilian population.

"Targeting a field army is relatively easy. That's not what we're doing," Hesterman said. "The comparisons being made to conflicts against field armies in nation-states don't apply in this case."

"This enemy wrapped itself around a friendly population before we even started," he said.

- Trusting pilots -

He said that coalition warplanes are in the air round the clock "to get after this enemy whenever we have the opportunity whenever they show themselves."

"Sometimes they don't and we bring those weapons back. That's not because we're seeing them and not killing them."

Some American pilots have complained to US media that they faced cumbersome rules in the skies over Iraq and Syria that hampered their ability to go after the IS jihadists.

Hesterman, however, said coalition pilots were not hamstrung and that the approval for most strikes was "measured in minutes, not hours or halves of hours."

"The thought that we don't trust our pilots is just wrong," he said.

Critics of the air campaign have demanded the deployment of forward air controllers with Iraqi or Kurdish forces to help guide air strikes against the IS extremists.

Hesterman said spotters would "probably" be helpful but were not necessary "so far."

The general, who oversees air forces operating over Iraq and Syria, said that the IS jihadists did not appear out in the open in large numbers in the battle for Ramadi.

"In Ramadi, you know, if the enemy (had) massed at Ramadi, they would be dead," he said.

He said ultimately local forces -- backed up by air strikes -- would have to seize back ground from the IS group.

"Air power doesn't hold and govern territory."

The coalition also had to take care to distinguish from the air between Iraqi government forces and the IS militants, while also taking pains to avoid inadvertently killing civilians, he said.

"It has never been more difficult to identify friend from foe than it is right now in Iraq. It is nearly impossible to tell them apart when they dress nearly the same and use the same equipment," the general said.

"So imagine if those strikes had been made, even a fraction of them, what we call blue-on-green fratricide. My opinion is the coalition would have unwound some time ago."

According to US Central Command, which oversees forces in the Middle East, there have been 15,675 coalition strike missions over Iraq and Syria, and bombs were dropped in 4,423 of those flights.


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TERROR WARS
IS jihadists in fierce battle for key Syrian city
Beirut (AFP) June 4, 2015
Islamic State group jihadists, emboldened by a string of battlefield victories, advanced Thursday to the gates of the Syrian city of Hasakeh after intense fighting with regime troops. In neighbouring Iraq, security forces foiled car bomb attacks by IS on two military bases west of Baghdad, a day after US-led coalition warplanes destroyed a massive jihadist bomb factory. Despite nine mont ... read more


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