US troops near jihadist-besieged Philippines city ‘not fighting militants’
RT,
14
June, 2017
Philippine
officials say US troops are on the ground near the besieged city of
Marawi, which fighters linked to Islamic State (IS, formerly
ISIS/ISIL) have occupied for more than three weeks.
Philippine
military general Brigadier General Restituto Padilla said in a news
conference on Wednesday that the US troops are operating in a support
role and are not involved in fighting the militants.
“There
are some US personnel who are operating equipment to provide
information on situation awareness to our troops,” Brigadier
General Padilla said, according to Reuters.
“I
do not know the exact number and the specific mission. They are
allowed to carry rifles for self-defense. But they are not allowed to
fight, they only provide support,” he added.
A
US official in Washington told Reuters that the US is providing a P-3
surveillance plane as well as intelligence gathering from a drone.
However, the drone crashed on Saturday after it lost communication
links with its operator, the official said.
The
Philippine military previously said the US was providing technical
assistance to combat the militants but had no troops on the ground.
An
armoured personnel carrier (APC) drives along the road of Amai Pakpak
as government troops continue their assault against insurgents from
the Maute group © Romeo Ranoco / Reuters
Up
to 600 US personnel were based in Camp Navarro, Zamboanga, for a
joint effort to combat terrorism in the southern Philippines.
However, that number has decreased since 2010 and the Joint Special
Operations Task Force-Philippines officially ended in 2015. US
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Tuesday that the task force was
wrapped up too soon.
At 103rd Brigade
Plumes
of smoke rose above Marawi again on Wednesday as Philippine forces
attacked militant positions with bombs, tank fire and helicopter
gunships.
Marawi,
a city of 200,000 people, is now almost entirely deserted because of
the heavy fighting. However, military sources believe that about
300-600 civilians remain trapped or are being held hostage. The
military said 290 people had been killed - 206 militants, 58 soldiers
and 26 civilians. They say 100 militants remain are in the besieged
area.
Lieutenant
General Carlito Galvez, head of military command in Western Mindanao,
said that the jihadists control about 20 percent of the city.
Galvez’s
comment was a refutation of an earlier claim made by Amaq, the IS
news organization, that jihadists still hold “more than two-thirds”
of the town after 23 days of fighting.
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