Syria Summary - Towards The End Of The Caliphate
27
August, 2017
This
map from the last
Syria summary shows
the forming of two cauldrons north and north-west of Palmyra. ISIS
forces there were enclosed by the Syrian army progressing eastwards
on several axes.
Map
by Weekend
Warrior - bigger
Ten
days later the most eastward of those cauldrons has been eliminated.
Map by Islamic World News - bigger
The
Syrian army progresses further east and continues to move onto Deir
Ezzor on three axes.
ISIS
attempted counterattacks towards the supply line to Aleppo and along
the Euphrates southeast of Raqqa. Both were defeated within a day or
two and the attacking ISIS forces were eliminated. There is clearly a
change in the pattern of ISIS deployment. It is now lacking manpower
and is giving up in outlining areas. Its counterattacks use swarming
tactics and lack the command and force of monolithic military units.
In Iraq the army and the popular militia units took just 10 days to
liberate the ISIS held city of Tal Afar.
Of the estimated 2,000 ISIS
forces there only some 200 non-locals had remained. 1,800 had been
evacuated towards east-Syria, In the Qalamun area at the Lebanese
border the Lebanese army and Hizbullah attacked the last ISIS enclave
along that border. Today the remaining 200 ISIS fighters in the area
agreed to lay down arms in exchange for an evacuation towards
east-Syria.
Three
ISIS pockets remain in Syria. One is in Raqqa where the enclosed ISIS
units will fight to death. The U.S. military and its Kurdish proxy
forces are literally destroying the city to save it. It is unlikely
that the remaining ISIS forces in the city will give up or agree to
an evacuation deal. In an earlier deal with Kurdish forces a group of
ISIS fighters negotiated a retreat from the Tabqa dam in exchange for
free passage towards Raqqa. The U.S. military broke
the deal by
attacking the retreating ISIS fighters.
A
second pocket is in the semi desert north-west of Palmyra. ISIS
fighters there have dug elaborate cave systems (video).
The caves may protect against detection from the air but these
positions are indefensible against a ground assault. The area will
likely be cleansed within a week.
The
third ISIS pocket left is near the Israeli border in Golan heights.
The area still awaits a solution but there is no doubt that the
Takfiri forces there will eventually be eliminated. Israel has tried
to press the U.S. and Russia for protection of the area from an
expected onslaught by the Syrian Hizbullah. It also asked to suppress
all Iranian influence in Syria. But Washington as well as
Moscow rejected the
Israelirequests.
Netanyahoo lost the war he waged on Syria and Israel will now have
to live with
a far more capable force along its northern borders.
What
is left of ISIS, probably some 10,000 fighters in total, is now
confined to east Syria and west Iraq. No more replenishment is coming
forward. No new fighters are willing to join the losing project. Its
resources are dwindling by the day. The U.S. is extracting its
assets within
the organization. The Euphrates valley west and east of Deir Ezzor
will become the last defensible territory it holds. Six month from
now it will be defeated. Its Caliphate will be gone.
The
other Jihadi project in Syria is run under the various names of
al-Qaeda in Syria. It is now mainly confined to Idleb province. The
estimated strength is some 9,000 fighters with some 12,000 auxiliary
forces of local "rebels". Like ISIS, al-Qaeda in Syria is
now isolated and no one is willing to come to its help. Its local
helpers will give up and reconcile as soon as the Syrian army will
move in on them. The hard-core militants will be killed.
The
U.S. has
told its
proxy "rebels" to give up on their political project.
Jordan is sending peace
signals towards
Damascus. The Syrian President Assad will not be removed and the
country will stay under the protection of Russia and Iran. The U.S.
still supports the Kurdish YPG fighters in Syria's north-east.
But
its relation with its NATO member Turkey will always be more
important than any national Kurdish project. In the end the Kurds,
like others, will have to accept the condition Damascus will set for
them.
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