UN Sanction Monitor: U.S. Watches As ISIS In Syria Recuperates, Pumps And Sells More Oil
14
August, 2018
Since
November 2017 the U.S. largely stopped the fight against ISIS in
north-east Syria. It gave ISIS the chance to regain power. A new
report to the UN Security Council now confirms that ISIS in
north-east Syria recuperated. It again profits from oil extraction
under the nose of U.S. forces.
The U.S. military in Syria has refrained from fighting ISIS for months. The map of the territory held by ISIS (grey) at the Syrian-Iraqi border in the U.S. controlled zone north of the Euphrates (yellow) has not changed since November 2017.
Livemap: Nov 30 2017, Apr 24 2018 -
(The yellow corridor going south east towards Iraq on the map is misleading. The U.S. has no forces there and ISIS crossed it several times to attack Syrian forces (red) across the river.)
The British group Airwars documents the U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and Syria. ... The U.S. strikes hit, if anything, only very minor targets.
...It is obvious that the U.S. wants to keep ISIS alive and well to again use it, if need be, against the Syrian and Iraqi government.
The
Sanctions Monitoring Team of the UN Security Council recently
released its 26nd
report(pdf).
It notes in the summary:
[The] Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), having been defeated militarily in Iraq and most of the Syrian Arab Republic during 2017, rallied in early 2018. This was the result of a loss of momentum by forces fighting it in the east of the Syrian Arab Republic, which prolonged access by ISIL to resources and gave it breathing space to prepare for the next phase of its evolution into a global covert network. By June 2018, the military campaigns against ISIL had gathered pace again, but ISIL still controlled small pockets of territory in the Syrian Arab Republic on the Iraqi border. It was able to extract and sell some oil, and to mount attacks, including across the border into Iraq.
Under
the nose of more than 2,000 U.S. forces in north-east Syria ISIS
recuperated and again gained force. It is still able to pump oil from
the ground and sell it into the local market.
In
the details of its report the Sanctions Monitor writes:
It appears that ISIL can still draw on some of its traditional funding streams, including hydrocarbons and extortion, earning millions of dollars per month. In its previous report, the Monitoring Team highlighted the group’s loss of control of oil and natural gas fields however, the slowdown of military progress against ISIL in early 2018, mentioned earlier, allowed the group to regain access to some oil fields in north-eastern Syrian Arab Republic. As a result, oil remains a primary source of revenue, with the group using primitive methods to extract it, both for its own consumption and for sale to locals, in addition to the extortion of distribution networks.
Oil
extraction can certainly be seen by surveillance drones of which the
U.S. flies plenty in the Syrian airspace. But there is not one report
of an airstrike against oil related targets in the U.S. military
reports collected by Airwars for April, May or June 2018.
After
a slight uptick in May and June airstrikes against ISIS in July were
again down at a very low level.
Publicly
announced U.S. operations against ISIS in north-east Syria have a
Groundhog Day feeling to them:
Zana Amed @zana_med - 11:17 AM - 13 Jul 2018
#DeirEzzor - After a short surveillance tour by Gen. Funk, Gen. Jarrard and #SDF commander in Middle Euphrates River Valley heval Çiya yesterday, operation to liberate #Hajin to start today in the evening.
Para Keta @ParaKeta - 8:55 AM - 14 Aug 2018
#SDF commander said they will launch “Operation to Liberate #Hajin” in a few days to clear the final places held by #ISIS to the east of the Euphrates.
The
U.S. claimed that it had to stop its operation in east Syria because
its Kurdish proxy ground force, the SDF, was busy fighting the
Turkish invasion of Afrin in north-west Syria. But U.S. air
attacks against ISIS in Syria already slacked in November 2017. The
Turkish invasion of Afrin started on
January 20 and ended on March 24. Hardly any Kurdish units from east
Syria were involved in the fight.
Giving
ISIS time and liberty to recuperate and to make more revenue seems to
be a deliberate strategy.
It
is a repeat of the earlier U.S. coddling of ISIS. During the ISIS
occupation of eastern Syria in 2014 and 2015 oil extraction and its
sale to Turkey was ISIS' main financial resource. But the U.S.,
despite declaring a grand coalition against ISIS, never made the
lucrative ISIS oil operations a target. Only when Russia's President
Putin showed aerial pictures of thousands of oil tankers, waiting in
the desert to load ISIS oil, to his colleagues at the G20 summit in
Turkey, was U.S. President Obama shamed
into attacking them.
A day after the G20 summit the U.S. airforce started to bomb the long
lines of oil tankers.
The
UN Sanctions Monitor also notes another ISIS relevant area under U.S.
protection:
The densely populated Rukban camp in southern Syrian Arab Republic contains some 80,000 internally displaced persons, including families of ISIL fighters, a situation which Member States fear might generate new ISIL cells.
The
Rubkan camp in the semi-desert at the Jordan border is within the 55
kilometer protection zone of the al-Tanf border crossing to Iraq
which the U.S. military occupies. Syrian government forces got bombed
by the U.S. when they tried to reach it. Currently the Syrian Army is
fighting ISIS forces which earlier attacked Suweida and massacred
some 250 people there. Those ISIS forces are now surrounded at the
Safa lava field nearby. They will be defeated because the Syrian army
isolated them from their sources of supplies in the U.S.protected
zone:
Desert Hawk @Syrian_Uruk - 7:31 utc - 14 Aug 2018
The #SyrianArmy surrounded ISIL gatherings at #Safa after cutting off their supply lines between the Zalaf & Rahim Dam while the #SAA secured a wall between the #US #tanf base to cut off roads from Al-Rikban and Al-Tanf camps and separate them from each other #Syria #OpDignity
The
Syrian army is still preparing for the operation in Idleb governorate
which is mostly under al-Qaeda's control. Under the Astana
de-escalation agreement Turkey has been given until early September
to solve the al-Qaeda problem in the province. It is unlikely that
Turkey will succeed with that.
The
Sanctions team finds:
[The Al-Nusra Front (ANF)] is assessed to remain the controlling force within the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) umbrella, which has accordingly been added by the Sanctions Committee as an alias of ANF. Syrian national Abu Mohammed al-Jawlani is the leader of both ANF and HTS. HTS maintains a position of strength in Idlib province, but is under pressure from other Syrian opposition groups.
Member States assess that HTS and its components still maintain contact with Al-Qaida leadership. ... According to one Member State, HTS recently seized territories from Ahrar Al-Sham and other armed groups after being reinforced by the arrival of military and explosives experts from Al-Qaida in Afghanistan. Some ISIL fighters, such as the leader of the ISIL Green Brigade in north-western Syria, have also joined HTS.
...
Extortion remains a primary source of financing for ANF, which earns money through its control of Idlib and checkpoints, including by “taxing” the movement of commercial commodities. Kidnapping for ransom of locals is another source of revenue, and the group may earn some funds through external donations.
'Western'
media continue to play down the Idleb problem and al-Qaeda's
influence there. Their 'experts' cry crocodiles tears about the
upcoming Syrian operation. But these ain't 'moderate rebels'.
Al-Qaeda in Syria, under the Nusra or HTS label, continues to be a
danger not only to the local population and not only to Syria. It
must be eliminated as soon as possible.
But
the same way the U.S. continues to use ISIS for its imperial
interests, it will likely continue to use al-Qaeda in Syria to
exercise pressure on the Syrian and Russian government. As soon as
the Idleb operation starts we can expect another full propaganda
onslaught with daily news of the "last hospital bombed",
more faked 'chemical attacks' and fake
rescue videos.
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