Syrian
army troops take full
control of Manbij
15
October, 2019
Syrian
army troops have established full control over Manbij, a city in the
northern province of Aleppo, and its nearby settlements, amid
Turkey’s cross-border invasion in northeastern Syria and an abrupt
US retreat of its forces from the city.
Syria’s
official news agency SANA reported on Tuesday that Syrian Arab Army
units completed their deployment in Manbij and its surroundings,
where they were welcomed by the locals.
It
added that residents of the northeastern city gathered in the city
center, carrying Syrian flags and cheering for the army forces, which
arrived to defend the city and its people from the Turkish military
invasion.
The
Russian Ministry of Defense, as cited by the Tass news agency, also
confirmed that Manbij and an area of more than 1,000 square
kilometers around it were now under the full control of Syrian
soldiers.
“The
Syrian government army has established full control over the city of
Manbij and nearby inhabited communities,” it said.
It
added that the government troops had taken control of the Tabqa
military airfield, two hydroelectric power plants, and a number of
bridges across the Euphrates River.
Manbij
is located some 85 kilometers east of Aleppo, the capital city of the
eponymous province. Back in August 2016, the city was liberated from
the Daesh terrorist group, which had turned the city into one of its
major outposts in the Arab country.
On
Sunday, Damascus said that it had deployed troops to northern Syria
to counter the Turkish army.
Defying
international calls to stop military action in Syria, Turkey keeps up
the offensive, as Syrian forces take up positions in the country's
northern belt following a deal with Kurds.
On
October 9, Turkish military forces and the Turkish-backed militants
launched a cross-border invasion of northeast Syria in a declared
attempt to push Kurdish militants from the so-called People’s
Protection Units (YPG) away from border areas.
Ankara
views the US-backed YPG as a terrorist organization tied to the
homegrown Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militant group, which has
been involved in armed separatism in Turkey since 1984.
Turkey
plans to create a 32-kilometer “safe zone” in northeast Syria,
clear it from the presence of Kurdish militants, and relocate one
million Syrian refugees there.
The
Turkish president will not order an end to Syria operation until
“ultimate victory.”
The
Syrian government has condemned the act of aggression.
Earlier
on Tuesday, the US military said that it had withdrawn all of its
forces from Manbij.
“Coalition
forces are executing a deliberate withdrawal from northeast Syria. We
are out of Manbij,” wrote Col. Myles B. Caggins III, a US military
spokesman, on Twitter.
A
day earlier, Syrian Kurds had announced that they had reached an
agreement with Damascus aimed at blunting the Turkish cross-border
offensive into Kurdish-held territory in northern Syria.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/oct/15/russian-troops-patrol-between-turkish-and-syrian-forces-on-border?fbclid=IwAR3U9PBYcOfgS8knNbDnRc-V4GzZq_rmPtAexI8120XBgjUPifuMhvyDvC4
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/oct/15/russian-troops-patrol-between-turkish-and-syrian-forces-on-border?fbclid=IwAR3U9PBYcOfgS8knNbDnRc-V4GzZq_rmPtAexI8120XBgjUPifuMhvyDvC4
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