U.S. soldiers in Syria to back anti-ISIS Kurds
U.S. soldiers are in Kobane, the town in northern Syria nearly destroyed in fierce fighting with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria group, to train Kurdish forces to battle the militants, Kurdish sources said Thursday.
He said they had arrived in two groups over the past two days, coming from Turkey and from the autonomous Kurdish region of neighboring Iraq.
He said about 30 were in Kobane itself, with the rest in Hasakeh province in eastern Syria.
Abdel Rahman, whose group relies on a local network of sources, said the U.S. troops are expected to rendezvous in Kobane to train fighters from the Syrian Democratic Forces, an alliance of factions backed by the United States.
The U.S. Central Command declined to comment on details.
“We have said before that we will be putting a small number of troops on the ground in Syria to coordinate with our partners there in a non-combat role. We will not be providing the specifics of their whereabouts or travel plans beyond that,” a statement said.
The news comes after Brett McGurk, President Barack Obama’s special envoy to the coalition, said Sunday that U.S. forces would be arriving on the ground “very soon”.
At the end of October, Obama authorized the deployment of 50 special operations troops to Syria, and McGurk said their job would be to “organize” local forces.
A key objective will be to “isolate” Raqqa, he said.
The alliance of local fighters has already retaken more than 1,000 square kilometers (386 square miles) from ISIS and killed around 300 ISIS fighters, McGurk said.
ISIS began an offensive on the Kobane area, which lies right on the Turkish border, in September 2014.
Within a couple of weeks it had captured scores of villages and towns around Kobane city and attacked it, prompting thousands of Kurds to flee their homes.
After a desperate resistance that drew worldwide attention, the Kurds managed to regain full control of the city in January and eventually retake most of the lost territory.
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