SDF closes in on Daesh’s last bastion

The Daesh militant group faces final territorial
defeat as the US-backed Syrian force battling the militants said on Saturday it
was closing in on the militants’ last bastion near the Iraqi border, capping
four years of efforts to roll back the group.
While the fall of Baghouz, an eastern Syrian village
on the bank of the Euphrates River, would mark a milestone in a global campaign
against Daesh, they remain a threat, using guerrilla tactics and holding some
desolate land further west.
An array of enemies, both local and international,
confronted Daesh after it declared a modern-day territory in 2014 across large
swathes of territory it had seized in lightning offensives in Syria and
neighbouring Iraq.
Thousands of Daesh militants, followers and
civilians, who had retreated to Baghouz as the group was gradually driven out
of those lands, have poured out of the tiny cluster of hamlets and farmlands in
Deir Al Zor province over the last few weeks.
Their evacuation held up the final assault until
Friday evening when the SDF said it had advanced and would not stop until the
jihadists were defeated.
“We expect it to be over soon,” Mustafa Bali, a
spokesman for the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), said shortly after sunrise.
He said the SDF were advancing on two fronts using medium and heavy weaponry.
Daesh responded with drones and rockets, and seven SDF
fighters have been wounded so far, said commander Adnan Afrin.
The SDF has previously estimated several hundred
Daesh insurgents - believed mostly to be foreigners - to be still in Baghouz,
and the US-led international coalition has described them as the “most
hardened” militants.
The SDF’s final advance was slowed for weeks by the
militants’ extensive use of tunnels and human shields.
It has not ruled out the possibility that some
militants have crept out, hidden among civilians.
When reporters arrived at the village outskirts
around midday, columns of smoke could be seen rising from inside but the scene
appeared calm. Warplanes hovered in the sky, but no air strikes were observed.
A spokesman for the coalition, which supports the
Kurdish-led SDF, said it was too early to assess the battle’s progress “as it
is a complicated situation with many variables”.
The SDF commander-in-chief said on Thursday that his
force would declare victory within a week.
He was later contradicted by US President Donald
Trump, who said the SDF had retaken 100 per cent of the territory once held by
Daesh.
Washington has about 2,000 troops in Syria, mainly
to support the SDF in fighting Daesh. Trump announced in December he would
withdraw all of them, but the White House partially reversed itself last month,
saying some 400 troops would stay.
Some 40,000 people bearing various nationalities
have left the militants’ diminishing territory in the last three months as the
SDF sought to oust the militants from remaining pockets.
The number of evacuees streaming out of Baghouz
surpassed initial estimates of how many were inside.
Afrin said on Thursday that many of the people
leaving the enclave had been sheltering underground in caves and tunnels.
An 27-year-old Indonesian widow who emerged on
Friday said she would have liked to stay in Daesh territory but conceded that
conditions had become untenable.
“I have no money, I have no food for my baby, no
medicine, nothing for my baby, so I must go out,” she said.