Syrian forces pound last Daesh-held village

Kurdish-led forces backed by US warplanes rained
artillery fire and air strikes on Sunday on besieged and outgunned militants
making a desperate last stand in a remote Syrian village.
Daesh group fighters holed up in Baghouz, the last
dreg of the once-sprawling “caliphate” that their leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi
proclaimed in 2014, responded with small arms fire as the Syrian Democratic
Forces (SDF) advanced.
Media reporters near the front line saw
fireworks-like explosions lighting up the sky over the eastern Syrian farming
village after an airstrike hit an underground ammunition depot.
The crackle and thud of gunfire and shelling filled
the air, as did plumes of thick black smoke over Baghouz, a small cluster of
ruined buildings nestled in a palm-lined bend of the Euphrates.
“There are tunnels. We’re not sure how many members
of the Daesh are still inside,” an SDF commander said from a rooftop about 400
metres from the front line.
“They are completely besieged. They have planted
many explosive devices in the houses and on the roads,” he said.
The militants’ last redoubt was said to be about
half a square kilometre in size a week ago and it shrank even further with the
last few hours of fighting.
The SDF had in recent days maintained a buffer of
about one kilometre between their forces and the holdout militants hunkered
down in their very last bastion.
But they resumed their advance on Friday evening
after processing what they said was the last batch of civilians, mostly
militants’ relatives, fleeing the enclave.
The militants are massively outnumbered and unlikely
to hold out very long against the SDF, who launched their broad offensive against
remaining Daesh strongholds in the Euphrates Valley six months ago.
The capture of Baghouz would mark the end of Daesh
territorial control in the region and deal a death blow to the “caliphate”,
which once covered huge swathes of Syria and Iraq.
At its peak more than four years ago, the
proto-state created by Daesh was the size of Britain and administered millions
of people, including two million in Iraq’s second city of Mosul.
It minted its own currency, levied taxes, published
a wide array of propaganda material and designed its own school curricula.
The caliphate effectively collapsed in 2017 when
Daesh lost most of its major cities in both countries.
The loss of Baghouz, which the SDF says is only days
away, would carry mostly symbolic value.
The latest military operation has nonetheless
sparked a major humanitarian emergency, with thousands of people of various
nationalities emerging from the ruins of the “caliphate” and washing up in
Kurdish-run camps.
The SDF thrust forward on Saturday and closer combat
ensued at night, with tracer ammunition flashing glimpses of the raging battle
ripping the village apart.
Perched on a rooftop some distance away, an SDF
commander who gave his name as Rustam Hasakeh listened to details on an Daesh
position coming in on his walkie-talkie.
He entered the GPS coordinates on his tablet and
called in a strike. Moments later, a coalition fighter jet appeared in the sky
and an explosion was heard in the distance.
“Daesh position: gone,” Hasakeh said, looking up
from his tablet with a smile.
“Since the start of the fighting, we have taken 13
or 14 positions from them,” the commander told a media reporter outside Baghouz
early on Sunday.
“We can hear their conversations on the radio. Some
of them communicate in Russian,” he said.
Hasakeh said the militants were launching suicide
attacks with every possible vehicle they could find: cars, motorbikes and even
bicycles.
Daesh had used civilians as human shields against
air strikes in Baghouz, holding thousands of civilians all huddled in a
makeshift camp on the edge of the village, according to evacuated families.
The SDF has said that those who did not use last
week’s humanitarian window to be evacuated were essentially chosing to die in
Baghouz.
The families of several French militants contacted
in France by media said however that women and children remained in the
enclave.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
monitoring group, around 10 percent of the people who left Daesh bastions this
year were suspected militant fighters trying to slip back into civilian life.
The area’s Kurdish administration has been
overwhelmed by the influx of “caliphate refugees,” forced as they were to
screen a large population in a short time.