The U.S. Forever War In Syria

As the United States works to establish a strategic alliance with Syria’s new Islamist-led government, the threats facing its forces in the war-torn country appear to be growing.

The threats became clear on December 13 when U.S. troops came under attack in the central city of Palmyra. A gunman opened fire at the troops as they were meeting with representatives of Syrian security forces, killing two soldiers and a translator. Later, it emerged that the gunman was a security personnel who served as the guard of a senior officer.

This was the first attack to target U.S. troops in Syria since the country joined the anti-ISIS coalition led by Washington last month.

The attack in Palmyra came a day after coalition aircraft had begun to operate all over Syria. A British MQ-9B Protector combat drone was spotted over the governorate of Homs in central Syria and a U.S. Beech King Air 350i spy plane was spotted over the northern city of Aleppo on December 12.

The attack was not surprising, however. Signs of a near insurgency against the Syrian government and U.S. forces have been around for a while.

Earlier in the month, specifically on December 9, a salvo of three rockets targeted Mezzeh Air Base right next to the Syrian capital, Damascus. The U.S. is reported to be planning to deploy troops there.

The latest attacks were clearly a setback for the emerging alliance between the U.S. and Syria. The biggest beneficiary was, of course, Israel.

On December 15, U.S. envoy to Syria Tom Barrack and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met in Jerusalem. Several understandings on Syria were reportedly reached.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Barrack and Netanyahu agreed during the meeting on Israel’s “freedom of operation” in Syria. Israeli officials also told their U.S. counterparts that Syrian security forces “cannot be relied upon,” citing the deadly attack in Palmyra.

Another beneficiary from the recent attacks was the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). On December 17, the U.S.-led coalition held what appears to be one of its largest joint exercises with the group in the eastern governorate of Deir Ezzor.

The exercise was seen as a sign that the U.S. was not ready to abandon the SDF, already a trusted ally, in favor of the emerging alliance with the Syrian government.

Despite growing threats to its forces, the U.S. will not likely leave Syria anytime soon. This does not mean, however, that Washington will base its presence in the country on its relations with Damascus. Despite all recent progress, Israel and the SDF remain the key partners of the U.S. when it comes to Syria.

As the United States works to establish a strategic alliance with Syria’s new Islamist-led government, the threats facing its forces in the war-torn country appear to be growing.

The threats became clear on December 13 when U.S. troops came under attack in the central city of Palmyra. A gunman opened fire at the troops as they were meeting with representatives of Syrian security forces, killing two soldiers and a translator. Later, it emerged that the gunman was a security personnel who served as the guard of a senior officer.

This was the first attack to target U.S. troops in Syria since the country joined the anti-ISIS coalition led by Washington last month.

The attack in Palmyra came a day after coalition aircraft had begun to operate all over Syria. A British MQ-9B Protector combat drone was spotted over the governorate of Homs in central Syria and a U.S. Beech King Air 350i spy plane was spotted over the northern city of Aleppo on December 12.

The attack was not surprising, however. Signs of a near insurgency against the Syrian government and U.S. forces have been around for a while.

Earlier in the month, specifically on December 9, a salvo of three rockets targeted Mezzeh Air Base right next to the Syrian capital, Damascus. The U.S. is reported to be planning to deploy troops there.

The latest attacks were clearly a setback for the emerging alliance between the U.S. and Syria. The biggest beneficiary was, of course, Israel.

On December 15, U.S. envoy to Syria Tom Barrack and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met in Jerusalem. Several understandings on Syria were reportedly reached.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Barrack and Netanyahu agreed during the meeting on Israel’s “freedom of operation” in Syria. Israeli officials also told their U.S. counterparts that Syrian security forces “cannot be relied upon,” citing the deadly attack in Palmyra.

Another beneficiary from the recent attacks was the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). On December 17, the U.S.-led coalition held what appears to be one of its largest joint exercises with the group in the eastern governorate of Deir Ezzor.

The exercise was seen as a sign that the U.S. was not ready to abandon the SDF, already a trusted ally, in favor of the emerging alliance with the Syrian government.

Despite growing threats to its forces, the U.S. will not likely leave Syria anytime soon. This does not mean, however, that Washington will base its presence in the country on its relations with Damascus. Despite all recent progress, Israel and the SDF remain the key partners of the U.S. when it comes to Syria.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DEAR FRIENDS. IF YOU LIKE THIS TYPE OF CONTENT, SUPPORT SOUTHFRONT WORK:

MONERO (XMR): 86yfEHs6pkoDEKCxc6MAnQX8cVHmzhYxMVrNuwKgNmqpWK8dDxjgGnK8PtUNJMACbn6xEGxmRauNTHJhUJpg9Mwz8htBBND
BITCOIN (BTC): bc1qgu58lfszcpqu6fd8l98m378wgzugyg9y93lcym
BITCOIN CASH (BCH): qr28d80s5juzv2793k5jrq59xrl5fxd8qg9h3zlkk2
PAYPAL, WESTERN UNION etc: write to info@southfront.press , southfront@list.ru

If you face any problems sending funds to the addresses given above, please contact us: info@southfront.press and southfront@list.ru. Also be aware that many email services such as Hotmail, Yahoo etc. may block correspondence from info@southfront.press and some others put it in spam.

If you want to support SouthFront but have no opportunity to do it via cryptocurrency, please contact us: info@southfront.press and southfront@list.ru.

SouthFront: Analysis and Intelligence
NOW hosted at southfront.press
Previously, SouthFront: Analysis and Intelligence was at southfront.org.
The .org domain name had been blocked by the US (NATO) (https://southfront.press/southfront-org-blocked-by-u-s-controlled-global-internet-supervisor/) globally, outlawed and without any explanation
Back before that, from 2013 to 2015, SouthFront: Analysis and Intelligence was at southfront.com

SOUTHFRONT.PRESS

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Emanuel, do Brasil

“as forças de segurança sírias “não são confiáveis”. que ótimo para nós todos israel, você não pode trabalhar tranquilo e livremente na síria. ela não é tua, seu animal da torah.

hash
hashed
Aragorn

the “us” forever war around the world. sf have so strange rubrics.

hash
hashed