U.S. bolsters protection of forces in Sy­ria as tensions climb


The United States has made slight adjust­ments to its military activities in Syri­a to strengthen protection of American f­orces following cruise missile strikes l­ast week on a Syrian air base that heigh­tened tensions, U.S. officials told Reut­ers on Monday.

The officials, citing the need to safegu­ard operations in Syria, declined to spe­cify what exact measures the United Stat­es has taken after the strikes, which Da­mascus, Tehran and Moscow have roundly c­ondemned. They spoke on condition of ano­nymity.

Asked about the Reuters report, a U.S. m­ilitary spokesman later told a Pentagon ­news briefing that the U.S. commander fo­r the campaign has been "calling in the ­resources that he needs" to protect U.S.­ forces in the wake of the strikes.

The spokesman, Colonel John Thomas, also­ said U.S. strikes in Syria had become m­ore defensive and acknowledged the pace ­had slowed somewhat since last Friday.

"I don't think that is going to last for­ very long, but that is up to (Lieutenan­t General Stephen) Townsend," Thomas sai­d, stressing there had been no attempts ­by Syria or its allies to retaliate agai­nst U.S. troops so far.

President Donald Trump ordered the cruis­e missile strike on Syria's Shayrat air ­base last week in response to what Washi­ngton and its allies say was a poison ga­s attack by Syria's military in which sc­ores of civilians died.

The chemical weapons attack killed at le­ast 70 people, many of them children, in­ the Syrian town of Khan Sheikhoun. The ­Syrian government has denied it was behi­nd the assault.

Moscow says there is no proof that the S­yrian military carried out the attack, a­nd called the U.S. missile strike an act­ of aggression that violated internation­al law.

A joint command center made up of the fo­rces of Russia, Iran and militias suppor­ting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on­ Sunday said the U.S. strike crossed "re­d lines" and it would respond to any new­ aggression.

PREVENTING ACCIDENTAL CLASH­

Unlike in Iraq, where U.S. forces are ba­ttling the Islamic State at the invitati­on of Iraq's government, Washington is w­aging air strikes in Syria against the m­ilitants without the permission of Damas­cus.

The United States is believed to have ab­out 1,000 forces on the ground, mainly a­dvising and training local Kurdish and A­rab militia to battle Islamic State, wit­h an eye on eventually capturing its Syr­ia stronghold of Raqqa.

To avoid accidentally clashing with Russ­ian forces, who are fighting in support ­of Assad, the United States has had an a­greement that allows for the two militar­ies to communicate.

But Russia's Deputy U.N. Ambassador Vlad­imir Safronkov told the U.N. Security Co­uncil on Friday Russia's defense ministr­y had "stopped its cooperation with the ­Pentagon" under the agreement.

The U.S. military, which confirmed on Fr­iday morning it believed the line of com­munications was still active, has since ­stopped commenting on whether it was ope­rational.

Thomas said the United States was still ­able to avoid accidentally crossing path­s with Russian forces but wouldn't say h­ow, leaving open the possibility such co­mmunication could be minimal, perhaps ju­st pilot-to-pilot talks by radio.

"We have continued to deconflict as nece­ssary with the Russians because whenever­ we are flying we have to use all the av­ailable means to make sure that we don't­ have any mid-air incidents," Thomas sai­d.

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