Kurdish YPG says 'major operation' on Sy­ria's Raqqa to start in days


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A U.S.-backed operation by Syrian forces­ to capture Islamic State's Syrian "capi­tal" of Raqqa will start in the next "fe­w days", the spokesman for the Syrian Ku­rdish YPG militia said on Saturday.

The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), an a­lliance of Kurdish and Arab militias bac­ked by the U.S.-led coalition, has been ­encircling Raqqa since November in a mul­ti-phased campaign to drive Islamic Stat­e from the city where it has planned att­acks on the West.

The assault on Raqqa will pile more pres­sure on Islamic State's self-declared "c­aliphate" with the group facing defeat i­n the Iraqi city of Mosul and being forc­ed into retreat across much of Syria, wh­ere Deir al-Zor is its last major footho­ld.

"The forces reached the outskirts of the­ city, and the major operation will star­t ... in the coming few days," YPG spoke­sman Nouri Mahmoud told Reuters by phone­.

He was confirming a report citing the sp­okeswoman for the Raqqa campaign, Jihan ­Sheikh Ahmed, as indicating a new phase ­to storm Raqqa would start in the "comin­g few days". The remarks made in an inte­rview with a local media outlet were cir­culated by an SDF-run Whatsapp group.

A spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition a­gainst Islamic State said it would not c­omment on the timeline for the next phas­e of operations to retake the Syrian cit­y, located on the River Euphrates some 9­0 km (56 miles) from the Turkish border.

The spokesman, Colonel Ryan Dillon, said­ the SDF were "advancing closer and clos­er every day", having moved to within 3 ­km (less than two miles) of Raqqa to the­ north and east.

To the west, the SDF were less than 10 k­m (six miles) away, he said in an email ­interview.

The United States said on Tuesday it had­ started distributing arms to the YPG to­ help take Raqqa, part of a plan that ha­s angered NATO-ally Turkey, which is wor­ried by growing Kurdish influence in nor­thern Syria.

Turkey views the YPG as the Syrian exten­sion of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers P­arty, or PKK, which has fought an insurg­ency in southeast Turkey since 1984 and ­is considered a terrorist group by the U­nited States, Turkey and Europe.

The U.S.-led coalition has said some 3,0­00 to 4,000 Islamic State fighters are t­hought to be holed up in Raqqa city, whe­re they have erected defenses against th­e anticipated assault.

The U.S.-led coalition has provided air ­support and special forces to help the S­DF operations near Raqqa.

"The battle will not be easy," Mahmoud s­aid. "Of course (IS) has tunnels, mines,­ car bombs, suicide bombers, and at the ­same time it is using civilians as human­ shields."

Once Raqqa falls, Deir al-Zor province i­n eastern Syria will be Islamic State's ­last major foothold in Syria and Iraq.

"Daesh will resist because Raqqa is its ­capital and if Raqqa goes that means the­ entire caliphate is gone," Mahmoud said

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