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Battle in Raqqa may be opening act for decisive campaign farther south
By Anne Barnard
New York Times

BEIRUT — There are signs that US-backed forces could recapture Raqqa, the Islamic State’s de facto capital in northern Syria and a long-sought target, with relative ease.

Yet the militant group’s commanders, who have withdrawn their toughest forces from the city, and most everyone else in Syria’s multifaceted war are looking ahead to an even more decisive battle in the south.

There, a complex confrontation is unfolding, with far more geopolitical import and risk. The Islamic State is expected to make its last stand not in Raqqa but in an area that encompasses the borders with Iraq and Jordan and much of Syria’s modest oil reserves, making it important in stabilizing Syria and influencing its neighboring countries.

Whoever lays claim to the sparsely populated area in this 21st-century version of the Great Game not only will take credit for seizing what is likely to be the Islamic State’s last patch of a territorial caliphate in Syria, but also will play an important role in determining Syria’s future and the postwar dynamics of the region.

Since launching the battle for Raqqa one week ago, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces have penetrated two neighborhoods in the city, at its eastern and western fringes.

On Saturday, the activist coalition Raqqa24 said seven people were killed when coalition aircraft bombed al-Nour street in the city, the Associated Press reported. There was no immediate confirmation from US forces, which are providing battlefield support to the SDF.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 13 Raqqa civilians were killed in coalition air raids over the past 24 hours.

There was no immediate comment from the US-led coalition against the Islamic State group.

With the stakes so high in the southern border region, the United States, Iran, and Russia are all scrambling for advantage. They are building up their forces and proxy fighters and, increasingly, engaging in inflammatory clashes that threaten to escalate into a larger conflict.

On Thursday, a US pilot shot down an Iranian-made drone as big as an American Predator, which had fired on US-backed Syrian fighters and US Special Forces advisers.

All have their eyes on Deir el-Zour province, where Islamic State forces surround an estimated 200,000 people in a government-held section of the provincial capital.

The contested area also includes desert regions farther south with several border crossings, among them the highway connecting Damascus and Baghdad — coveted by Iran as a route to Lebanon and its ally, the Shi'ite militia Hezbollah.

But what is really at stake are even larger issues. Will the Syrian government re-establish control of the country all the way to its eastern borders? Will the desert straddling the Syrian-Iraqi border remain a no man’s land ripe for militant control? If not, who will dominate there? Which Syrian factions will wield the most influence?

The moment is a “major crossroads’’ in the conflict, said Kamel Wazne, who studies Hezbollah, the United States and the Middle East and teaches at the American University of Beirut.