US-led strikes hit IS refineries in Syria

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The United States (US)-led coalition destroyed three makeshift oil refineries in jihadist-controlled territory in Syria early on Sunday as it pressed efforts to deny Islamic State (IS) militants funding, a monitoring group said.

The coalition strikes hit close to the Turkish frontier, near the town of Tal Abyad just across the border fence from the Turkish town of Akcakale, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The coalition also kept up its raids on the jihadist heartland province of Raqa early Sunday as it pressed what Washington says are “near continuous” strikes.

The raids destroyed a plastics factory outside Raqa city, killing one civilian, the Observatory said.

The attacks have come after at least a dozen strikes on Thursday night on the refinery infrastructure that the jihadists have developed in the territory they control in eastern Syria, which includes many of the country’s main oil fields.

“At least three makeshift refineries under IS control in the Tal Abyad region were destroyed overnight,” the Observatory said.

“IS had been refining crude and selling it to Turkish buyers,” said the Britain-based watchdog.

Before the launch of US-led air strikes on IS in Syria last Tuesday, analysts said that the jihadists were earning as much as $3 million a day from oil revenues.

Per reports, output from IS-controlled fields stood at 80,000 barrels per day, far exceeding the 17,000 barrels per day the Syrian oil ministry said it was pumping.

The strikes around Tal Abyad came after Saturday’s raids on the mainly Kurdish town of Ain al-Arab, also very close to the Turkish border.

The town, known as Kobane in Kurdish, has been under assault by IS for more than a week, sparking an exodus of at least 160,000 refugees into Turkey.

 

1 COMMENT

  1. This US-led and spearheaded aerial bombardment of the so-called Islamic State military and industrial sites has begun to look more and more like a war on a new and strictly Islamic country rather than a fight against a large terrorist group. And, no doubt as seen with other once moderate anti-Assad fighters now joining the ISIL, is becoming a Muslim rallying and recruiting cry worldwide, meaning the American-allied Persian Gulf monarchies like Saudi Arabia, can expect their refineries, pipelines, oil terminals, and oil and gas fields to come under suicide attacks that will slowly cripple their economies and ultimately see the Wahhabi-believing monarchies overthrown and beheaded by their own people.
    It didn't have to happen but instead is expanding and, warning, these suicide attacks will sooner or later hit the European, UK, Australian and American ports and refineries and transportation hubs. It didn't have to happen. As recently as six months ago this horror could have been prevented through negotiation and economic pressure but the West and its allies chose war. It didn't have to happen.

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