Report: US Military Assisting the Russians in Taking Over Northern Syria to Block Off Turko-Jihadi Offensive

US personnel "assisting the Russian forces to navigate through previously unsafe areas quickly"

Editor’s note: Yesterday there was a report that the US military has asked the Russians across their “deconfliction channel” to postpone entering into Kobani to give the Americans time to destroy what they can not take with them. There was also a report of the Americans occupying a bridge over the Euphrates on the Manbij-Kobani road, perhaps as reassurance. However it seems that the flip side of the coin is that in return the Americans have been helping out the Russian military with useful tips on Manbij.


The U.S. military has begun a hasty exit from Syria’s northern city of Manbij, and is set to help Russia establish itself there amid a Turkish attempt to defeat Kurdish-led, Pentagon-backed fighters at the strategic location, Newsweek has learned.

The U.S. was scheduled as of Monday to officially withdraw from Manbij within 24-hours, leaving the mostly Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces behind as two rival factions—the Syrian government, backed by Russia and Iran, and the Turkey-backed Syrian insurgents opposed to it—sought to seize control of the strategic location. A senior Pentagon official told Newsweek that U.S. personnel, “having been in the area for longer, has been assisting the Russian forces to navigate through previously unsafe areas quickly.”

“It is essentially a handover,” the official said. “However, it’s a quick out, not something that will include walk-throughs, etc., everything is about making out with as much as possible of our things while destroying any sensitive equipment that cannot be moved.”

Contacted by Newsweek on Monday, no reply was returned from the Pentagon before publication.

Above: Russian reporter Oleg Blokin in the abandoned US military base in Manbij

Faced with a potentially imminent clash with Turkish forces and their Syrian rebel allies, the Syrian Democratic Forces have chosen to realign themselves with the central government and its Russian backer, a partnership that would soon be put to the test.

As Syrian troops and allied militias moved to team up with Kurdish-led forces in the city, opposition fighters began their own advance toward Manbij. Reports have since begun to emerge of clashes between the two sides, signifying a new front in the country’s multi-sided conflict.

Manbij, home to a majority-Arab, but diverse community that includes Kurds and other ethnic minorities, has long been on the frontier of Syria’s multi-sided war. It was first seized by rebels and jihadis about a year after a nationwide uprising devolved into civil war in 2011. The United States had actively supported a number of the insurgents trying to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, but refocused its policy as the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) spread across the country, taking Manbij in 2014.

The Pentagon partnered with the Syrian Democratic Forces in 2015, piercing through ISIS-held territory stretching across northern and eastern Syria and wrested control of Manbij from the militants in 2016. The mostly Kurdish militia also comprised of other ethnic minorities and Arabs immediately found itself at the heart of a new fight for survival.

Turkey launched a cross-border offensive later that year, mobilizing mostly Sunni Muslim Arab rebels in an attempt to take Manbij, but the United States offered its support for the self-ruling, majority-Kurd administration that was established by the Syrian Democratic Forces. Ankara considers some Kurdish fighters linked to a decades-long insurgency at home and has sought to neutralize their presence near the Turkish border.

Around the same time, the Syrian military made gains against opposition forces on the southern outskirts of the city, placing allied Russian personnel near their American counterparts. With the two major powers present, Turkey never managed to take Manbij.

Even after Turkey expanded its control over autonomous, mostly Kurdish-held territory elsewhere in far northwestern Afrin early last year, Manbij remained a sticking point for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey. He demanded President Donald Trump pull U.S. troops as the two countries enter talks on establishing a “safe zone” along the Turkish-Syrian border.

Trump announced his decision to pull troops out of Syria in December of last year following a call with Erdogan, but plans stalled as the U.S. wrapped up its anti-ISIS campaign and expanded its mission to counter Iranian influence. Months later, following another call between Erdogan and Trump, the White House announced last week that the U.S. would relocate U.S. troops as Turkey launched another operation.

The Pentagon immediately expressed its opposition to the Turkish assault, calling on Erdogan to halt the advance. Trump, who initially signaled his support, threatened sanctions and called for a U.S. role in mediating between Turkish officials and Kurdish groups, but ultimately ordered a pullout as Syrian troops and rebels neared Manbij.

“And so we find ourselves as we have American forces likely caught between two opposing advancing armies and it’s a very untenable situation,” Defense Secretary Mark Esper told CBS News on Sunday. “So I spoke with the president last night after discussions with the rest of the national security team and he directed that we begin a deliberate withdrawal of forces from northern Syria.”

“It’ll be a deliberate withdrawal and we want to conduct it as safely and quickly as possible,” he added. “So we want to make sure we deconflict a pullback of forces. We want to make sure we don’t leave equipment behind. So I’m not prepared to put a timeline on it, but that’s our general game plan.”

Like Trump, Russian President Vladimir Putin has a direct line to Erdogan. The two leaders have repeatedly come together, along with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, as part of trilateral peace talks designed to end the war in Syria, but new tensions could emerge among them as their respective allies marched towards Manbij.

As the state-run Syrian Arab News Agency reported the first Syrian units entering the city, Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov said Monday that “what matters most of all is that the Turks act in keeping with the situation and that their actions pose no problems for what is most important—political settlement in Syria,” according to the state-run Tass Russian News Agency. “This is what is most important for us.”

Source: Newsweek

2 Comments
  1. ArcAngel says

    This behind the scenes, International Skullduggery – Intelligence War has gone “Full retard”.
    What we are witnessing is ‘The Plan’ being implemented that was designed by some very ‘dark demonic humanoids’ in some very dark places.
    We watch ‘checkers’ while what is truly transpiring is 4D Chess.

    US SF’s MIGHT be assisting RuMoD, might not…who knows, certainly not some “sources”.
    What I do know is “Newsweek” is full of shit, constantly lies and obfuscates and rings the bell for more wanton death and destruction. I would not trust them if they reported “water is wet”.
    TASS has a definite western slant, but not as bad as the Moscow Times, but is spot on in this regard.
    Psycho M Esper should just f n die, and rid the world of another blood thirsty war-mongering cowardly chicken-hawk.
    SANA is pretty decent, but the man of the hour is Oleg Blokin, working for RI
    The best news I can find on Syria is “ANNA News”. Although translation can be tough.
    If your going to translate use Yandex.
    Google and Bings are f n terrible, and do NOT translate well at all.
    The last paragraph made the most sense

  2. John C Carleton says

    Notice how these two keep showing up together at the scene of war crimes?

    ‘How RUSSIA saved the USA’s ASS during the 1861-1865 War Crimes Against The Confederacy”
    https://www.theburningplatform.com/2017/10/23/how-russia-saved-the-unions-ass-in-the-civil-war/

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Anti-Empire