US-led strikes hit IS oil targets as coalition grows



LONDON, Dario Thuburn- Three more European countries on Friday promised warplanes to join the US-led air armada battering Islamic State targets in Iraq, as coalition forces seek to destroy the jihadists' oil business.
Britain, Belgium and Denmark approved plans to join the war in the air, but Washington warned up to 15,000 "moderate" rebels would need to be trained and armed to beat back the militants in Syria, where they have set up their de facto capital.



The Pentagon said air strikes -- which continued for a fifth day in Syria -- had disrupted lucrative oil-pumping operations that have helped fund the militants, but that a final victory, perhaps years away, would need local boots on the ground.
The White House welcomed the new European countries recruited to the Iraq operation, who are expected to add a total of 19 fighter jets in the air campaign over the country.
That would free up more US air power to strike jihadist targets in Syria, where American jets are already flying with warplanes from four allied Arab countries.
Britain's House of Commons voted by 524 lawmakers to 43 to back a motion authorising air strikes in Iraq.
British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon said there would be no "immediate military action" but that it would be a "long, drawn-out campaign".
"We have to select our targets in accordance with the American and international effort that's going on in Iraq," Fallon told Sky News.
And he noted that there had been "a lot of support" for military action in Syria as well, during a sometimes heated parliamentary debate.
Ahead of the vote, Prime Minister David Cameron told lawmakers the IS group must be confronted.
"This is not a threat on the far side of the world. Left unchecked, we will face a terrorist caliphate on the shores of the Mediterranean," Cameron said.
Washington wants to build the broadest possible coalition including Sunni Arab allies to tackle IS, which has captured large areas of Syria and Iraq and declared an Islamic "caliphate".
But it has explicitly excluded Bashar al-Assad's Syrian regime in Damascus, favoring instead moderate rebel factions fighting both the government and IS extremists.
This led to criticism of the operation from Russia, whose Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters at the United Nations that the US-led strikes are illegal unless coordinated with Syria -- a Moscow ally.
- Oil trade shutdown -
Britain, Belgium and Denmark should join warplanes from the United States, France, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Jordan that are already hitting IS targets.
The Netherlands is also sending six F-16 jets and will provide 250 military personnel and 130 trainers for the Iraqi military, and Greece said it would send arms to Kurdish forces in Iraq.
In recent days, Washington and its allies have targeted the funding sources of what US President Barack Obama has branded a "network of death".
A US defense official, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity on Friday, said US aircraft had launched a fresh wave of bombing raids in Syria.
The mission is now similar to US-led air raids undertaken in Iraq, with "near-continuous" combat flight operations over Syria, the official said.
The coalition has also bombed oil refineries in eastern Syria where IS jihadists extract crude for sale on the black market, according to the Syrian Observatory For Human Rights, a British-based watchdog.
Experts say sales of oil from Syria and Iraq usually earn IS up to $3 million (2.4 million euros) a day.
But now, according to activists in Deir Ezzor, Syria pumping has stopped.
"Oil extraction has been halted because of the security situation," said Leith al-Deiri, who spoke to AFP via the Internet.
- 'Ground component' -
The US is also planning to train and arm 5,000 Syrian rebels as part of the effort, although the top US military officer, General Martin Dempsey, said a force of between 12,000 and 15,000 would be required "to recapture lost territory in eastern Syria".
The general said defeating the IS group would take more than air power and that "a ground component" was an important aspect of the US-led campaign.
"We believe the path to develop that is the Syrian moderate opposition," he said.
Britain and France have so far ruled out launching strikes in Syria but London "reserved the right" to intervene there in case of an imminent "humanitarian catastrophe".
IS's brutal abuses against civilians, rival fighters and Arab and Western hostages, as well as its success in recruiting Western members, have caused international alarm.
British police this week arrested 11 people suspected of links to Islamic extremists, including a notorious radical preacher who was released on Friday.
In Paris, hundreds of people answered a call by Muslim leaders to denounce the "barbarism" of Islamic State, as flags flew at half mast after the beheading of a Frenchman by an IS-linked group in Algeria.
The coalition strikes in Syria are reported to have killed at least 140 jihadists as well as 13 civilians.
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Saturday, September 27th 2014
Dario Thuburn
           


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