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US strikes on IS oil supply initially only 'minimally effective'
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 18, 2015


Russian jets 'hunting' IS oil tanker trucks: defence ministry
Moscow (AFP) Nov 18, 2015 - Russia on Wednesday said its planes will attack any tanker trucks travelling through territory belonging to the Islamic State group in Syria, as Moscow looks to ratchet up pressure on the jihadists.

"Today a decision was taken according to which Russian warplanes are now flying on a so-called 'free hunt' against tanker trucks carrying oil products belonging to terrorists in areas controlled by IS," senior Russian military official Andrei Kartapolov was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.

Kartapolov said that Russian aviation had already destroyed some 500 fuel trucks over the past "few days" transporting oil from Syria to refineries in Iraq.

"This has considerably lowered the ability of the fighters to illegally export energy products and their income from contraband oil," he said.

Revenues from oil smuggling are a key part of IS financing.

Russia for a second day running sent long-distance bombers to attack targets in the IS-held Raqa and Deir Ezzor provinces.

Other strategic bombers flying over Russian territory fired cruise missiles at the Idlib and Aleppo provinces.

Planes from the Russian base in Syria have bombed some 150 targets across the war-torn country.

Moscow pledged to ratchet up its strikes in Syria on Tuesday after confirming for the first time that a bomb brought down its passenger jet over Egypt last month.

Russia has been flying a bombing campaign in Syria since late September in support of forces loyal to Bashar al-Assad.

The US -- which is heading a rival coalition targeting IS -- on Monday bombed hundreds of tanker trucks belonging to the jihadist group for the first time.

US air strikes have been only "minimally effective" in destroying oil infrastructure in the hands of jihadists, a military spokesman said Wednesday, explaining why tanker trucks in Syria are now being targeted instead.

The US-led coalition that has been conducting drone and plane strikes in Iraq and Syria for more than a year has repeatedly hit IS oil equipment -- only to see the jihadists quickly repair it.

IS militants reportedly rake in millions of dollars in revenue from oil fields under their control.

"We have been striking oil infrastructure targets since the very beginning of this operation," Colonel Steve Warren told reporters in a video call from Baghdad.

"What we found out was that many of our strikes were only minimally effective."

On Sunday, US military planners tried a new tactic, attacking a large convoy of gas trucks that had massed in the desert in eastern Syria to collect "illicit oil," Warren said.

About 45 minutes before the strike, which saw the destruction of 116 fuel trucks, warplanes conducted a low pass known as a "show of force" and dropped leaflets warning drivers to flee.

The leaflet states: "Get out of your trucks now, and run away from them."

"A very simple message," Warren said.

Though the trucks were being used to support the IS group, the drivers were not thought to be jihadists, he added. The strike was conducted near Albu Kamal, an IS-held town in Deir Ezzor province along Syria's border with Iraq.

"They're probably just civilians," Warren said. "So we had to figure out a way around that. We're not in this business to kill civilians, we're in this business to stop" the IS group.

War-torn Syria is also being bombed by Russia, which claims it is targeting "terrorists," but the United States says Moscow is trying to prop up President Bashar al-Assad.

Moscow used long-range bombers that flew in from Russia on Tuesday to target several areas in Syria including the IS stronghold of Raqa.

Warren said it would be "no surprise" if the bombs had resulted in civilian casualties and he blasted the Russian air force as outdated.

"Those are the type of tactics needed only if you don't possess the technology, the skills and the capabilities to conduct the type of precision strikes that our coalition conducts," he said.

The IS group has declared a self-styled caliphate in bands of territory it seized in Iraq and Syria, but has faced recent setbacks from Kurdish and Arab forces in Iraq's Sinjar and parts of northeastern Syria.


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