one day ago
American troops have reportedly blocked a Russian
convoy from accessing the oil fields at least four times in the past eight
days. U.S. Army
Reserve photo by Spc. DeAndre Pierce / The National Guard / Flickr (CC BY 2.0)
Russian and U.S. forces have faced off for what could
be the fourth time in less than two weeks in oil-rich northeastern Syria, the
local Kurdish news outlet Anha reported Saturday.
Video of the reported standoff in the Hasakah
province showed a Russian-flagged armored vehicle and what
appeared to be two U.S. Army armored vehicles standing on a highway
off-ramp.
US forces has blocked an Russian military patrol eastern
entrace of Tell tamr city and blocked the way to M4 international road. Russian
military patrol were forced to retreat back to Tell tamr city.
Following the “skirmish” at the entrance to the town
of Tal Tamr — which lies on a highway to the region’s key oilfields — the U.S.
and Russian convoys reportedly headed in different directions.
Russian helicopters and U.S. warplanes flew over Tal
Tamr half an hour after the incident, Anha reported. The outlet did not say how
long the standoff lasted.
American troops have blocked a Russian convoy from
accessing oil fields at least four times in the past eight days, Turkey’s Daily Sabah newspaper reported Sunday. U.S. troops
also “blocked” a Russian military patrol from accessing an
oilfield in the Hasakah town of Rmelan on Jan. 18
A Russian army helicopter flies over a patrol of US
soldiers in the town of Tal Tamr in Syria's Hasakeh province on the border with
Turkey
A Russian army helicopter flies over a patrol of US soldiers in the town of Tal Tamr in Syria's Hasakeh province on the border with Turkey
Delil Souleiman
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The latest standoff took place two days after Kurdish
forces similarly prevented Russian troops from passing through a major city to
establish a military zone near the Rmelan oilfield, Turkey’s Anadolu news
agency reported.
Commenting on that incident, a top U.S.-led coalition
commander said "the Russians are always testing us,"
Anadolu reported Thursday.
U.S. and Russian forces maintain bases in northeastern
Syria.
The two countries have experienced “hiccups” in their
military deconfliction efforts in Syria, James Jeffrey, the U.S. special envoy
for Syrian engagement and the anti-Islamic State coalition, said Thursday.
Russia has waged an air and sea campaign in support of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad since 2015 as Moscow's Middle East ally has grappled
with a years-long civil war. The U.S.-led coalition deployed in the war-torn
country in 2014.
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