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UAE launches air strikes from Jordan on IS

By BBC
10 February 2015   |   5:27 pm
THE United Arab Emirates launched air strikes Tuesday against the Islamic State group from an air base in Jordan, marking its return to combat operations against the militants after halting the strikes late last year.   According to AP, the Gulf federation’s official WAM news agency quoted the General Command of the UAE Armed Forces…

THE United Arab Emirates launched air strikes Tuesday against the Islamic State group from an air base in Jordan, marking its return to combat operations against the militants after halting the strikes late last year.

  According to AP, the Gulf federation’s official WAM news agency quoted the General Command of the UAE Armed Forces as saying that Emirati F-16s carried out a series of strikes yesterday morning.

  The fighters returned safely back to base after striking their targets, the statement said. It did not elaborate, nor did it say whether the strikes happened in Syria or Iraq. The militants hold roughly a third of each country in a self-declared caliphate.

  The Emirates is one of the most prominent Arab members of the U.S-led coalition against the Islamic State group.

  American officials say the Emirates halted air strikes in December after a Jordanian pilot, Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbeh, was captured when his plane crashed behind enemy lines. The militants later burned al-Kaseasbeh alive.

  The Emirates had not commented on the suspension, and yesterday’s statement was the first confirmation it had restarted combat operations, AP reported.

  It has continued to provide logistical support to the campaign by hosting coalition warplanes at its air bases on the southern rim of the Persian Gulf.

  American defense officials last week said they moved search-and-rescue aircraft closer to the battlefield, helping ease allies’ concerns about the coalition’s ability to aid downed aircrews.

  The announcement came as Syria’s President Bashar Assad, said in comments published yesterday that his government has been receiving general messages from the American military about air strikes targeting the Islamic State group inside Syria but that there is no direct cooperation.

  In an interview with the BBC, Assad said the messages are conveyed through third parties, such as Iraq.

  “Sometimes they convey message, general message, but there’s nothing tactical,” he said.

  A U.S-led coalition that includes four Arab countries is conducting air strikes in Syria as part of an international campaign against Islamic State extremists. They share the skies with Assad’s air force, which also targets the militants.

  Syrian officials have maintained that they have not been consulted about the air strikes since they started in September – only informed through third parties in the beginning.

 

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