Northern al-Bab offensive (September 2016)

Northern al-Bab offensive (September 2016)
Part of the Turkish military intervention in Syria (August 2016–March 2017) and the Syrian Civil War

Map of the wider Turkish-led operations in northern Aleppo and the wider campaigns in Aleppo
Date16–27 September 2016
(1 week and 4 days)
Location
Status

Turkish and SNA victory

  • FSA groups/Turkish capture 10 villages (16–20 Sep.)
  • ISIL captures 20+ villages (21–23 Sep.)
  • FSA groups/Turkish capture 15 villages (23–27 Sep.)
Belligerents

 Turkey
Syrian opposition Syrian Opposition
Support:

 Islamic State
Commanders and leaders
Turkey Lt. Gen. Zekai Aksakallı
(Operations chief commander)
Turkey Lt. Gen. İsmail Metin Temel
(Second Army commander)
Syrian opposition Col. Ahmed Othman
(Sultan Murad Division commander)
Syrian opposition Fehim İsa
(Sultan Murad Division commander)
Syrian opposition Ali Şeyh Salih
(Sultan Murad Division field commander)
Syrian opposition Muhammad al-Gabi
(Liberation Army commander)
Syrian opposition Mohammad Abu Ibrahim
Syrian opposition Mustafa Sejari
(Al-Moutasem Brigade political leader)
Syrian opposition Abdel Karim Alyato 
(13th Division commander)
Mahmoud Abu Hamza (Descendants of Saladin Brigade commander)
Capt. Abdel Salam Abdel Razaq (Nour al-Din al-Zenki Movement commander)
Capt. Mohammed Abu Mustafa
(Sham Legion commander)
Abu Jafer (Brigade of Conquest commander)
Unknown
Units involved

Turkey Turkish Armed Forces

Syrian opposition Hawar Kilis Operations Room


Other Syrian rebels
Nour al-Din al-Zenki Movement

Ahrar al-Sham
Unknown
Strength
Turkey 500+ soldiers
Syrian opposition 1,500+ rebels
United States 40 military advisors
3,000+ militants
Casualties and losses

8 rebels and 2 Turkish soldiers killed (per Turkey & SOHR)

~60 rebels and 2 Turkish soldiers killed, 1 Turkish tank destroyed (ISIL claim)
45+ killed (per Turkey)

The northern al-Bab offensive (September 2016) was a military offensive and part of the third phase of Operation Euphrates Shield launched by the Turkish Armed Forces and factions from the Free Syrian Army and allied groups, with the goal of capturing the city of al-Bab located north of Aleppo from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

Preparations

In early September 2016, rebel and Turkish forces reached within 20 kilometers of al-Bab after capturing a large area of territory from al-Rai to Jarabulus from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. The rebels then announced their goal of capturing al-Bab.

Two days later, ISIL evacuated its headquarters in al-Bab and dozens of vehicles carrying militants and weapons drove to the town of Khafsa to the east.

On 14 September, a large number of rebels, Turkish troops, and military vehicles gathered north of al-Bab as the Turkish Air Force and artillery bombed ISIL positions near the city.

The offensive

On 16 September, the Turkish Armed Forces and FSA factions officially announced the beginning of the third phase of Operation Euphrates Shield. The FSA vowed to continue until they reach the government-held Kuweires Military Airbase. Dozens of US special forces would also support the operation. On 17 September, pro-Syrian opposition media had claimed the Turkish-backed rebels had captured the Tal Homs hilltop near al-Rai. On the same day, fighters of ISIL started evacuating their families from al-Bab.

On 18 September, Turkish-backed rebels captured six villages. Meanwhile, the ISIL-affiliated Amaq News Agency claimed that around 60 rebels were killed in Jakkah and Talghar, mostly due to mines when they rushed through these areas. Amaq also claimed that ISIL had destroyed a Turkish tank near Jakkah using a guided missile. By 19 September, the number of villages captured by the rebels had risen to nine.

On 20 September, ISIL reportedly seized six villages in a counter-attack near al-Rai, reaching the village of al-Hadabat, east of the town. In turn, the rebels took control of two other villages near al-Rai. Between 21 and 22 September, the rebels recaptured three villages from ISIL, before losing them again hours later.

As of 22 September, the rebel offensive towards al-Bab had stalled due to the ISIL counter-attack. Meanwhile, ISIL fired two rockets on Kilis in Turkey, leaving eight civilians injured. The Turkish military later stated that it had carried out airstrikes as well as shelling against the positions from where the rockets were fired, resulting in the deaths of 40 militants.

By 23 September, ISIL had captured more than 20 villages from the rebels. Due to the rebel losses, the offensive was halted and the third phase of the Turkish operation was put on hold. During the ISIL advance east of al-Rai, a pro-rebel source claimed the FSA captured a village west of the town.

Between 24 and 27 September, pro-rebel sources claimed the rebels had seized 11 villages from ISIL, including 10 of those previously lost, as well as the electrical grid of Weqfan. A pro-government source also confirmed the rebels took control of three other villages, two of which they also previously lost.

On 27 September, three Turkish soldiers were injured in an attack conducted by ISIL using a bomb-laden drone while the Turkish military shelled 30 ISIL targets.

In late September, the Al-Monitor assessed, taking into account the ISIL recapture of a number of Turkmen villages south of Jarablus from the FSA, that the Euphrates Shield operation could not be sustained without Turkish ground troops, pointing to existing doubts since the very start. It stated the rebel forces were inadequate and the biggest weakness of the operation, which could possibly lead to larger numbers of Turkish troops coming into Syria and into a "quagmire".

Aftermath

In the immediate aftermath of the aborted offensive towards al-Bab, the rebels and Turkey launched a new offensive towards the ISIL-held town of Dabiq.

See also


This page was last updated at 2024-02-14 20:23 UTC. Update now. View original page.

All our content comes from Wikipedia and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.


Top

If mathematical, chemical, physical and other formulas are not displayed correctly on this page, please useFirefox or Safari