DAMASCUS: US-led airstrikes in Syria disrupted the Islamic State group’s lucrative oil-pumping operations as Britain’s Parliament on Friday debated joining anti-jihadist raids in neighboring Iraq.
As MPs in London prepared to vote on whether to join the military campaign in Iraq against the IS, American planes destroyed four tanks operated by militants in Syria as well as several vehicles and jihadist positions in neighboring Iraq, the Pentagon said.
The US-led coalition also bombed oil refineries in east and northeast Syria where IS jihadists extract crude for sale on the black market, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.
In recent days, Washington and its allies have taken aim at the funding sources of what US President Barack Obama has branded a “network of death.”
Experts say sales of oil from Syria and Iraq usually earn IS between $1 million and $3 million a day.
But now, according to activists in Deir Ezzor, pumping has stopped.
“Oil extraction has been halted because of the security situation,” said Leith Al-Deiri who spoke to AFP via the Internet.
Another activist from Deir Ezzor, Rayan Al-Furati, confirmed the halt.
“There are no traders or clients going to the fields, fearing the strikes,” he said, also via the Internet.
In London, Prime Minister David Cameron sought to convince members of parliament that Britain should join military action against IS in Iraq.
He also warned that such involvement could last years, saying the “hallmarks” of the campaign would be “patience and persistence, not shock and awe.”
Washington is eager to build the broadest possible coalition to tackle IS, which has captured large areas of Syria and Iraq and declared a “caliphate.”
If, as expected, the British Parliament votes to take part, the Royal Air Force will join warplanes from the United States, France, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Jordan hitting IS targets.
Both France and Britain have ruled out launching strikes in Syria, however, unlike the Arab allies taking part in the aerial campaign.
Denmark said it would send seven F-16 fighters to help combat IS militants in Iraq, joining Belgium and the Netherlands which also plan to deploy six aircraft each.
The Netherlands will also provide 250 military personnel and 130 trainers for the Iraqi military, and Greece said it would send arms to Kurdish forces battling the jihadists.
Turkey has so far declined to take part in military action, and has denied claims that its airspace or airbases have been used by coalition forces. But Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Ankara would support “any military operation or a solution (that) carries the perspective of bringing peace and stability to the region.”
Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani on Thursday blamed Western “blunders” for creating extremist havens, and said outside interference would not solve the problem.
IS’s brutal abuses against civilians, rival fighters and Arab and Western hostages, as well as its success in recruiting Western members, have triggered international alarm.
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