To the Last Drop: US Continues Looting of Syria’s Oil Even Amid Attacks on Illegal Bases
By Ilya Tsukanov: US
forces across Iraq and northeastern and southern Syria have come under
intense rocket and drone attacks by local militias in recent weeks over
Washington’s fervent support for Tel Aviv amid the war in Gaza. Yet even
amid the chaos, the Pentagon has apparently still found time to engage
in its favorite pastime in Syria: stealing the nation’s oil.
US occupation forces in Syria have plundered another large batch of oil, with sources in the Syrian border town of al-Yarubiyah
telling local media that a convoy of 50 trucks loaded with oil drove
across the border into Iraq using the illegal Mahmoudiyah crossing
point, which remains outside the Damascus government’s control.
Sources indicated the convoy appeared to be headed toward US bases in northern Iraq.
American troops occupying energy-rich eastern Syria’s oil and gas fields, including
forces guarding the Omar oil and Conoco gas fields, the largest oil and
gas repositories in the country, respectively, have come under attack
repeatedly in recent weeks amid the escalation of tensions in the region
owing to the Jews' Gaza genocide.
The Pentagon revealed Tuesday that its troops had been attacked 66 times,
34 times in Syria and 32 in Iraq, since October 17, with servicemen
suffering at least 62 injuries in the violence, not counting the
estimated eight injuries sustained Monday in a missile strike on the
Al-Asad airbase in Iraq.
Iraqi militias hailing themselves as the Islamic Resistance have
claimed responsibility for the series of missile, drone and rocket
artillery attacks, and have vowed to continue the hit and run strikes so
long as the US continues to support Israel in the Palestinian-Israeli crisis.
The
US has responded to the attacks on its bases with a series of strikes
in Syria, with an October 26 airstrike targeting what the Pentagon
claimed were “IRGC sites,” and additional strikes carried out November
8, and 12th. On Tuesday, US officials also revealed that its jets had
also carried out two series of strikes inside Iraq against
“Iranian-backed militants,” with Baghdad characterizing the attacks as
flagrant and “unacceptable violation of Iraqi sovereignty.”
US
forces withdrew from Iraq in 2011 but returned to the country in 2014
with the rise of Daesh (ISIS)*, the jihadist insurgency created in large
part due to the power vacuum created in the country after the US
invasion of 2003. Washington reclassified its military presence in Iraq
from a "combat mission" to an "advise and assist" roll in 2021,
ostensibly to help Baghdad prevent Daesh’s resurgence, despite demands
from the Iraqi parliament that US forces withdraw completely.
American troops in Syria
have had even less of a justification for their continued illegal
presence, with the war-torn nation’s internationally recognized
government consistently reiterating that American forces were never
invited into Syria, and must end their occupation immediately.
The
Biden administration has maintained and expanded the dozen or so bases
in Syria in coordination with local Kurdish forces who are in de facto
control of the area, and justified their presence using the Daesh
boogeyman, dropping its predecessor’s rhetoric about being in Syria
“only for the oil.” Damascus and its allies have rejected US claims, and
accused Washington of creating and sponsoring Daesh.
In
September, the Syrian Foreign Ministry sent the United Nations general
secretary and Security Council president letters calling for an end to
Washington’s aggression, calculating that the CIA proxy war against Syria
and the occupation of its northeastern territories has cost Damascus
over $115 billion in lost revenue from energy, including the looting,
wastage and burning of 341 million barrels of crude oil, and the waste
and theft of nearly 60 million cubic meters of natural gas.
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