Battle of Khasham

The Battle of Khasham, also known as the Battle of Conoco Fields, was a military engagement of the Syrian civil war fought on 7 February 2018 near the towns of Khasham and Al Tabiyeh in the Deir ez-Zor Governorate, Syria. The Operation Inherent Resolve coalition delivered air and artillery strikes on Syrian Armed Forces and pro-government militias after they reportedly engaged a U.S. military and Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) position in the region.

Battle of Conoco Fields (Battle of Khasham)
Part of the 2017–2019 Deir ez-Zor campaign of the Syrian civil war

Hatched box shows location of clashes
Territorial control in February 2018:
     Syrian Arab Republic
     Syrian Democratic Forces
Date7–8 February 2018
(1 day)
Location35°20′10″N 40°18′34″E
Result American and SDF victory
Belligerents
  •  United States
  • Syrian Democratic Forces
  • Syria
  • Liwa Fatemiyoun
  • Liwa Zainebiyoun
  • Wagner Group
  • Interbrigades
Commanders and leaders
Unknown
Units involved

Syrian government forces

Wagner Group

  • 5 Storm unit
Strength
  • 40 American troops

US aircraft and artillery

  • F-22 fighter jets
  • F-15E strike fighters
  • B-52 bombers
  • AC-130 gunships
  • AH-64 Apache attack helicopters
  • MQ-9 Reaper unmanned combat aerial vehicles
  • RQ-7B Shadow unmanned aerial vehicles
  • M777 howitzer artillery
  • M142 HIMARS rocket artillery
500 Syrian and Russian troops
Casualties and losses
  • None
  • 1 SDF fighter wounded
  • Syrian claim: 55 killed
  • U.S. claim: Approximately 100–200 killed
  • SOHR claim: 68 killed
  • Unofficial Russian claims: 80–100 killed, 200 wounded
  • University of Southern Denmark: 65—200 Russians killed:51–53

The US Central Command stated that pro-government forces had "initiated an unprovoked attack against well-established Syrian Democratic Forces headquarters" in the area, while coalition service members were "co-located with SDF partners during the attack 8 kilometers (5 mi) east of the agreed-upon Euphrates River de-confliction line". The Russian Ministry of Defence's statement, released on 8 February 2018, referred to the incident at the village of Salihiyah (located south of the SDF-held town of Abu Hamam in the Abu Kamal District) and said that it was caused by reconnaissance actions of Syrian militias that had not been cleared with the Russian operations command; the statement stressed that there were no Russian service members in the "designated district of the Deir ez-Zor province of Syria".

The number of pro-Syrian government troops–particularly the number of Russian mercenaries–has been the subject of debate.:49 Shortly after the fighting, the American officials estimated that around 100 Syrian troops had been killed in the fighting, with some reports of Russian mercenaries among the dead. As unconfirmed accounts of casualties among Russian Wagner Group mercenaries in the strike emerged, the incident was billed by media as "the first deadly clash between citizens of Russia and the United States since the Cold War".

Reporting by Der Spiegel and the official Russian position hold that U.S. troops repelling a Syrian attack "happened to kill 20-30 Russians", while the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) believed there were some Russian casualties caused by a nearby booby-trap unrelated to the assault. However, other news organizations and American official estimates ranged up to a "couple of hundred" Russians killed. The Ukrainian Security Service of Ukraine identified 65 Russians as killed through open-source intelligence, though this appraisal has the potential for forgery. A report published the University of Southern Denmark in 2019 which referred to claims made by Der Spiegel's report, official Russian and American statements, and other sources estimated "that 65–200 Russians (of which a few may have been Russian special operators assisting or leading the Wagnerites) died as a result of the fighting, some in the field, and some in hospital beds in Syria and Russia".:49–54

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.