Is ISIS gaining or losing ground in Syria?

An injured man from the Syrian town of Kobane is carried to a hospital in Turkey, after forces of the so-called Islamic State raided Kobane.

Good and bad news from the war in Syria. On one hand, Kurdish and Syrian forces appear to be closing in on Raqqa — the capital of the so-called Islamic State. On the other, ISIS is on the offensive in several places, including the high-profile town of Kobane.

Over the winter, ISIS forces battled hard to take control of the town. But Kurdish forces, assisted by US airstrikes, were able to hold them at bay and finally drive them out. 

Until Thursday, that is.

“Basically, Islamic state fighters managed to enter the town wearing uniforms of the Kurdish militia and flying the flag of the (rebel) Free Syrian Army,” says Liz Sly of the Washington Post, who is across the frontier in Turkey. “They detonated suicide bombs,” she adds. They roamed around the streets and shot at people."

While several dozen people were killed, the attack seems to have been more of a raid than an attempt to take territory. More serious fighting is going on around Hasakah. ISIS forces are reported to have punched into the city, which is defended by Kurdish militias and Syrian government forces.   

The United States has carried out air strikes to assist the defenders against ISIS in Hasakah.

However, ISIS is on the back foot elsewhere. An offensive by a coalition of Kurdish militias and rebel Free Syrian Army factions has made surprise progress toward the self-proclaimed capital of the Islamic State, Raqqa. The coalition is dubbed the ‘Euphrates Volcano.’

The Post’s Sly says this advance appears to be the result mainly of US air attacks.

“The people I’ve spoken to — refugees who’ve fled the area; fighters on the ground — they say this is all about  air strikes. It’s not about brilliant fighting by Kurds or the FSA.”

Map of Syria
The Syrian cities of Raqqa and Kobane have both seen skirmishes in reccent daysMoira Lavelle
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