Syria, Iraq troops link at border for first time in years
BEIRUT — Syrian troops and allied militias met up with Iraqi forces at one crossing point along their shared border Sunday for the first time in years, in a step described as a major achievement by the Syrian military in their fight against the Islamic State group.
The development came as the U.S. military confirmed that it had shot down a Syrian Air Force fighter jet that had bombed local forces aligned with the Americans in the fight against IS, threatening to escalate tensions. The Syrian SU-22 was shot down near the town of Tabqa, it said.
The meeting with Iraqi forces reported by pro-government media took place a day after Iraqi forces captured a border crossing point with Syria, al-Waleed, from the IS militants. It was not immediately clear if the Syrian forces reached a new point along their border with Iraq or whether it was the Iraqi forces that had moved northeast of their newly captured point.
The U.S.-led coalition said it was aware of the Iraqi forces’ manoeuvrs along the border, which highlight Baghdad’s resolve to fight IS. The manoeuvrs have no impact on the U.S. presence nearby, a coalition colonel said.


