The United States and its local Kurdish militia allies have smuggled two more convoys worth of Syrian oil out of the country.
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Sources told local media Saturday that they’d spotted a 23-vehicle convoy including covered trucks filled with oil heading from Syria’s al-Jazeera oil fields toward the illegal al-Mahmudiya border crossing with Iraq in the al-Yarubiya countryside. Separately, a 34-vehicle convoy, including trucks and tankers, was seen making its way toward Iraq via the illegal al-Walid crossing.
Saturday’s smuggling operations were the second of their kind this week. On Monday, media reported that US occupation forces had shipped oil from al-Jazeera's fields to bases in Iraq.
On Tuesday, Syrian UN representative Bassam Sabbagh blasted Washington’s effort to politicize the humanitarian response in Syria in the wake of last month’s devastating earthquakes, pointing out that the US’s “illegitimate dominance on oil and gas wells in the northeastern part of Syria and the smuggling of petroleum outside the country” constitute a special form of cruelty which “deprived Syrians from these materials and billions of dollars in estimated income.”
The US operates about a dozen military bases in Syria without the permission of the internationally recognized Damascus government. Most of these bases are situated east of the Euphrates River in the energy and food-rich parts of the country, where approximately 90 percent of Syria’s modest oil reserves are concentrated. Syria has never been a major regional oil power, but had enough to ensure energy self-sufficiency, and earn a modest export income, before the US and its regional allies began a long-running dirty war against Damascus in 2011.
Syrian officials have repeatedly demanded that American troops and all other foreign forces operating in the country illegally exit immediately.