True||Militants defending their last bastion in eastern Syria used the cover of bad weather to launch a deadly counterattack against a Kurdish-led force, an activist group said Tuesday.||

BEIRUT: Militants defending their last bastions in eastern Syria used the cover of bad weather to launch a vain but deadly counterattack against Kurdish-led fighters.

Daesh (ISIS) was unable to hold on to the positions they attacked but the assault killed 23 members of the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and also left nine militants dead.

Daesh fighters took advantage of poor visibility to unleash suicide attackers on SDF forces along the front line in the Euphrates valley late Sunday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Tuesday.

"Twenty-three SDF fighters were killed and nine Islamic State [Daesh] jihadists were also killed in fighting that lasted all night and into Monday morning," Observatory chief Rami Abdel-Rahman said.

The militants often launch attacks under the cover of bad weather that cancels out their opponents' advantage of U.S.-led coalition air power.

The SDF launched what is meant to be the final offensive on the militant organization four months ago with air and ground support from coalition forces.

The Kurdish-Arab alliance has deployed some 17,000 fighters for an operation aimed at flushing out Daesh from the last rump of its now-defunct "caliphate."

Daesh fighters "launched deadly counterattacks in three different directions against the Syrian Democratic Forces, including in the villages of Sousa and Al-Shaafa," Abdel-Rahman said.

He said they used at least two suicide bombers in their attacks, which inflicted the latest in a string of heavy losses on the SDF.

According to the Observatory, 1,087 Daesh militants were killed since the start of the operation on Sept. 10 while 602 members of the SDF also died.

"On Monday morning, the SDF launched an offensive and retook all the positions they lost," the Observatory said.

"Due to its depleted manpower, Islamic State was unable to hold on to the positions it attacked," it said.

Rahman said the militants' defenses in the area have collapsed and the end of the battle is near.

Daesh militants who remain however include seasoned fighters who have little to lose and are prepared to die in a last stand.

The meanders of the Euphrates in those areas of the Deir al-Zor province near the border with Iraq are considered the heartland of Daesh and are a perilous terrain for the SDF.

In mid-December, the SDF took Hajin, the last town of note in the Daesh-controlled pocket, signaling the imminent fall of the militants' last bastion.

An announcement by U.S. President Donald Trump last month that he was ordering a complete troop pullout from Syria rattled the Kurds.

It left them exposed to the threat of a cross-border operation by their archfoe Turkey and protesting that they had been poorly rewarded for doing much of the heavy-lifting in the battle against Daesh.

They have pressed on with their operation in eastern Syria regardless and Washington has since stressed any withdrawal would be gradual.

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