Mail OnlineIS flag flies on Europe's doorstep: Jihadis are poised to seize key town...
while Nato's tanks hold their fire on Turkish border By John Hall and Jack Crone Islamic State terrorists raise the black flag of jihad in Kobane - where Kurdish forces have been resisting for weeks
Flag was seen being waved on hill on the outskirts of town, before being raised over four-storey building in suburbs
Brave Kurdish troops still desperately resisting and earlier said they will not let them take city 'for as long as we live'
But new reports say militants have entered city's eastern districts, engaging in street-to street fighting with defenders
If Kobani falls ISIS will control unbroken 125-mile stretch of frontier with Turkey - 1,000 miles from the EU
Heavily armed Turkish soldiers stationed on nearby Syrian border have been watching the fierce fighting take place
Mortar shells fired by ISIS militants have fallen inside Turkish territory in recent days damaging homes in Atmanek
NATO member Turkey has announced that alliance's 'joint defence mechanism' will be activated if ISIS breach border
Islamic State militants have entered the key strategic city of Kobane, which lies on the Syrian-Turkish border, and have taken control of its eastern districts after engaging in street-to-street fighting with Kurdish defenders.
ISIS raised their flag over a building in the outskirts of the town yesterday morning following an assault lasting almost three weeks, amid fears the town could fall to the jihadists within hours.
Kobane is just six miles from the Turkish border - the gateway into Europe - and the NATO member country has already called on the international alliance to provide military assistance in the event that ISIS fighters breach the border.
Despite the symbolic raising of the flag, the town's brave Kurdish defenders earlier claimed that the terrorists had not reached the city centre and would not be allowed to do so 'for as long as we live'.
But ISIS are believed to have now taken the town's industrial zone in the east - as hundreds of civilians flee to the Turkish border.
Meanwhile, Turkish tanks were massing across the hillsides just miles away, with soldiers standing atop ready to fire.
Turkey has announced that NATO has drawn up a strategy to defend the country if it is attacked along its border with Syria, ABC News reports.
Defense Minister Ismet Yilmaz yesterday said that NATO had done this at Turkey's request, adding: 'If there is an attack, NATO's joint defence mechanism will be activated.'
NATO's Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg also spoke yesterday, claiming that the alliance had 'deployed Patriot missiles in Turkey to enhance and strengthen' the country's air defence.
He added: 'The main responsibility for NATO is to protect all allied countries. Turkey is a NATO ally and our main responsibility is to protect the integrity, the borders of Turkey,' NBC News reports.
Local sources inside Kobane confirmed the group had planted its flag but said that Kurdish forces had repelled their advances so far. At least 20 ISIS militants have so far been killed in their assault on the city yesterday - following the deaths of more than 45 fighters on each side on Sunday.
Turkish tanks are seen along the border with Syria as fighting between Kurdish forces and ISIS militants continues to rage in the nearby Syrian town of Kobane
Charlie Cooper, a spokesman at the Quilliam Foundation, a British counter-extremism think tank, said: ‘The fall of Kobani is perilously close, if not inevitable. It is most likely there will be mass execution of those left fighting. Kobani is important symbolically because it is the last pocket of resistance in northern Syria for hundreds of miles.’
Jenan Moussa, a reporter for the Dubai-based network Al Aan, who is on the border, said there were fears in Kobani that ‘all will be killed’.
She posted a series of tweets, including: ‘Isis used booby trAlan Henning calls for David Cameron to send troops to ...apped cars to force their way through Kurdish defence lines in Kobani.’ Another read: ‘Isis entered #Kobani from both east & west. They are in the city. Street fights raging.’
Kobane is a town of key strategic importance to both ISIS and the Kurdish resistance due to its close proximity to the largely porous Turkish border.
While the city centre is roughly six miles from the barbed wire fence that separates Turkey from Syria, the city's northern suburbs are so close to Turkey that civilians in the Turkish town of Mursitpinar have been able to watch the fighting with binoculars.
Yesterday morning Kurdish fighters inside Kobane - which is also known as Ayn al-Arab and situated right on the Turkish border - declared that U.S.-led airstrikes against ISIS targets in northern Syria have had little impact on the militant group, who have continued to seize swathes of territory.
'ISIL have only planted a flag on one building on the eastern side of town,' said Ismail Eskin, a journalist in the town, using an alternative acronym for ISIS.
'That is not inside the city, it's on the eastern side. They are not inside the city. Intense clashes are continuing,' he added.
ISIS has been battling to seize the predominantly Kurdish town after taking over large swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq in recent months.
Air strikes by American and Gulf state warplanes have failed to halt the advance of the Islamists, who have besieged the town from three sides and pounded it with heavy artillery.
'During the day sometimes IS makes advances but YPG pushes them back. There are clashes within the vicinity, but they are not inside the city, YPG is resisting,' said Pawer Mohammed Ali, a translator for the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) inside Kobane.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and a statement from the Kurdish force known as the People's Protection Units, or YPG, said more than 45 fighters on both sides were killed yesterday near Kobane - including a Kurdish female fighter who blew herself up, killing several jihadists.
Kobane and the surrounding areas have been under attack since mid-September, with ISIS capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages.
The assault has forced some 160,000 Syrians to flee - many of them across the porous border into neighboring Turkey - and has strained Kurdish forces, who have struggled to push back the extremists despite being aided by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes.
ISIS PLOTTING TROJAN HORSE CAMPAIGN BY SMUGGLING MILITANTS INTO EUROPE DISGUISED AS REFUGEESISIS is plotting to smuggle militants into Western Europe disguised as refugees so that they can launch devastating terror attacks, according to US intelligence sources.
Encrypted communications unravelled by American military intelligence have revealed that Islamic State leaders are planning to take advantage of the 'chaotic conditions' on the Syria-Turkey crossing.
Relaxed border controls would allow IS militants to blend in with the thousands of genuine refugees spilling over the border in search of safety.
The Trojan Horse tactic would see fighters equipped with fake passports, leaving them free to travel around European countries and plot terrorist attacks unchecked.
A US intelligence source, speaking to German newspaper Bild, said that ISIS was moving away from plans to conduct aircraft hijackings for fear of tight security - and that they were looking to land a new strategy.
'In view of the chaotic conditions on the Syria-Turkey border, it is nearly impossible to catch Isis terrorists in the wave of refugees,' wrote Bild.
Because hundreds of refugees cross the Syrian-Turkish border every day, the jihadists have a good chance of remaining unnoticed in the crowds.On the Turkish side of the border, at least 14 Turkish army tanks took up defensive positions on a hilltop near Kobane.
Heavy bombardment could be heard down below as plumes of smoke rose from the town.
A shell from the fighting struck a house and a small grocery store across the border in Turkey yesterday morning, but no one was wounded. At least four people were injured in a similar incident yesterday.
Despite mortars raining down on residential areas in Kobane and the stray fire hitting Turkish territory, Kurdish pleas for help have so far largely gone unanswered.
ISIS wants to take Kobane to consolidate a dramatic sweep across northern Iraq and Syria, in the name of an absolutist version of Sunni Islam, that has sent shockwaves through the Middle East.
Turkish forces fire tear gas to disperse Kurds on the outskirts of Suruc, at the Turkey-Syria border, as news cameramen also run for cover amongst the group
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