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ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 21, 2014 6:16 pm

Kobani might well win the current fight but it will only survive if it has support from Turkey

and a safe corridor for supplies - to be perfectly honest the long-term outlook is not good

- the Kobani Canton has lost all of it's towns and villages other than Kobani itself

Most of the residents have lost everything they own - their homes and business have been destroyed

Even though many Kurds wish to return - there is not a lot left for them to return too

I do not believe that the Syrian government will pay to rebuild Kobani

The Islamic State is now turning it's attentions on Cizire

At the same time IS is trying once again to totally annihilate the Yazidis :((

Things are going from bad to worse
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 21, 2014 9:27 pm

BBC News Middle East

Islamic State: US probes 'stray Syria air drop' in IS video

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The US defence department has said it is examining an Islamic State video appearing to show militants in control of US weapons intended for Syrian Kurdish fighters.

Some 27 bundles containing small arms, ammunition and other weaponry were dropped on Monday for militias defending the town of Kobane from IS.

A Pentagon spokesman said the vast majority ended up in the right hands.

Kurdish forces control most of the town but IS remains a threat, he said.

Militants launched a fierce attack "on all fronts" in Kobane on Monday after two days of relative calm when the town's defenders appeared to have pushed them back.

But Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm John Kirby said IS had been kept at bay by a combination of US-led air strikes and the efforts of the Kurdish forces.

Kobane, on the Turkish border, has been been under assault from IS for weeks, with most civilians forced to leave.

The new fighting came as Turkey said it would allow Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga fighters to cross into Syria to fight IS.

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Full Article and Photos:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-29715044
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 21, 2014 9:32 pm

BREAKING:

Kurdish PYD co-leader Asya Abdullah from Kobane stated that they suspect IS might have used chemical weapons against the city

Asya Abdullah has reported attack on city centre. Victims of attack are suffering loss of eyesight and breathing difficulties


Unconfirmed

Comments by reporters with contacts inside cobani:

Jenan Moussa ‏@jenanmoussa

Kobane doctor tells me: "Important to wait till we check cases. Nothing confirmed. There were false alarms before regarding the usage of chemical weapons"


@Hevallo ‏@Hevallo

Spoken to Idriss Nassan deputy PM of Kobane Autonomous Kanton who also confirms reports of chemical weapons use against YPG/YPJ fighters
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 21, 2014 10:03 pm

The Moderate Rebels:

A Complete and Growing List of Vetted Groups

Shortly after U.S. president Obama declared war on the so-called Islamic State (ISIS/IS), a bogus claim by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) about a non-aggression pact between ISIS and an unnamed unit of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) went viral largely due to ignorance about which moderate rebels the U.S. and its “Friends of Syria” allies are supporting. This guest post by Hasan Mustafa (@hasanmustafas) is an attempt to cure that ignorance and make future pseudo-scandals less likely by detailing who the U.S.-backed moderate rebels are using open-source information.

Those who oppose arming the FSA often claim that advanced weapons have already fallen or will fall into the hands of extremists, but the results of arming rebel forces thus far indicate otherwise. A recent report by the Carter Center found that of the foreign-supplied tube-launched optically-tracked wireless-guided anti-tank missiles (TOWs), HJ-8s, and RAK-12s that:


Link to a detailed list of so-called 'Moderate Rebels'

http://notgeorgesabra.wordpress.com/201 ... ed-groups/

Anthea: I expect that ISIS would have been on such a list a couple of years ago - I wonder which of these groups will be the next to turn into power-crazed murdering monsters X(
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 21, 2014 10:22 pm

@Hevallo ‏@Hevallo

BREAKING NEWS!

FIRST PICTURE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS VICTIM IN KOBANI

Image


Anthea: Source is respected journalist - normally very reliable - such a small photo - could be real - could be anything in those eyes - we will wait for further confirmation

I am certain that the Islamic State murders are getting desperate by now and will try anything to remove the Kurds before reinforcements turn up
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 21, 2014 11:25 pm

Personal Website of Mutlu Civiroglu

Chemical Attack in Kobane?

I spoke to Dr. Ahmed, one of the 4 remaining doctors inside Kobane, in 01:35 Kobane time about possible ISIS chemical attack claims. What Dr. Ahmed says is as follows:

“Several patients came to health center at 11:10pm with burn in the throat & as well as complaining about headache, though their situation is NOT very severe. We are NOT sure what the cause is yet, but we are planning to send affected patients to Suruc [neighboring city in the Turkish side of the border] in the morning for further examination.”

Doctor Ahmed said there is also a smell in the city after the incident. He said all affected people are civilians, no fighters among them.

Doctor Ahmed emphasized that they were NOT sure the symptoms were certainly due to a chemical attack. He said more research needed to be done to determine the exact cause.

He added that they do not have any masks or other equipment to protects civilians and YPG and FSA fighters from a possible chemical attacks.

http://civiroglu.net/2014/10/22/chemica ... in-kobane/
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 21, 2014 11:58 pm

To sum up:

Doctors in Kobane are strongly suspicious of a chemical attack but cant yet confirm it

The people affected will be sent to Turkey tomorrow
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Oct 22, 2014 10:19 am

Bloomberg

Iraqi Kurds Set to Reinforce Kobani as Turkey Relents
By Aziz Alwan, Selcan Hacaoglu and Salma El Wardany

Iraqi Kurdish fighters are set to reinforce the defense of Kobani, the Syrian town besieged by Islamic State, after Turkey agreed to let them transit its territory.

It wasn’t immediately clear when the fighters, known as Peshmerga, would arrive or the size of the force. A small group may be deployed “within a few days,” Rudaw News Agency cited Fuad Hussein, chief of staff to the president of the Kurdistan Regional Government as saying. Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said yesterday that talks were continuing on the arrangements.

Kurdish fighters in Kobani have held off Islamic State militants for weeks with increasing support from the U.S., which has focused airstrikes on the town and dropped supplies for its defenders. Islamic State, which already holds a stretch of territory on the Turkish border, is fighting to expand its self-declared caliphate in Iraq and Syria.

Turkey had resisted supporting the Kurdish forces because of their links with a separatist group fighting for autonomy in Turkey. It relented this week, announcing on Oct. 20 it would allow the Peshmerga to cross into Syria through Turkey.

The reinforcements will bring heavy weapons requested by Kobani’s defenders and retain control of their use, Hussein was cited as saying.

Rival Kurds

Syrian Kurdish leaders said there was no agreement on the deployment. “When contacts are made with the Peshmerga, only then will we agree on how the fighting will happen,” said Enwer Muslim, a senior official in Kobani.

He said any assistance should be coordinated with the Syrian Kurds, who have carved out their own autonomous region as the government of President Bashar al-Assad lost control over much of Syria during a 3 1/2-year civil war.

The Iraqi and Syrian Kurds have been rivals in the past, and have competed for influence in northern Syria, according to Nihat Ali Ozcan, an analyst at the Economic Policy Research Foundation in Ankara.

The main Syrian Kurdish group is linked to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party or PKK, a separatist group classified as a terrorist organization by Turkey and the U.S.

Turkey, which has close economic ties with the Iraqi Kurds, has come under U.S. pressure to help defend Kobani, and violent protests broke out among its own Kurdish minority over the government’s perceived reluctance to get involved.

“Turkey does not want the PKK to claim victory in Kobani on its own, and is allowing the Peshmerga to join the fight,” said Ozcan.

To contact the reporters on this story: Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara at shacaoglu@bloomberg.net; Salma El Wardany in Cairo at selwardany@bloomberg.net; Aziz Alwan in Baghdad at aalwan1@bloomberg.net - To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaa Shahine at asalha@bloomberg.net Jack Fairweather, Glen Carey

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-2 ... fense.html
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Oct 22, 2014 5:19 pm

Reuters

Iraqi Kurds approve sending fighters to aid Syrian town
By Isabel Coles and Dasha Afanasieva

Iraqi Kurdish lawmakers approved a plan on Wednesday to send fighters to the Syrian town of Kobani to relieve fellow Kurds under attack by Islamic State militants, marking the semi-autonomous region's first military foray into Syria's war.

Kobani lies on the border with Turkey and Islamic State fighters keen to consolidate territorial gains in northern Syria have pressed an offensive against the town even as U.S.-led forces started bombing their positions.

The battle has also taken on major political significance for Turkey, where the siege has sparked protests among Kurds and threatened a peace process with Turkey's own Kurdish insurgents, who are angry at the government for failing to aid Kobani.

Under pressure to go beyond humanitarian assistance for those fleeing the violence, Turkey said on Monday it would allow Iraqi Kurdish fighters, known as "peshmerga" or those who confront death, to cross its territory to reach Kobani.

Iraqi Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Haji Omer said the Kurdish parliament approved the plan in a session on Wednesday. "Today in parliament we agreed to send the peshmerga forces to Kobani as soon as possible," he said.

Iraqi Kurdish official Hemin Hawrami said on Twitter the peshmerga would be equipped with heavy weapons. This would help the besieged fighters, who say they need armour-piercing weapons to fight the better-armed Islamic State militants.

Gunshots rang out throughout the day and an air strike occurred near the centre of the Kobani in the early afternoon, while five Kurdish fighters were buried in the Turkish border town of Suruc to defiant speeches and Kurdish songs.

Idris Nassan, a local Kurdish official, said clashes had taken place in the east, southeast and southwest of Kobani.

"They (IS) are always bringing more people and weapons from the surrounding areas and also from (the Syrian province of) Raqqa and Iraq. It's obvious every time they attack," he said.

One resident who visited Kobani and asked not to be named said Islamic State were still in control of the town centre.

The pro-Islamic State Amaq News Agency released a video of fighters speaking from what they said was the centre of Kobani, claiming that their morale is high and that they are advancing despite coalition air strikes.

SUSPICIONS

Two senior Kurdish officials said late on Tuesday that preparations were under way to send a small number of peshmerga to Kobani, known in Arabic as Ayn al-Arab, but it would take several days until the necessary arrangements were in place.

Anthea: Not a problem - I am sure that the kind gentlemen of the Islamic State will hold off on their attacks and wait for the reinforcements to arrive - perhaps ISIS will have a weeks holiday while they sit and wait for the Peshmerga to go and annihilate them

The United States said on Sunday it had air dropped medical supplies and weapons to Kurds in Kobani provided by Iraq's Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) - a move Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan criticised on Wednesday because Islamic State fighters managed to seize some of the weapons.

The Pentagon said on Wednesday two bundles of military supplies for Kurdish fighters in Kobani went astray during an air drop earlier this week, with one destroyed later by an air strike and the other taken by Islamic State militants.

Twenty-six other bundles of supplies were dropped to Kurds in the city and reached their targets.

“There is always going to be some margin of error in these types of operations. In fact, we routinely overload these aircraft because we know some bundles may go astray," said U.S. Army Colonel Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman.

"One bundle worth of equipment is not enough equipment to give the enemy any type of advantage at all."

Speaking at a news conference, Erdogan said he proposed the move to facilitate the passage of peshmerga fighters to Kobani in a call with U.S. President Barack Obama at the weekend.

"At first they didn't say yes to peshmergas, but then they gave a partial yes and we said we would help," he said.

Erdogan added that talks were continuing among officials on the details of the peshmergas' transit. One Turkish journalist close to the government said on Wednesday 500 of them were expected to cross into Kobani this weekend.

Although Turkey's relations with the KRG are close, officials view those defending Kobani with suspicion because of their links with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), outlawed in Turkey as a terrorist group after fighting a three-decades long insurgency for Kurdish autonomy in southeast Turkey.

The government wants a definitive peace with the PKK, but that process has faltered in recent months, particularly as Turkey's failure to intervene militarily in Kobani has provoked fury among many of the country's 15 million Kurds.

Ankara has also criticised the PYD for not joining the wider struggle to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, something the Turkish authorities have been demanding for years.

The U.S.-led campaign against Islamic State, which has seized swathes of territory across Iraq and Syria, continued on Wednesday as air strikes killed around 25 of the militants near the northern Iraqi city of Baiji, residents said.

U.S. Central Command said it targeted the militant group, carrying out 12 strikes near Iraq's Mosul Dam and another six close to Kobani.

Iraqi army tanks and armoured vehicles also fought off an advance by Islamic State militants on the town of Amiriya Fallujah, west of the Iraqi capital Baghdad, army sources said.

Syria's Information Minister, Omran Zoabi, meanwhile said the country's air force had destroyed two fighter jets reportedly operated by Islamic State militants in the north of the country.

[size=80](Additional reporting by Saif Hameed in Baghdad, Oliver Holmes and Maariam Karouny in Beirut, and Susan Heavey, Eric Beech, David Alexander and Phil Stewart in Washington; Writing by Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Giles Elgood)[/size]

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/10/2 ... 2B20141022
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Oct 22, 2014 5:26 pm

Reuters

Turkey's Erdogan says U.S. weapons airdrop on Kobani was wrong

Anthea: Do you realise that several MILLION Kurds actually voted for this shit - I bet they are kicking themselves now

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday it was wrong of the United States to air drop military supplies to Kurdish fighters defending the Syrian border town of Kobani, as some weapons were seized by Islamic State militants besieging it.

The Pentagon said on Tuesday the vast majority of the U.S. supplies dropped on Sunday had reached the Kurdish fighters despite an online video showing Islamic State jihadists with a bundle.

"What was done here on this subject turned out to be wrong. Why did it turn out wrong? Because some of the weapons they dropped from those C130s were seized by ISIL (Islamic State)," Erdogan told a news conference in the Turkish capital Ankara.

Asked about a plan for Turkey to facilitate the passage of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters to Kobani to help in its defense, Erdogan said he proposed this move in a telephone call with U.S. President Barack Obama at the weekend.

"I have difficulty understanding why Kobani is so strategic for them because there are no civilians there, just around 2,000 fighters," Erdogan said. "At first they didn't say yes to peshmergas, but then they gave a partial yes and we said we would help."

He added that talks were continuing among officials on the details of the peshmergas' transit through Turkey. One Turkish journalist close to the government said on Wednesday some 500 of them were expected to cross into Kobani this weekend.

(Reporting by Gulsen Solaker and Ece Toksabay; Writing by Daren Butler, editing by John Stonestreet)

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/10/2 ... IX20141022
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Oct 22, 2014 9:38 pm

Kobani Kurd and Lovely Friend :x

Today in a dream
i saw my house
in my lovely home
kobani
how warm it was
and how safe
i saw it as it was when i left it
that time
when i was afraid
this time
the war was over
and every thing every memory is still alive
still as it self green . beautiful and kind
every one was there
happy
but later
even in the dream
the war started again
and the fear came back again
i wake up
but
there was some thing good
in the dream
we weren't displaced again
we stayed at home
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Oct 23, 2014 4:41 pm

Reuters

U.S.-led air strikes killed 521 fighters, 32 civilians in Syria: monitor

Air strikes by U.S.-led forces have killed 521 Islamist fighters and 32 civilians during a month-long campaign in Syria, a monitoring group which tracks the violence said on Thursday.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the vast majority of the deaths, 464, were militants from Islamic State, an al Qaeda offshoot which has grabbed large areas of Syria and neighboring Iraq.

The attacks also killed 57 members of the al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front, the Observatory said. Six of the civilians were children and five were women, it added.

The United States has been carrying out strikes in Iraq against Islamic State since July and in Syria since September with the help of Arab allies. Britain and France have also struck Islamic State targets in Iraq.

Washington justified its action in Syria under Article 51 of the U.N. Charter, which covers an individual or collective right to self-defense against armed attack.

U.S. Central Command spokesman Colonel Patrick Ryder said on Saturday that Washington took "reports of civilian casualties or damage to civilian facilities seriously and we have a process to investigate each allegation."

Close to 200,000 people have been killed in Syria's three-year civil war, according to the United Nations.

Coalition strikes have hit the Syrian provinces of Aleppo, Deir al-Zor, Idlib, Raqqa and al-Hassakah, the Observatory said.

(The story corrects to say 521, not 553, fighters killed)
(Reporting by Oliver Holmes; Editing by Andrew Heavens)


http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/ ... IG20141023
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Oct 23, 2014 5:23 pm

CNN

Turkish President: 200 Iraqi Peshmerga will join Syrian Kurds' fight for Kobani
By Laura Smith-Spark, Hande Atay and Mohammed Tawfeeq

A deal has been reached for 200 Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga forces to pass through Turkey to help Syrian Kurdish fighters in the besieged town of Kobani, just over the border in Syria, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Thursday.

The Syrian Kurdish fighters had originally declined the deployment of Peshmerga troops, but Erdogan told reporters in Riga, Latvia, that he'd learned Wednesday that an agreement for the reinforcement force had been reached.

However, an aide to the minister for Peshmerga in Iraq's Kurdish Regional Government told CNN that talks are ongoing.

The technical discussions involve four parties -- the United States, Turkey, the Syrian Kurds and the KRG in Iraq -- and decisions on numbers and timing are still a ways off, he said.

The reports on the Peshmerga forces came on the same day that Erdogan accused the United States of arming a group linked with terrorists, according to Anadolu, Turkey's semiofficial news agency.

Kurdish fighters have been battling alongside Free Syrian Army forces to repel ISIS forces from the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a London-based monitoring group, said Thursday that ISIS militants have taken control of the western outskirts of the border town.

This means they now surround Kobani from three sides: the east, west and south, it said.

Meanwhile, heavy clashes continue between Kurdish militia groups and ISIS militants in the northern part of Kobani, the group said.

Strong accusation

As the clashes raged in Kobani, Erdogan said the border city, which is under the control of the armed wing of the Democratic Union Party, or PYD, is more important to Turkey than the U.S. because Turkey houses the roughly 200,000 refugees who have fled the fighting there, Anadolu reported.

He asked the U.S. to recognize the "dilemmas" there while accusing the country of arming terrorist elements among the Kurdish forces.

"Kobani is not strategic for the U.S.," he said. "It could be strategic for us only. And also, Turkey is currently accommodating all the civilians fleeing from the town. There are no civilians there."

Erdogan went on to say the U.S. was pushing arms to the PYD, which he accused of affiliation with the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, which is considered a terrorist organization by the U.S., Turkey, NATO and others.

"We had said that there are commanders from the PKK in the ranks of PYD fighting in Syria," Erdogan said. "We had said that any U.S. aid to this group is going to a terrorist organization."

Airdropped supplies

There had been hopes that foreign airstrikes and airdropped supplies could help Kurdish fighters turn the tide against the ISIS militants. But the onslaught has continued.

ISIS has said that at least some of the airdropped supplies made it into its fighters' hands.

One of the 28 bundles dropped in and around Kobani on Monday drifted away from its target zone, a U.S. official said. The U.S. military said it went back and blasted it.

But a video posted on social media shows what appears to be an ISIS fighter next to a parachute bundle. He goes on to show what appears to be the contents of the bundle, including crates of hand grenades and mortar rounds.

CNN cannot independently confirm whether the items in the video are from a U.S. airdrop, but according to Anadolu, Erdogan said ISIS had seized some of the weapons.

"The rest, they also were seized by another terrorist organization, the PYD. Turkey did never lean toward such military aid and the U.S. did that despite Turkey," the news agency quoted him as saying.

Erdogan further said the Syrian groups that deserve help are the Free Syrian Army and the Peshmerga fighters, the news agency reported.

Fight for strategic hill

A Kurdish fighter and a media activist in Kobani also told CNN that ISIS militants are pushing toward the western outskirts of Kobani after attacking checkpoints manned by the Kurdish People's Protection Units, or YPG, and the Free Syrian Army.

The attacks forced them to withdraw from the strategic Tall Shair Hill area, they said.

But, they said, neither ISIS nor the YPG is able to control the western outskirts of Kobani as fighting for control of the hill rages.

Clashes also continue between ISIS and YPG fighters on the eastern outskirts of Kobani, leaving at least five Kurdish fighters dead.

ISIS militants were also killed in the clashes, but it was not immediately clear how many.

Earlier this week, U.S. airplanes dropped medical supplies and weapons into Kobani to help the city's defenders.

Rights group: Syria airstrikes killed 553

Meanwhile, a month of airstrikes in Syria by the U.S.-led coalition -- many targeting ISIS positions around Kobani -- has killed 553 people, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

A large majority of those killed were ISIS militants, including foreigners, the group said.

However, at least 32 civilians were also among those killed between the start of the airstrikes on September 23 and October 22.

They included six children and five women, the group said in a statement Wednesday.

In total, 464 ISIS militants were killed, the Observatory said. The airstrikes also claimed the lives of 57 fighters from al Nusra Front, a rival Islamist group fighting in Syria.

The figures do not include any casualties in neighboring Iraq, where the coalition has also been targeting ISIS forces.

http://edition.cnn.com/2014/10/23/world ... irstrikes/
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Oct 24, 2014 7:29 pm

Reuters

Kurds reject Erdogan report of deal with Syrian rebels to aid besieged Kobani
By Humeyra Pamuk and Sylvia Westall

A senior Syrian Kurdish official on Friday rejected a report from Turkey's president that Syrian Kurds had agreed to let Free Syrian Army fighters enter the border town of Kobani to help them push back besieging Islamic State insurgents.

The Free Syrian Army is a term used to describe dozens of armed groups fighting to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad but with little or no central command. They have been widely outgunned by Islamist insurgents such as Islamic State.

Anthea: The Free Syrian Army fighters contains even worse groups that the Islamic State - Kurds should only rely on other Kurds

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan is a leading opponent of Assad and has allowed his more secular, Western-backed opponents such as FSA fighters to use Turkey as a base and sanctuary.

Erdogan said on Friday said 1,300 FSA fighters would enter Kobani after the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) agreed on their passage, but his comments were swiftly denied by Saleh Moslem, co-chair of the PYD.

"We have already established a connection with FSA but no such agreement has been reached yet as Mr. Erdogan has mentioned," Moslem told Reuters by telephone from Brussels.

Turkey's unwillingness to send its powerful army across the Syrian border to break the siege of Kobani has angered Kurds, and seems rooted in a concern not to strengthen Kurds who seek autonomy in adjoining regions of Turkey, Iraq and Syria.

Ankara's stance has also upset Western allies, as Islamic State's capture of wide swathes of Syria and Iraq has caused international shock and U.S.-led air strikes began in August to try to halt and eventually reverse the jihadist advance.

Erdogan told a news conference on a visit to Estonia that Ankara was working on details of the route of passage for the FSA fighters, indicating they would access Kobani via Turkey.

But Moslem said talks between FSA commander Abdul Jabbar al-Oqaidi and the armed wing of the Kurdish PYD were continuing about the possible role of FSA rebels. "There are already groups with links to the FSA in Kobani helping us," he said.

The FSA, however, is little more than an acronym used to describe dozens of tenuously affiliated rebel groups who complain of a lack of arms and resources leaving them unable to effectively confront Assad and better-armed Islamist rebels.

Moslem said the FSA would be more helpful if it opened a second front against Islamic State elsewhere in Syria. "Politically we have no objections to FSA....But in my opinion, if they really would like to help, then their forces should open another front, such as from Tel Abyad or Jarablus," he said.

He was referring to two nearby Syrian border towns captured by Islamic State as part of its lightning military campaign in which it has beheaded or crucified prisoners, massacred non-Sunni Muslim civilians in its path and declared a mediaeval-style caliphate spanning eastern Syria and northwestern Iraq.

FSA commander Al-Oqaidi, speaking to Reuters in Suruc, a Turkish border town across from Kobani, said there had been an agreement to begin establishing a united defense force and initially 1,350 FSA fighters were to go to Kobani for help.

"These fighters will come in two or three days," he said.

"The fighters will come from the northern Syrian countryside. These fighters are not coming from the fighting fronts against the Assad regime. These are reserve fighters."

U.S. officials said on Thursday that Kobani, nestled in a valley overlooked by Turkish territory, seemed in less danger of falling to Islamic State after coalition air strikes and limited arms drops, but the threat remained.

Turkey has been loath to join the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State but, after mounting pressure from its Western allies, Erdogan said on Wednesday that some Kurdish peshmerga fighters from Iraq would be allowed to transit Turkey to Kobani.

CREDIBILITY TEST

Although Turkish and U.S. officials acknowledge Kobani itself is not especially strategically important, the fate of the town has become a credibility test of the international coalition's response to Islamic State.

Over the weekend, U.S. warplanes air-dropped small arms to Kobani's defenders, against the wishes of Turkish authorities who have described them as terrorists because of their links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-long separatist insurgency in Turkey.

The PYD's Moslem said he was disappointed with Turkey's response so far. "When I conducted my meetings in Turkey, I was hoping the help would come in 24 hours. It's been more than a month and we're still waiting," he said.

In a separate interview published in a pan-Arab newspaper, Moslem said that the battle for Kobani would turn into a war of attrition unless Kurds obtained arms that can repel tanks and armored vehicles.

He told Asharq al-Awsat that Kurds had recently received information that Islamic State wanted to fire chemical weapons into Kobani using mortars, after having surrounded it with around 40 tanks.

"If we were to receive qualitative (stronger) weapons, we would be able to hit the tanks and armored vehicles that they use - we may be able to bring a qualitative change in the battle," Moslem said.

The FSA's al-Oqaidi echoed Moslem's call for better weapons, saying that FSA fighters had only light arms. "Our main problem is not numbers of the fighters but the quality of weapons...The fighters in Kobani need good quality weapons too."

Elsewhere in Syria's civil war, government forces retook a town on the highway linking Hama and Aleppo cities in the west of the country after months of battles with insurgents, Damascus state television and a monitoring group said.

The recapture of Morek, 30 km (19 miles) north of Hama, is part of Assad's campaign to shore up control of territory in the west stretching north from Damascus while U.S.-led forces bomb Islamist militants in the north and east.

(Additional reporting by Dasha Afanasieva in Suruc, Turkey, Ece Toksabay and Jonny Hogg in Istanbul, Tom Perry in Beirut; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/ ... JF20141024
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Oct 24, 2014 8:32 pm

RT

Between Kobani and Turkey:
How an unarmed Kurdish brigade guards a restive border


Caught between ISIS-besieged Kobani and unwelcome in Turkey, an unarmed Kurdish brigade guards the Turkey-Syria border. The volunteers’ problems are not only with Islamic State militants – Turkish troops are also resolved to keep the brigade away.

The Kurdish volunteers can’t count on the Turkish army, who has been keeping close watch on the taskforce, to protect them from the Islamic State, also known as ISIS/ISIL. Talking to RT, the group’s head, Fadile Bayram accused Turkish forces of waging attacks on the volunteers.

“We don’t carry weapons. We are here as a moral voice to show the world what is happening. We make the Turkish army angry, and they’ve attacked us with tear gas more than a hundred times,” he said.

Frustrated and frightened, volunteers showed resilience in the face of the Islamic State militants’ atrocities and roadblocks from the Turkish police.

I tried so many times to cross the border but the Turkish police stopped us,” Zariah Kabak, a 90-year-old woman volunteer told RT’s Paula Slier. “I am ready to take a weapon to defend the Kurdish people. God gave us power. We can fight ISIS.”

phpBB [video]


Dozens of guards work in shifts throughout the night to monitor the activities of Turkish border police.
A resident of Zwahani, the closest accessible point to the Turkish border, Abdullah, spoke to RT without revealing his last name. He described the dangers in the region posed by ISIS.

ISIS are always coming to the cars and trying to steal them. They try to take them and fit them with TNT and explosives so they can explode them inside Kobani," he said. “Three days ago they captured two old men that were inside a car and tried to kidnap them.

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan is reluctant to support Kurds in Kobani because of their link to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a party advocating Kurdish self-rule in southern Turkey for the last 30 years.

When the US recently airdropped weapons and supplies to aid Kurdish militias defending Kobani, the Syrian city besieged by the ISIS since mid-September, US ally Turkey disapproved of the move.

Until Turkey sealed its border against the influx of Kurds fleeing the beleaguered Syrian city, thousands had entered the country and settled in refugee camps near the border.

http://rt.com/news/199064-kobani-turkey ... h-brigade/
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