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ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Oct 24, 2014 11:17 pm

Mail Online

Numb to horror: Women walk past headless corpses in the street without raising an eyebrow in shocking video depicting life under ISIS rule

Footage filmed in Raqqa shows decapitated corpses scattered in street
Syrian soldiers' heads have been impaled on spikes as a message to civilians
Civilians walk past scenes of unimaginable horror seemingly unaffected

By Jennifer Smith for MailOnline

For months its brutality has been documented in propaganda designed to frighten the world into considering its terrorist cause.

But footage of life under the rule of ISIS has revealed the lasting effects of the group's barbarity, with women and children strolling past the decapitated bodies of Syrian soldiers in the city of Raqqa without giving them a second glance.

Unaffected by the sight of the decaying corpses, civilians do not even acknowledge the men's impaled heads positioned on fences across the city which has become a recruiting hub for extremists.

Image

It is among the most gruesome hallmarks of life under the group's control since jihadis stormed President Assad's army and took hold earlier this year.

The video, filmed in July, is among the few glimpses into civilian life offered since ISIS launched a campaign of terror against Syria and Iraq.

Scattered corpses lie on pavements and roads with some tied to fencing, their heads in between their legs, as black-clad ISIS fighters patrol the streets.

In other parts of the town preachers urge children, with black balaclavas disguising their innocent faces, to disobey their parents and join the militant group.

'I swear to god we will see a caliphate based on the prophecy. Be with the state or you will be the ones who get killed,' a man threatened one group of silent youngsters to a backdrop of the group's ominous flag.

While the corpses of President Assad's troops will be removed within three days, the threat of death is enduring for everyone else, one civilian revealed.

'They hate to see the murder but they cannot speak because of fear,' one civilian living in the city told MailOnline.
Soldiers decapitated bodies were tied to fences with their trousers around their knees in the horrifying images

Full Article -Photos - Video:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... -rule.html
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 25, 2014 10:31 am

Rudaw

First Peshmerga to head to Kobane on Sunday

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - The first 150 Peshmerga forces will head to the besieged Syrian border town of Kobane on Sunday, Peshmerga sources told Rudaw. They will be manning heavy weapons in the fight against Islamic State militants.

“Our enemies in Kobane are using heavy weapons and we should have heavy weapons too,” Brigadier Ramazan of the 2nd infantry brigade told Rudaw. “This support force will speed up the fight of the Kobane Kurds.”

These will be the first foreign troops to provide aid to Syrian Kurdish fighters in the city, which has been besieged by Islamic State fighters since mid September.

On Thursday, Erdogan said an agreement had been reached with the YPG’s Democratic Unity Party (PYD), the main Kurdish faction in northern Syria, to send 200 Peshmerga.


“The PYD had agreed on a group of Peshmerga of up to 200-300 people. According to information I have just received, this figure has now reduced to 150,” Erdogan said on live television during a visit to Estonia.

He also confirmed several media reports the FSA, a loose group of anti-Islamist rebels backed by Turkey, the West and the Arab World, had agreed to send 1,300 of its men to fight alongside the Kurds in Kobane and that Ankara was also happy to let them cross through Turkish territory. This was subsequently denied by the PYD.

The plan was proposed by Kurdistan Regional President (KRG) Massoud Barzani over two weeks ago in a series of secret meetings between the KRG, Turkey, the United States, and Syrian Kurdish parties.

The Kurdish parliament in Erbil approved unanimously on Wednesday to send Peshmerga forces to the besieged Kurdish city of Kobane.

Kurdistan Region President Massoud Barzani signed the parliamentary decree on Thursday.

The official source said that members of the contingent are packed and ready to move through Turkey “without a passport and they need only their military IDs.”

http://rudaw.net/english/middleeast/syria/25102014
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 25, 2014 10:49 am

Mail Online

Women on front lines in Syria, Iraq against IS

SURUC, Turkey (AP) — Just over a year ago, Afshin Kobani was a teacher. Now, the Kurdish Syrian woman has traded the classroom for the front lines in the battle for Kobani, a town besieged by fighters from the Islamic State extremist group.

The 28-year-old Kurdish fighter, who uses a nom de guerre, said she decided to join the fight in her hometown when she saw IS advances in Syria.

"I lost many friends to this, and I decided there was a need to join up," said Kobani, who declined to reveal her birth name. "This is our land — our own — and if we don't do it, who else will?"

Perched on the other side of the Turkish border, the Syrian town of Kobani has been under an intense assault by IS for more than a month. The town — surrounded on the east, south and west by IS — is being defended by Kurdish forces in Syria.

Among those fighters are thousands of women, an unusual phenomenon in the Muslim world in which warfare is often associated with manhood. In April, Kurdish fighters created all-female combat units that have grown to include more than 10,000 women. These female fighters have played a major role in battles against IS, said Nasser Haj Mansour, a defense official in Syria's Kurdish region.

The Kurdish women now find themselves battling militants preaching an extreme form of Islam dictating that women only leave the house if absolutely necessary. Earlier this month the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors events in Syria, reported IS militants beheaded nine Kurdish fighters, including three women, captured in clashes near Turkish border.

After more than a year of fighting, Kobani has risen through the ranks to become a commander of a mixed-gender unit. "We are just the same as men; there's no difference," she said. "We can do any type of job, including armed mobilization."

There is nothing new about Kurdish women fighters. They have fought alongside men for years in a guerrilla war against Turkey, seeking an independent Kurdistan which would encompass parts of Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. The campaign for Kurdish independence has been pursued mainly by leftist militant groups that championed gender equality, such as the Kurdistan Workers Party in Turkey.

Suicide bombings have long been part of the Kurdish women fighters' battleground repertory.

Early this month, Deilar Kanj Khamis, better known by her military name Arin Mirkan, blew herself up outside Kobani, killing 10 IS fighters, according to Kurdish forces. Haj Mansour, the Kurdish defense official, recounted that Kurdish fighters were forced to withdraw from a strategic hill south of the besieged town. Khamis stayed behind, attacking IS fighters with gunfire and grenades as they moved in. Surrounded, she detonated explosives strapped to her body. The Kurds then recaptured the position — but lost it again on Wednesday.

In Kobani, Sheikh Ahmad Hamo's daughter Rukan signed up for the fight for Kurdish independence at the age of 18, and was quickly sent to Iraqi Kurdistan, in Iraq's north. That was eight years ago. For the first six years, she didn't contact her parents or her nine siblings. Her mother, Salwa Moussa, traveled to northern Iraq in March last year in the vain hope of seeing her daughter.

Five months after that, she phoned home. "When she called, she had a mountain accent. Her mother didn't recognize her," said Hamo. "When we talked to her, we were happy, but we were also crying."

Rukan Hamo's 23-year-old brother Ferman was killed fighting in Kobani this month. The sister didn't make it to the brother's funeral. Her parents don't know when, or if, they will see her again.

In the dust-blown cemetery of the Turkish border town of Suruc, a corner has been laid out for the casualties among Syrian Kurds fighting in Kobani. Of more than 30 dead, 10 are women.

"It's not strange that women are fighting," said Wahida Kushta, an elderly woman who recently helped prepare the body of a young female fighter, 20-year-old Hanim Dabaan, for burial. "There is no https://twitter.com/ElenaBecdifference between a lion and a lioness."

Link to Article and Photos:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/art ... st-IS.html
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 25, 2014 4:22 pm

FOX News
AP

Islamic State group fighters shell Syrian Kurdish town near Turkish border as clashes rage

Activists say Islamic State militants are shelling a beleaguered Kurdish town in northern Syria on the Turkish border.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says the extremists fired at least 10 rockets Sunday on the town of Kobani, also known as Ayn Arab. The militants are also firing tank shells and mortars as they try to break the Kurds' hold on the town.

The Observatory says heavy clashes overnight, as well as U.S.-led coalition airstrikes on Islamic State positions around Kobani, killed at least 16 militants. At least 11 Kurdish militiamen were also killed the in the fighting.

From the Turkish side of the border, the heavy thud of shelling could be heard Sunday from Kobani, and pillars of smoke billowed over the town.

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/10/05 ... border-as/
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 25, 2014 8:23 pm

W O W

Turkey are going to let a number of Kurdish Peshmerga pass through on there way to Kobani

I know that the Peshmerga are good but even they are NOT Superman and Batman

2 0 0

Is not enough X(

Erdogan I do not like you or your Islamic government :ymtongue:
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 25, 2014 9:48 pm

Ape Xelil has been resisting ISIS in his city of Kobane

for more than 40 Days! He has a message for us!


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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 25, 2014 10:43 pm

Kobani my thoughts:

The Islamic State is sending reinforcements to Kobani - those fighters have been hit a few times by air-strikes - has that stopped their advance towards Kobani

NO

The Peshmerga are thought to be heading towards Kobani - has there been any confirmation that they are actually on their way

NO

Will the Peshmerga reach Kobani before the Islamic State reinforcements

NO

If members of the FSA join in does anyone know which side they are really on

NO

I would say that the next 48 hours are crucial - it is now make or break for Kobani

We at Roj Bash Kurdistan could see what was happening MONTHS ago

Why did not the rest of the world prevent this from happening X(
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Oct 26, 2014 5:07 pm

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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Oct 26, 2014 6:23 pm

Reuters

No direct combat for Iraqi Kurds in Kobani, IS loses ground in Iraq
By Isabel Coles and Ahmed Rasheed
(Additional reporting by Dasha Afanasieva in Mursitpinar; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Tom Heneghan)

Iraqi Kurdish forces will not engage in ground fighting in the Syrian town of Kobani but provide artillery support for fellow Kurds fending off Islamic State militants there, a Kurdish spokesman said on Sunday.

Islamic State fighters have been trying to capture Kobani for over a month, pressing on despite U.S.-led air strikes on their positions and the deaths of hundreds of their fighters.

The Kurds prepared to help their comrades in Syria as Iraqi government forces and Shi'ite militias advanced against the al Qaeda offshoot that wants to redraw the map of the Middle East.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors violence in Syria's three-and-a-half-year-old conflict, said on Sunday it had confirmed that 815 people had been killed in the fighting for Kobani over the last 40 days - more than half of them Islamic State fighters.

The Kurdish region's parliament voted last week to deploy some of its peshmerga forces, which have been fighting their own battle against Islamic State in northern Iraq, to Syria.

"Primarily, it will be a back-up support with artillery and other weapons," Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) spokesman Safeen Dizayee told Reuters. "It will not be combat troops as such, at this point anyway."

Islamic State militants shelled Kobani's border post with Turkey overnight but were repulsed by Kurdish fighters, Kurdish officials and a monitoring group said on Sunday.

"Of course they will try again tonight," said Idris Nassan, a local Kurdish official. "Last night they brought new reinforcements, new supplies, and they are pushing hard."

IRAQI FORCES GAIN

Iraqi security forces backed by Shi'ite militias gained some momentum at the weekend in their bid to loosen the grip of Islamic State, which controls large swathes of territory in the north and west of the major OPEC oil producer.

Iraqi government forces backed by Shi'ite militias retook four villages on Sunday near the Himreen mountains overlooking Islamic State supply lines some 100 km (60 miles) south of the oil city of Kirkuk, security officials said.

They also drove Islamic State militants out of Jurf al-Sakhar, just south of Baghdad, while Kurdish fighters regained control over the town of Zumar in the north.

Sunni insurgents have been moving fighters, weapons and supplies from western Iraq through secret desert tunnels to Jurf al-Sakhar, Iraqi officials have said. Now it appears government forces may be able to disrupt that network.

Roadside bombs and booby-trapped houses hampered their progress near the Himreen mountains, security officials. "We have decided to make slow advances. We hold the ground, set up watch towers, clear the explosives and build sand barriers to prevent the armed men from returning," army major Ahmed Nu'aman told Reuters by telephone.

BATTLE FOR KOBANI

Last week, Ankara said it would allow Iraqi Kurdish fighters passage through Turkish territory to reach besieged Kobani.

Syrian Kurdish forces defending Kobani say heavier weaponry is vital to fighting the better armed Islamic State fighters.

They have asked for armour-piercing missiles able to destroy the tanks and other armoured vehicles used by Islamic State.

The Syrian Kurds said weapons airdropped to them by the U.S. air force last week were not enough to defeat Islamic State. U.S. officials had described those weapons, which were supplied by the Iraqi Kurdish authorities, as "small arms".

In a separate interview with Reuters on Sunday, the chief of staff to the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, said the peshmerga were ready to depart as soon as a timetable had been finalised with Ankara and Kurds in Syria.

Fuad Hussein said he expected the 155 peshmerga fighters to move "one of these days".

Asked about the weapons the peshmerga would take, Hussein described them as "semi-heavy" and said they would enable the lightly armed Kurdish fighters in Kobani to counter Islamic State's tanks and armoured vehicles.

The battle for Kobani has taken on major political significance for Turkey, whose own Kurds have been infuriated by Ankara's reluctance to intervene, threatening to derail a peace process between the government and separatist guerrillas.

On the prospect of further deployments to Kobani, Dizayee said: "It all depends on how things go on the ground. I think this should and can be discussed at a later point."

Iraqi forces are slowly trying to undermine Islamic State in operations like the one near the Himreen mountains.

It is designed to isolate Islamic State fighters controlling the towns of Jalawla and Saadiya and cut off the areas they seized northeast of the city of Baquba, which is held by Iraqi security forces and Shi'ite militias.

Government forces and Kurdish peshmerga fighters have been trying for months to take over Jalawla and Saadiya, located northeast of Baghdad.

ANBAR OPERATION

Islamic State swept through northern Iraq in the summer, facing little resistance from U.S.-trained government troops.

The group made up of Iraqis, other Arabs and foreign fighters then threatened to march on Baghdad, rattling the Shi'ite-led government.

Much may depend on whether the performance of Iraq's army and security forces improves.

Their advances over the weekend and other operations indicate they rely heavily on support from Shi'ite militias whose alleged human rights abuses against minority Sunnis have fueled sectarian bloodshed and helped destabilise Iraq.

The next major security operation is expected to target the town of Amriyat al-Falluja, located in the Sunni heartland of Anbar province, just 40 km (25 miles) from Baghdad.

The Sunni insurgents have been surrounding it for weeks. Security officials said government forces are preparing to try and break the siege. Islamic State also appears to be gearing up for another battle.

Militants in the nearby town of Falluja, an Islamic State bastion, used loudspeakers attached to captured police vehicles to tell supporters to expect good news from Amriyat al-Falluja.

"Be cheerful. We have 100 suicide bombers preparing for the battle of Amriyat al-Falluja and we have more if the situation warrants," was the message conveyed, a witness told Reuters from Falluja.

(Additional reporting by Dasha Afanasieva in Mursitpinar; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Oct 26, 2014 6:45 pm

Rudaw

Erdogan: Kobane fighters oppose Peshmerga deployment

ISTANBUL, Turkey – Kobane’s Kurdish defenders do “not want” Peshmerga forces from Iraqi Kurdistan to help thwart a takeover of Kobane by the Islamic State (ISIS), Turkey’s president was quoted as saying Sunday.

Turkish media quoted President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as saying that the Democratic Union Party (PYD), whose forces have been fighting to defend Kobane for more than a month against ISIS, wanted to keep its dominance in the Syrian Kurdish city that sits hard on the border with Turkey.

“The PYD does not want the Peshmerga to come,” Erdogan said in published comments. “The PYD thinks its game will be ruined with the arrival of the Peshmerga – their set-up will be spoilt,” he added.

Erdogan also called the PYD a “terrorist group.” Ankara has remained opposed to the group because of its links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has fought a 30-year war for autonomy for Turkey’s estimated 15 million Kurds.

“The PYD is a terrorist group, just like the PKK,” Erdogan was quoted as saying.

Last week Turkey announced it would allow some 150 Peshmerga forces from the Kurdistan Region to cross into Kobane to fight alongside the People’s Protection Units (YPG), the PYD’s military wing.

The Peshmerga forces were due to arrive on Monday, according to Peshmerga sources. But following Erdogan’s comments, it remains unclear whether that deployment will go ahead as planned.

Erdogan also said last week that the Peshmerga would be joined in the fight for Kobane by 1,300 fighters from the Free Syrian Army (FSA), which has been fighting to overthrow the Damascus regime for more than three years.

Meanwhile, fighting erupted again on Sunday between ISIS and the YPG, when coalition airplanes bombed an ISIS target at approximately 12:30 pm.

Two large pillars of smoke rose above the city, one the result of the airstrike in the ISIS-controlled eastern part of the city and a much larger plume from western neighborhoods held by the YPG following a militant attack.

http://rudaw.net/english/middleeast/261020141
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Oct 26, 2014 6:55 pm

Reuters

Syrian Kurds repulse Islamic State attack on border gate
By Dasha Afanasieva

Islamic State militants tried to seize a border post in the Syrian town of Kobani on the Turkish frontier overnight but were repulsed by Kurdish fighters, Kurdish officials and a monitoring group said on Sunday.

Islamic State fighters have been trying to capture Kobani, known as Ayn al-Arab in Arabic, for over a month, pressing their assault despite U.S.-led air strikes on their positions and the deaths of hundreds of their fighters.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors violence in Syria's three-and-a-half-year-old conflict, said on Sunday it had confirmed that 815 people had been killed in the fighting for the town over the last 40 days, more than half of them Islamic State fighters.

Idris Nassan, a local Kurdish official, said Islamic State fighters had shelled Kobani's border gate on Saturday night but Kurdish fighters had pushed them back in the south and west.

"Of course they will try again tonight. Last night they brought new reinforcements, new supplies, and they are pushing hard," he said.

To lose the border gate, the only official way for the Kurdish fighters in Kobani to cross into Turkey, would be a major blow to the fighters defending the town as well as the civilians who still remain.

On Sunday, Turkish police dispersed media and other observers from two hills overlooking Kobani, a Reuters witness said. There were two air strikes in the early afternoon and dark grey smoke hung in plumes over the city, which has been largely destroyed by the war.

Iraqi Kurdish "peshmerga" fighters are expected to arrive to reinforce the fighters in Kobani, who are mostly members of the Syrian Kurdish YPG armed group, after Turkey last week said it would allow them to pass through its territory.

The chief of staff to the president of Iraqi Kurdistan said on Sunday that the timetable for their departure was still being finalised.

The Observatory said it had confirmed that 302 YPG fighters had so far been killed in the fighting for Kobani so far, as well as 481 Islamic State fighters, 10 fighters from other groups, 21 civilians, and one volunteer bringing ammunition to YPG fighters.

Dara Abdi, a lawyer working for a human rights organization sympathetic to the PYD, said one YPG fighter had been killed and seven wounded in the fight for the border post overnight.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/ ... GJ20141026
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Oct 26, 2014 7:37 pm

Sadly it does not look as though Kobani will receive help any time soon X(

I suspect that the Islamic State will remain at a safe distance and just continue to lay siege to Kobani - at least until their reinforcements arrive

The people in Kobani must be weakening:

Lack of food and water

Lack of medical supplies

Lack of ammunition

Lack of heavy armament

Lack of sleep

Kobani desperately needs help and a long-term solution

There is very little genuine information online

Most news comes from either Reuters or Associated Press - and is then rehashed by the media

We need genuine information NOT social media lies X(
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Oct 27, 2014 9:50 am

Reuters

No direct combat for Iraqi Kurds in Kobani, ISIS loses ground in Iraq
By Isabel Coles and Ahmed Rasheed

Iraqi Kurdish forces will not engage in ground fighting in the Syrian town of Kobani but provide artillery support for fellow Kurds fending off Islamic State militants there, a Kurdish spokesman said on Sunday.

Islamic State fighters have been trying to capture Kobani for over a month, pressing on despite U.S.-led air strikes on their positions and the deaths of hundreds of their fighters.

The Kurds prepared to help their comrades in Syria as Iraqi government forces and Shi'ite militias advanced against the al Qaeda offshoot that wants to redraw the map of the Middle East.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors violence in Syria's three-and-a-half-year-old conflict, said on Sunday it had confirmed that 815 people had been killed in the fighting for Kobani over the last 40 days - more than half of them Islamic State fighters.

The Kurdish region's parliament voted last week to deploy some of its peshmerga forces, which have been fighting their own battle against Islamic State in northern Iraq, to Syria.

"Primarily, it will be a back-up support with artillery and other weapons," Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) spokesman Safeen Dizayee told Reuters. "It will not be combat troops as such, at this point anyway."

Islamic State militants shelled Kobani's border post with Turkey overnight but were repulsed by Kurdish fighters, Kurdish officials and a monitoring group said on Sunday.

"Of course they will try again tonight," said Idris Nassan, a local Kurdish official. "Last night they brought new reinforcements, new supplies, and they are pushing hard."

IRAQI FORCES GAIN

Iraqi security forces backed by Shi'ite militias gained some momentum at the weekend in their bid to loosen the grip of Islamic State, which controls large swathes of territory in the north and west of the major OPEC oil producer.

Iraqi government forces backed by Shi'ite militias retook four villages on Sunday near the Himreen mountains overlooking Islamic State supply lines some 100 km (60 miles) south of the oil city of Kirkuk, security officials said.

They also drove Islamic State militants out of Jurf al-Sakhar, just south of Baghdad, while Kurdish fighters regained control over the town of Zumar in the north.

Sunni insurgents have been moving fighters, weapons and supplies from western Iraq through secret desert tunnels to Jurf al-Sakhar, Iraqi officials have said. Now it appears government forces may be able to disrupt that network.

Roadside bombs and booby-trapped houses hampered their progress near the Himreen mountains, security officials. "We have decided to make slow advances. We hold the ground, set up watch towers, clear the explosives and build sand barriers to prevent the armed men from returning," army major Ahmed Nu'aman told Reuters by telephone.

BATTLE FOR KOBANI

Last week, Ankara said it would allow Iraqi Kurdish fighters passage through Turkish territory to reach besieged Kobani.

Syrian Kurdish forces defending Kobani say heavier weaponry is vital to fighting the better armed Islamic State fighters.

They have asked for armour-piercing missiles able to destroy the tanks and other armoured vehicles used by Islamic State.

The Syrian Kurds said weapons airdropped to them by the U.S. air force last week were not enough to defeat Islamic State. U.S. officials had described those weapons, which were supplied by the Iraqi Kurdish authorities, as "small arms".

In a separate interview with Reuters on Sunday, the chief of staff to the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, said the peshmerga were ready to depart as soon as a timetable had been finalised with Ankara and Kurds in Syria.

Fuad Hussein said he expected the 155 peshmerga fighters to move "one of these days".

Asked about the weapons the peshmerga would take, Hussein described them as "semi-heavy" and said they would enable the lightly armed Kurdish fighters in Kobani to counter Islamic State's tanks and armoured vehicles.

The battle for Kobani has taken on major political significance for Turkey, whose own Kurds have been infuriated by Ankara's reluctance to intervene, threatening to derail a peace process between the government and separatist guerrillas.

On the prospect of further deployments to Kobani, Dizayee said: "It all depends on how things go on the ground. I think this should and can be discussed at a later point."

Iraqi forces are slowly trying to undermine Islamic State in operations like the one near the Himreen mountains.

It is designed to isolate Islamic State fighters controlling the towns of Jalawla and Saadiya and cut off the areas they seized northeast of the city of Baquba, which is held by Iraqi security forces and Shi'ite militias.

Government forces and Kurdish peshmerga fighters have been trying for months to take over Jalawla and Saadiya, located northeast of Baghdad.

ANBAR OPERATION

Islamic State swept through northern Iraq in the summer, facing little resistance from U.S.-trained government troops.

The group made up of Iraqis, other Arabs and foreign fighters then threatened to march on Baghdad, rattling the Shi'ite-led government.

Much may depend on whether the performance of Iraq's army and security forces improves.

Their advances over the weekend and other operations indicate they rely heavily on support from Shi'ite militias whose alleged human rights abuses against minority Sunnis have fueled sectarian bloodshed and helped destabilize Iraq.

The next major security operation is expected to target the town of Amriyat al-Falluja, located in the Sunni heartland of Anbar province, just 40 km (25 miles) from Baghdad.

The Sunni insurgents have been surrounding it for weeks. Security officials said government forces are preparing to try and break the siege. Islamic State also appears to be gearing up for another battle.

Militants in the nearby town of Falluja, an Islamic State bastion, used loudspeakers attached to captured police vehicles to tell supporters to expect good news from Amriyat al-Falluja.

"Be cheerful. We have 100 suicide bombers preparing for the battle of Amriyat al-Falluja and we have more if the situation warrants," was the message conveyed, a witness told Reuters from Falluja.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/ ... me=topNews
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Re: ISIS- SYRIA-THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Oct 27, 2014 5:01 pm

Bloomberg

Islamic State Escalates Kobani Offensive Amid Airstrikes
By Selcan Hacaoglu and Salma El Wardany

Islamic State targeted Kobani’s Kurdish defenders with three car bombs and an intense shelling as they escalated their offensive ahead of mooted reinforcements for the Syrian town.

Kurdish fighters fought off an attack on a border crossing with Turkey today, Ibrahim Kurdo, a local official in Kobani, said by phone. Militants have been firing mortars and rockets “non-stop” since yesterday, Meryem Kobane, a rebel commander, said.

Islamic State appear to be trying to capture the Mursitpinar border crossing before the arrival of Kurdish Peshmerga forces from northern Iraq, state-run TRT television as well as private news channels A Haber and NTV said today. It was not clear when or if the Peshmerga will reach Kobani, nor what route they would take.

Talks between Iraqi Kurds, Turkey and local Syrian forces had yet to reach an agreement on the deployment of the Peshmerga or the supply of arms to Kobani, Kurdo said.

Five U.S. airstrikes near Kobani destroyed seven Islamic State vehicles and a building they were using, the U.S. Central Command said in a statement on its website yesterday. The U.K.- based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the country’s civil war, said yesterday more than 800 people have been killed in Kobani since Islamic State’s onslaught began Sept. 16.

“The situation is still dangerous in Kobani, and we’re in need of weapons as soon as possible,” Kurdo said. Arms airdropped by U.S. cargo planes Oct. 20 did not include heavy weapons “to match the superior firepower of Islamic State,” the rebel commander Kobane said without elaborating.

To contact the reporters on this story: Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara at shacaoglu@bloomberg.net; Salma El Wardany in Cairo at selwardany@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaa Shahine at asalha@bloomberg.net Jack Fairweather, Mark Williams


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

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Oct 27, 2014 7:26 pm

Reuters

Syrian Kurdish leader says Turkey delays peshmerga fighters from moving on Kobani

A Syrian Kurdish official accused Turkey on Monday of stalling on an agreement to allow Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters to cross into Syria to help end the siege of the border town of Kobani.

Saleh Moslem, co-chair of the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD), told Reuters that the peshmerga have been ready to go into Kurdish-defended Kobani for three days.

"But we don't know what is going on between them and Turkey. The delay is because of Turkey," said Moslem, whose party's armed wing, the YPG, has been battling Islamic State militants in Kobani for a month.

Turkey has been reluctant to join the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State, an al-Qaeda offshoot. But after pressure from its Western allies, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said last Wednesday that some peshmerga fighters from Iraq would be allowed to transit through Turkey to Kobani.

A Turkish official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the parties involved were still discussing details of the deal.

"Turkey is part of these discussions. In principle we said yes to the transfer of the peshmerga, the rest is just details, so it is not right to say we are blocking," he said.

The Iraqi Kurdish region's parliament voted last week to deploy some of its peshmerga forces, who have been fighting their own battle against Islamic State in northern Iraq, to Syria.

They will not engage in direct combat in Kobani but instead provide artillery support, a Kurdish government spokesman said on Sunday.

"They should have arrived yesterday. Until now it seems Turkey is making some difficulty. We don’t know exactly what is happening because there is a kind of deal between (the peshmerga) and Turkey," Moslem said by telephone.

Iraqi Kurdish officials cited technical issues for the delay but gave no further details.

(Reporting by Oliver Holmes in Beirut, Isabel Coles in Arbil and Jonny Hogg in Ankara; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/ ... KI20141027
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