Iraqi
army helped Syrian government retake border checkpoint - reports
The
Iraqi army has reportedly shelled Free Syrian Army positions inside
Syria near the border with Iraq. Unconfirmed reports suggest that
Iraq was helping Syrian government forces regain control of a border
checkpoint seized by the insurgency.
RT,
2
February, 2013
Syrian
troops have recaptured the Al-Ya'robiya checkpoint on the border with
Iraq on Friday night. According to witness reports on Twitter, Iraq's
armed forces moved in to help with the operation and shelled the
border post, which was held by the rebels.
An
Al-Arabiya correspondent also confirmed that targets inside Syria had
been shelled while Iraqi snipers took positions near the crossing.
Massive reinforcements have also been deployed in Baghdad near the
Syrian border, the correspondent said.
The
checkpoint on Syria’s northeast border with Iraq had been overrun
by rebel fighters from the Al-Nusra Front on Thursday but were
recaptured by government troops after less than 24 hours.
Earlier
on Friday, the conflict once again spilled into neighboring Iraq
after a Scud missile fired from Syria landed near a village in Iraq's
Nineveh province, causing no significant damage. Last time rockets
fired from Syrian territory hit Iraq, in September 2012, they killed
a 5-year-old girl.
Iraqi
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warned on Wednesday that a Syrian
rebel victory could spark sectarian violence in his own country and
the whole region.
“Neither
the opposition nor the regime can finish each other off,” he
said in an interview with the Associated Press. “If
the opposition is victorious, there will be a civil war in Lebanon,
divisions in Jordan and a sectarian war in Iraq.”
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