Friday 13 November 2015

Kurds kick ISIS out of Northern Iraq

Run, Surrender or Die: Kurds Boot Out ISIL From Northern Iraq

After a series of clashes, Kurdish militias began to push ISIL away from the Sinjar province of Northern Iraq, Peshmerga General Taib Abdullah Gurdy told Sputnik.




12 November, 2015
ISIL is losing a large number of fighters and heavy weaponry. During a recent military operation, Kurds managed to kill Abu Jihad, a major ISIL intelligence officer in the Sinjar province, the Peshmerga general said.
"We have regained 70 percent of Sinjar," Gurdy informed.
According to the Peshmerga general, there are no Iraqi government troops fighting against ISIL, but several units of Kurdish volunteer militia forces.
"More than 7,000 Pershmerga fighters are taking part in the operations, and another 20,000 are ready to join the fight at any given moment," Gurdy told Sputnik.
Kurds now control a road that connects Mosul and the town of Sinjar. ISIL fighters are looking for an escape, as their casualties keep increasing. General Gurdy said ISIL now has three choices left: retreat, surrender or be destroyed.
The accomplishments of Peshmerga forces brought hope to the hearts of the long-suffering residents of Sinjar. The majority of local residents support the Kurds and hope their anti-ISIL offensives would succeed and finally bring peace to the war-torn province.
Another Peshmerga General Kemal Kerkuri added that although Kurdish forces now control most parts of Sinjar, previously under ISIL control, a series of clashes with smaller ISIL units in the streets of the city continues.
When asked about the safety of Yazidi women and children, whom Sputnik feared ISIL could use as "human shields" to defend themselves from the attacks of Peshmerga forces, General Gurdy said that it isn't the primary concern for ISIL fighters right now, as they're seeking ways to escape advancing Kurdish forces

From the Guardian
Troops say they expect to enter northern Iraqi town and clear it soon in an operation that aims to test US plans to defeat militants using Kurds as proxies

Kurdish forces who launched an offensive to retake a northern Iraqi town from Islamic State militants said they expect to enter and clear it soon, after severing a major supply line between the militant group’s stronghold in eastern Syria, and Mosul – their seat of power in Iraq.

Sinjar in northern Iraq, was seized 15 months ago by Isis forces, who massacred and enslaved the local Yazidi community and ousted other minorities from the Nineveh plains.

The Kurdish regional security council said its troops have seized more than 150 sq km from Isis, and were now in control of a section of highway 47, isolating Sinjar from militant strongholds in Syria and northern Iraq. The Kurdish fighters also said they had secured the villages of Gabarra, on the western front, and Tel Shore, Fadhelya and Qen on the eastern front.

Kurdish commanders said they had never seen Isis – also known as Daesh – so vulnerable. “For the last 15 months that I have been fighting Daesh, I have never seen them so weak, they were literally running away,” said Col Kamran Hawrami. “Our objective is to free Sinjar and the surrounding areas. The fighting is continuing on all fronts but we have passed by bodies of Daesh [fighters].”

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