• Saturday, 03 August 2024
logo

Iraqi Kurds arrive in Syria for fight against IS group

Gulan Media October 29, 2014 News
Iraqi Kurds arrive in Syria for fight against IS group
Iraqi Kurd Peshmerga forces crossed from Turkey into Syria on Wednesday on their way to join Syria's Kurds in their fight against Islamic State (IS) militants for control of the embattled town of Kobane.

Kobane, nestled on the border with Turkey, has been besieged by the Islamic State (IS) group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, for more than a month. Weeks of airstrikes on the extremists’ positions and the deaths of hundreds of their fighters have failed to break the siege.

The IS group has caused international alarm by capturing large expanses of Iraq and Syria, declaring an Islamic “caliphate,” and slaughtering or driving away Shiite Muslims, Christians and other communities who do not share their ultra-radical brand of Sunni Islam.

IS militants have threatened to massacre Kobane’s defenders in an assault which has sent almost 200,000 Syrian Kurds fleeing to Turkey, and triggered a call to arms from Kurds across the region.

Hemin Hawrami, a senior official in the Kurdistan Democratic Party in Iraq, wrote on his Twitter feed that peshmerga combatants were flying from Arbil airport in northern Iraq to Turkey, from where they would travel overland to Kobane.

Saleh Moslem, co-chair of the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD), said later that around 150 peshmerga had entered Turkey from Iraq and were expected to arrive in Kobane soon.

A Kurdish television channel showed footage of what it said was a convoy of peshmerga vehicles in northern Iraq loaded with weapons and on their way to the besieged town.

“We welcome the deployment of peshmerga fighters and weapons from the Kurdistan Region to Kobane, which began this evening,” Brett McGurk, a deputy envoy tasked by US President Barack Obama with building a coalition against IS, said on Twitter.

The Iraqi Kurdish region’s parliament voted last week to deploy some peshmerga to Syria although a Kurdish government spokesman later said they would not engage in direct combat in Kobane but rather provide artillery support.

Kurdistan’s Minister of Peshmerga, Mustafa Sayyid Qader, told local media on Tuesday that no limits had been set to how long the forces would remain in Kobane.

The fighting around Kobane has exacerbated the flow of refugees from Syria’s 3 ½-year civil war, with more than three million people already sheltering in neighbouring countries including Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.

Jordan’s foreign minister warned on Tuesday the huge demand for housing, schools, jobs and health care generated by the refugees meant Syria’s neighbours were reaching the limits of their ability to cope.

Ground troops

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said earlier that air strikes alone would not be enough to push back the insurgents and that only the peshmerga and moderate Syrian rebel forces could oust Islamic State from Kobane.

“Saving Kobane, retaking Kobane and some area around Kobane from ISIS, there’s a need for a military operation,” he said in an interview with the BBC broadcast on Tuesday. But he made clear neither Turkey nor Western allies would commit troops.

“If they (international coalition) don’t want to send their ground troops, how can they expect Turkey to send Turkish ground troops with the same risks on our border?” Davutoglu said.

Turkish officials have rebuffed international criticism over their reluctance to do more to help Kobane’s beleaguered Kurdish defenders, whom they accuse of being linked to the militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has fought a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.

That stance has enraged Turkey’s own Kurdish minority - about a fifth of the population and half of all Kurds across the region. Kurds suspect Ankara would rather see Islamic State jihadists extend their territorial gains than allow Kurdish insurgents to consolidate local power.

Turkey has repeatedly called for a long-term strategic plan for Syria involving the removal of President Bashar al-Assad from power, fearing that Assad’s forces or Kurdish militants will fill the void if Islamic State is neutralised.

Iran accused Turkey on Tuesday of prolonging the three-year armed conflict in Syria by insisting on Assad’s overthrow and supporting “terrorist groups” in Syria.

After pressure from Western allies, Turkey last week agreed to let peshmerga forces from Iraq traverse its territory to reach Kobane as its preferred alternative to US planes air-dropping weapons to Kurdish fighters in the town.

“The only way to help Kobane, since other countries don’t want to use ground troops, is sending some peace-oriented or moderate troops to Kobane. What are they? Peshmerga ... and Free Syrian Army (Syrian opposition forces),” Davutoglu said.

Davutoglu renewed calls for the United States to train and arm fighters from the Free Syrian Army (FSA), a loose, disorganised coalition of groups who have been battling Assad and who have long been supported by Turkey.

The US has committed to arming the Syrian opposition to fight the Islamic State group, but American officials remain concerned about identifying effective, moderate groups in the increasingly sectarian Syrian conflagration.

(FRANCE 24 with AP, REUTERS)
Top