What's new

Iraq's war against IS terrorism | Updates and Discussions

By: PTI | Baghdad | Published:September 29, 2017 5:31 pm
iraq-759.jpg

This image made from video provided by Kurdistan 24 shows an Iraqi tank moving into position as forces begun the operation to retake the town of Hawija, Iaq from the Islamic State group Thursday, Sept. 21, 2017. (Photo via AP)

http://indianexpress.com/article/world/iraq-forces-attack-is-held-town-of-hawija-general-4867223/


Iraqi forces on Friday launched an assault on the northern town of , one of the last bastions still held by the Islamic State group in the country, its commander said. “A huge military operation has begun to liberate Hawija and its surrounding areas,” Lieutenant General Abdel Amir Yarallah said in a statement.

Iraqi forces began an operation to retake the jihadist enclave around Hawija on September 21, swiftly taking the town of Sharqat on its second day before pushing on towards Hawija itself.

*************
 
1004411-872913111.jpg

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1170156/middle-east

BASRA: A veteran fighter known as “the sheikh of snipers” has been killed in Iraq’s battle to retake the town of Hawija from Daesh, his paramilitary force announced Saturday.

Abu Tahsin Al-Salhi, who took part in conflicts dating back to the 1973 Arab-Israeli war and said he had gunned down at least 320 Daesh jihadists, died on Friday.

He was killed as he advanced on Hawija in northwest Iraq, said Ahmad Assadi, spokesman for the Al-Hashd Al-Shaabi alliance mostly of Shiite militias fighting alongside government forces against the last militant bastions.

At his funeral on Saturday near the southern port city of Basra, close friend Ahmad Ali Hussein said the marksman was widely known by comrades as “the sheikh of snipers” or “hawk eye.”

A grey-bearded hulk of a man who drove an off-road motorbike and wore a black-and-white checkered scarf and fingerless mittens, Abu Tahsin was inseparable from his Austrian-manufactured Steyr rifle.

In an Al-Hashd video, the 63-year-old warrior gives a rundown of his career as a sniper, starting in 1973 when he was part of an Iraqi brigade fighting on Syria’s Golan Heights.

He also fought in late dictator Saddam Hussein’s 1980-1988 war against Iran, his 1990 invasion of Kuwait and against US troops who toppled Saddam in 2003, before turning his sights on Daesh.

“Today, I gunned down two of them (Daesh fighters). That’s ridiculous — the minimum for me is four,” he says in the video. In anti-Daesh battles in 2015 “I killed 173 of them, and now I’m at 320.”

******

1004751-1948993901.jpg
 
BAGHDAD:, October 05, 2017 13:02 IST
Updated: October 05, 2017 13:11 IST
http://www.thehindu.com/news/intern...lamic-state/article19801351.ece?homepage=true

MIDEAST-CRISISIRAQ-HAWIJA

Kurdish Peshmerga forces help people, who fled from their homes in Hawija, as they arrive to be transported to camps for displaced people, in the southwest of Kirkuk, Iraq. | Photo Credit: REUTERS


It is the only area that remains under the group’s control alongside the western border with Syria

Iraqi forces have captured the town of Hawija and the surrounding area from the Islamic State (IS), the military said in a statement on Thursday.

With the capture of Hawija, the militants’ last stronghold in northern Iraq, the only area that remains under control of Islamic State in Iraq is a stretch alongside the western border with Syria. Hawija is close to the oil-city of Kirkuk.

The offensive on Hawija was carried out by U.S.-backed Iraqi government troops and Iranian-trained and armed Shia paramilitary groups known as Popular Mobilisation.

“The army’s 9th armoured division, the Federal Police, the Emergency Response division and (..) Popular Mobilisation liberated Hawija,” said a statement from the joint operations commander, Lieutenant-General Abdul Ameer Rasheed Yarallah.

Iraq launched an offensive on September 21 to dislodge the IS from the area north of Baghdad where up to 78,000 people were estimated to be trapped, according to the United Nations.

Still controlling al-Qaim
The militants continue to control the border town of al-Qaim and the region surrounding it. They also hold parts of Syrian side of the border, but the area under their control is shrinking as they retreat in the face of two different sets of hostile forces — a U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led coalition and Syrian government troops with foreign Shia militias backed by Iran and Russia. IS’ cross-border “caliphate” effectively collapsed in July, when U.S.-backed Iraqi forces captured Mosul, the group’s de facto capital in Iraq, in a gruelling battle which lasted nine months.

The group’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who declared the caliphate from Mosul in mid-2014, released an audio recording last week that indicated he was alive, after several reports he had been killed.

He called on his followers to keep up the fight despite the setbacks.
 
http://www.thehindu.com/news/intern...ements-to-disputed-kirkuk/article19852645.ece

Kirkuk

Iraqi army reinforcements drive down a road, linking Hawija to Kirkuk, near the village of Khabbaz last week. | Photo Credit: AFP


Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has ruled out the use of military force against the Kurds.
Kurdish media says Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region has sent 6,000 reinforcements to the disputed, oil-rich city of Kirkuk.

Rudaw News, quoting Kurdish Vice President Kosrat Rasul, says the reinforcements were sent to Kirkuk late Thursday in response to what it says are threats from Baghdad to attack the oil-rich city, which is controlled by Kurdish forces but outside the autonomous Kurdish region.

The Kurds took control of Kirkuk when the Islamic State group swept across northern Iraq in 2014 as the Iraqi military crumbled. Baghdad has demanded the Kurds return to the city to federal authorities, a dispute that has escalated since the Kurds voted for independence in a non-binding referendum last month.

Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has ruled out the use of military force against the Kurds.
 
Baghdad continues to reject decades-old Kurdish ambitions to incorporate the city and other historically Kurdish-majority areas in their autonomous region.
41
Shares
By: AFP | Kirkuk (iraq) | Updated: October 13, 2017 4:30 pm
kirkuk.jpg

Baghdad is bitterly opposed to Kurdish ambitions to incorporate the oil-rich province in its autonomous region in the north and has voiced determination to take it back. (Photo: Reuters)

http://indianexpress.com/article/wo...-operation-as-kurd-fighters-mobilise-4888545/


The Iraqi army launched an operation to retake Kurdish-held positions around the disputed oil city of Kirkuk today amid a bitter row with the Kurds over a vote for independence last month. A senior Kurdish official said thousands of heavily armed fighters had been deployed to resist the offensive “at any cost” and called for international intervention with the federal government in Baghdad to prevent the confrontation worsening.

The Iraqi army and the Kurdish peshmerga have been key allies of the US-led coalition in its fight against the Islamic State group and the threat of armed clashes between them poses a major challenge for Western governments. Ethnically divided but historically Kurdish-majority Kirkuk is one of several regions that peshmerga fighters took over from the Iraqi army in 2014 when the jihadists swept through much of northern and western Iraq.

But Baghdad is bitterly opposed to Kurdish ambitions to incorporate the oil-rich province in its autonomous region in the north and has voiced determination to take it back. “Iraqi armed force are advancing to retake their military positions that were taken over during the events of June 2014,” the general told AFP by telephone, asking not to be identified.

He said that federal troops had already taken one base west of Kirkuk this morning after peshmerga fighters withdrew during the night without a fight. But a top aide to Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani vowed that peshmerga forces would defend their positions.

“Thousands of heavily armed peshmerga units are now completely in their positions around Kirkuk,” Hemin Hawrami said. “Their order is to defend at any cost.” The orders came after the Kurdish authorities accused the Iraqi government of massing forces in readiness for an offensive to seize Kurdish-held oil fields in the province.

They accused the Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF) –paramilitary units dominated by Iran-trained Shiite militia –of massing fighters in two mainly Shiite Turkmen areas south of Kirkuk. Hawrami urged the international community to intervene and call on Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to “order PMF to pull back if he can or if they listen to him”.

“No escalation from our side. Just defend and roll them back if they attack,” the senior Barzani adviser said. The surge in tensions comes two weeks after Kurdish voters overwhelmingly backed independence in a non-binding referendum that the federal government condemned as illegal. Polling was held in the three provinces that have long formed an autonomous Kurdish region as well as several other Kurdish-held areas, including Kirkuk.

Baghdad continues to reject decades-old Kurdish ambitions to incorporate the city and other historically Kurdish-majority areas in their autonomous region.

The Kurdistan Regional Security Council (KRSC) said that the Iraqi army and the PMF had been deploying tanks and heavy artillery to Bashir and Taza Khurmatu. “These forces are approximately three kilometres from peshmerga frontline positions,” it said. “Intelligence shows intention to take over nearby oil fields, airport and military base,” it added.

Kirkuk province is the location of northern Iraq’s main oil fields and, even though far more crude is now pumped from the south, it is bitterly disputed between Baghdad and the Kurds. Kurdish peshmerga yesterday closed the two main roads from Iraq’s second city Mosul to the Kurdish cities of Arbil and Dohuk for several hours for fear of an attack in that area. “We call on the Iraqi government to stop the PMF aggression in Kirkuk and north Mosul,” the KRSC said. “Kurdistan continues calling for dialogue and peaceful means to settle differences.”

The federal government severed ties between the Kurdish autonomous region and the outside world after the independence referendum by cutting international air links. Neighbouring Turkey and Iran, which fear that Iraqi Kurdish moves towards independence could fuel demands from their own sizeable Kurdish communities, have also threatened to close their borders to oil exports.
 
1013281-1155461272.jpg

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1177046/middle-east

KIRKUK, Iraq: The Iraqi army launched an operation to retake Kurdish-held positions around the disputed oil city of Kirkuk on Friday amid a bitter row with the Kurds over a vote for independence last month.

A senior Kurdish official said thousands of heavily armed fighters had been deployed to resist the offensive “at any cost” and called for international intervention with the federal government in Baghdad to prevent the confrontation worsening.

The Iraqi army and the Kurdish peshmerga have been key allies of the US-led coalition in its fight against the Daesh group and the threat of armed clashes between them poses a major challenge for Western governments.

Ethnically divided but historically Kurdish-majority Kirkuk is one of several regions that peshmerga fighters took over from the Iraqi army in 2014 when the jihadists swept through much of northern and western Iraq.

Baghdad is bitterly opposed to Kurdish ambitions to incorporate the oil-rich province in its autonomous region in the north and has voiced determination to take it back.

“The Iraqi armed forces are advancing to retake their military positions that were taken over during the events of June 2014,” an army general told AFP by telephone, asking not to be identified.

He said federal troops had already taken one base west of Kirkuk on Friday morning after peshmerga fighters withdrew during the night without a fight.

The peshmerga’s Kirkuk commander, Sheikh Jaafar Mustafa, said his forces had withdrawn from areas they had recently entered during fighting against Daesh in the west of the province.

“We withdrew to our lines in the area around Kirkuk and we will defend the city in the event of an attack,” he told a news conference.

“If the Iraqi army advances, we will fight.”

Kurdish media reported that the peshmerga had withdrawn from around 72 square kilometers (28 square miles) of territory.

Sheikh Mustafa said there had been an attempt to negotiate an agreed disengagement of forces through Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi but it had been overruled by field commanders.

“We informed the military commanders on the ground that we were in touch (with Abadi) and that he said our problems would be settled by dialogue within 48 hours,” he said.

“But the military commanders retorted that they had orders to advance in these areas and that they were not worried about statements from Mr. Abadi.”

Spokesmen for the prime minister declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

A top aide to Iraqi Kurdish leader Masoud Barzani vowed that peshmerga forces would defend their positions “at any cost.”

“Thousands of heavily armed peshmerga units are now completely in their positions around Kirkuk,” Hemin Hawrami said.

“Their order is to defend at any cost.”

The Kurdish authorities accused the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) — paramilitary units dominated by Iran-trained Shiite militia — of massing fighters in two mainly Shiite Turkmen areas south of Kirkuk in readiness for an attack.

Hawrami urged the international community to intervene and call on the Iraqi prime minister to “order PMF to pull back if he can or if they listen to him.”

The PMF published photographs of one its fighters making a victory sign in front of a Kurdish flag.

In Kirkuk, long queues formed at petrol stations Friday as motorists rushed to fill up, an AFP correspondent reported.

In Kurdish neighborhoods of the city, witnesses said there were armed civilians on the streets.
The surge in tensions comes two weeks after Kurdish voters overwhelmingly backed independence in a non-binding referendum that the federal government condemned as illegal.

Polling was held in the three provinces that have long formed an autonomous Kurdish region as well as several other Kurdish-held areas, including Kirkuk.

Baghdad continues to reject decades-old Kurdish ambitions to incorporate the city and other historically Kurdish-majority areas in their autonomous region.

The Kurdistan Regional Security Council said its intelligence reports suggested that Iraqi troops and armor were preparing an operation to taker over Kurdish-held oil fields.

The Kurds export an average of 600,000 barrels of oil per day under their own auspices, of which 250,000 bpd come from the three fields they control in Kirkuk province.

Abadi has repeatedly denied any intention of ordering an assault on his own people but tensions have been high on the front line for days.

On Thursday, Kurdish forces briefly blocked two roads into the autonomous region from second city Mosul for fear of an attack.

The federal government severed ties between Iraqi Kurdistan and the outside world after the independence referendum by cutting international air links.

It said there could be no negotiations on wider autonomy until Kurdish leaders annul the vote and commit to remaining part of Iraq.

thumbs_b_c_44a9a4bc31027de31331682ff88312c4.jpg


Turkish military drill on Iraqi border
59cb438945d2a0568ce223fe

59cb438945d2a0568ce22400

59cb438945d2a0568ce22402

59cb438945d2a0568ce22404

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22406

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22408

59cb438a45d2a0568ce2240a

59cb438a45d2a0568ce2240c

59cb438a45d2a0568ce2240e

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22410

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22412

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22414

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22416

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22418

59cb438a45d2a0568ce2241a

59cb438a45d2a0568ce2241c

59cb438a45d2a0568ce2241e

59cb438a45d2a0568ce22420
 
Back
Top Bottom