Posted on Nov 12, 2015
Will the Kurds be successful in taking back Sinjar from ISIS?
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Also a good update from CJTFOIR regarding US involvment: "Near Sinjar, 24 strikes struck nine separate ISIL tactical units, nine ISIL staging areas, and destroyed 27 fighting positions, an ISIL heavy machine gun, an ISIL improvised explosive device, six ISIL assembly areas, two ISIL vehicle borne improvised explosive devices, two ISIL command and control nodes, an ISIL bunker, two ISIL caches, four ISIL staging areas, and suppressed an ISIL heavy machine gun."
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British troops are involved on the frontline with Kurdish forces battling to retake Sinjar in northern Iraq from Islamic State.
US-led coalition airstrikes have been pounding IS-held areas in the town - directed by US and British special forces on the frontline, Kurdish Peshmerga commanders have told Sky News.
The bombardment, which has killed 60-70 IS militants, has paved the way for around 7,500 Kurdish special forces, Peshmerga and Yazidi fighters to descend from Sinjar mountain towards the frontline.
They travelled in a convoy made up of humvees on flatbed trucks, heavy artillery and fighters waving Kurdish flags and brandishing their rifles - winding past abandoned cars and bloodstained clothing on the road many of them had used to flee IS in 2014.
On the frontline, walkie-talkie chatter has picked up militants urging each other to fight to the death and an order given by the local IS emir that anyone "withdrawing from the caliphate" should be shot by their own side.
Reporting from Sinjar, Sky's Foreign Affairs Editor Sam Kiley said: "This is unprecedented from the Peshmerga, this is the biggest offensive they have launched since the Islamic State attacked them - they are backed all day today with airstrikes being conducted almost continuously."
Operation Free Sinjar aims to cordon off the town, which sits on the main highway between Mosul and Raqqa - the main IS bastions in Iraq and Syria.
Kurdish forces claim they have captured part of Sinjar's main road and started clearing the town itself since the offensive launched.
Sinjar was overrun more than a year ago by IS, who massacred and enslaved thousands of Yazidis - regarded as devil worshippers by the extremists.
The onslaught prompted Barack Obama to authorise the first airstrikes against Islamic State in August 2014, saying he was acting to prevent a genocide of the Yazidis.
Hussein Derbo, the head of a Peshmerga battalion made up of 440 Yazidis, said the men under his command could have migrated to Europe but chose to stay and fight.
"It is our land and our honour. They (Islamic State) stole our dignity. We want to get it back," he told Reuters in a village on the northern outskirts of Sinjar town.
Derbo's brother, Farman, echoed the sentiment, saying he hoped the militants did not retreat from battle so that the Yazidis could kill them all.
The offensive is being personally overseen by Kurdistan regional president Massoud Barzani.
Kurdish forces and the US military said the number of IS fighters in the town had increased to nearly 600 after reinforcements arrived as the offensive was delayed by weather and friction between various Kurdish and Yazidi forces.
https://www.facebook.com/CJTFOIR/posts/ [login to see] 86983'
British troops are involved on the frontline with Kurdish forces battling to retake Sinjar in northern Iraq from Islamic State.
US-led coalition airstrikes have been pounding IS-held areas in the town - directed by US and British special forces on the frontline, Kurdish Peshmerga commanders have told Sky News.
The bombardment, which has killed 60-70 IS militants, has paved the way for around 7,500 Kurdish special forces, Peshmerga and Yazidi fighters to descend from Sinjar mountain towards the frontline.
They travelled in a convoy made up of humvees on flatbed trucks, heavy artillery and fighters waving Kurdish flags and brandishing their rifles - winding past abandoned cars and bloodstained clothing on the road many of them had used to flee IS in 2014.
On the frontline, walkie-talkie chatter has picked up militants urging each other to fight to the death and an order given by the local IS emir that anyone "withdrawing from the caliphate" should be shot by their own side.
Reporting from Sinjar, Sky's Foreign Affairs Editor Sam Kiley said: "This is unprecedented from the Peshmerga, this is the biggest offensive they have launched since the Islamic State attacked them - they are backed all day today with airstrikes being conducted almost continuously."
Operation Free Sinjar aims to cordon off the town, which sits on the main highway between Mosul and Raqqa - the main IS bastions in Iraq and Syria.
Kurdish forces claim they have captured part of Sinjar's main road and started clearing the town itself since the offensive launched.
Sinjar was overrun more than a year ago by IS, who massacred and enslaved thousands of Yazidis - regarded as devil worshippers by the extremists.
The onslaught prompted Barack Obama to authorise the first airstrikes against Islamic State in August 2014, saying he was acting to prevent a genocide of the Yazidis.
Hussein Derbo, the head of a Peshmerga battalion made up of 440 Yazidis, said the men under his command could have migrated to Europe but chose to stay and fight.
"It is our land and our honour. They (Islamic State) stole our dignity. We want to get it back," he told Reuters in a village on the northern outskirts of Sinjar town.
Derbo's brother, Farman, echoed the sentiment, saying he hoped the militants did not retreat from battle so that the Yazidis could kill them all.
The offensive is being personally overseen by Kurdistan regional president Massoud Barzani.
Kurdish forces and the US military said the number of IS fighters in the town had increased to nearly 600 after reinforcements arrived as the offensive was delayed by weather and friction between various Kurdish and Yazidi forces.
Edited 9 y ago
Posted 9 y ago
Responses: 3
"Near Sinjar, 24 strikes struck nine separate ISIL tactical units, nine ISIL staging areas, and destroyed 27 fighting positions, an ISIL heavy machine gun, an ISIL improvised explosive device, six ISIL assembly areas, two ISIL vehicle borne improvised explosive devices, two ISIL command and control nodes, an ISIL bunker, two ISIL caches, four ISIL staging areas, and suppressed an ISIL heavy machine gun."
That sounds like the Friday Afternoon Follies from MAC-V.
Walt
That sounds like the Friday Afternoon Follies from MAC-V.
Walt
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If this winning keep going on ... Turkey will start bombing the Kurd again ... :)
I really think the Kurd will eventually earn their own state!
I really think the Kurd will eventually earn their own state!
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SSG Carlos Madden With U.S. forces pounding ISIS with air strikes, the Syrian Kurdish rebels being highly motivated in part due to the support, recent successes and that they are native to the area (giving them an tactical advantage) it is likely they may well prevail in this fight.
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SSG Carlos Madden
Looks good so far
Islamic State 'Defeated and On the Run' From Sinjar | VICE News
VICE News is embedded with Kurdish forces as they mount an offensive to take back the Iraqi town of Sinjar from IS. This morning they are claiming victory.
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SSG Carlos Madden - see I was right. Well at least for one night.....I hope it holds.
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SSG Carlos Madden
CPT (Join to see) - Update: A month has gone by and the Kurds are still in control of Sinjar. I think we've learned a lot about the Kurds and their capabilities against ISIS. Hopefully, we can use these lessons elsewhere against ISIS. http://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/isis-sanctuary-december-21-2015
ISIS Sanctuary: December 21, 2015
This newly-updated ISIS Sanctuary Map includes changes reflecting that Sinjar was retaken by anti-ISIS Kurdish forces and also highlights new confidence in the assessment that Liwa Shuhada al-Yar
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