Posted on Sep 23, 2017
canadian-special-forces-involved-in-battle-to-push-isil-out-of-the-iraqi-city-of-hawija
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Posted 7 y ago
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Thanks for letting us know LTC (Join to see)
FYI General Raymond "Tony" Thomas who currently commands U.S. Special Forces Command is a USMA classmate and old friend of mine.
"Canadian special forces in Iraq are now involved in the battle of Hawija, an offensive against ISIL extremists which started early Thursday.
Iraqi and coalition troops hope to push the forces of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant from the city of 150,000, one of the extremist group’s last remaining strongholds in the country.
The Canadian Forces isn’t releasing details about the numbers of Canadians involved, but the head of Canadian special forces said Hawija is now the major focus of his personnel in Iraq.
In an interview with the Ottawa Citizen on Thursday, Maj. Gen. Mike Rouleau, head of Canadian Special Operations Forces Command, said his soldiers have been involved in planning for the battle and will advise and assist Iraqi troops.
“They won’t be in the vanguard,” Rouleau said, citing the rules that have governed Canadian troops during their time in Iraq. But he said Canadian special forces can use lethal force to protect themselves or their Iraqi counterparts if needed. In the past, Canadian commandos have directed air strikes and launched anti-tank missiles against ISIL forces. Canadian snipers have also targeted ISIL troops.
An estimated 2,000 ISIL fighters are thought to be in Hawija, located 50 kilometres west of the city of Kirkuk in the north of Iraq. Hawija has been under their control since June, 2014.
Rouleau said Canadian special forces will also continue to train Kurdish troops, of whom they have so far trained 2,450. In addition, the Canadian Army will provide about a dozen specialized personnel to support the Canada’s special operations task force in Iraq. Rouleau said these will be army engineers from Garrison Petawawa in the Ottawa Valley. The engineers will help improve fortifications and bolster force protection for both special forces and the Kurds, he said.
Canada has also sent a small team of Canadian Army engineers to observe ongoing explosive-threat training the Iraqis are receiving under a NATO program, the first step in plans to have Canadian combat engineers providing such training to the Iraqis later this fall, the military said.
Kurdish forces, also known as the Peshmerga, will not take part in the offensive to retake Hawija. Jabar Yawar, the secretary general of the Peshmerga ministry, told the Kurdish news outlet Rudaw that the troops will prevent ISIL gunmen from infiltrating their lines. But he also told Rudaw they would not allow any units of the Iraqi military to cross the lines into Peshmerga-controlled areas.
That decision is a further sign of the tension between Iraqis and Kurds in the lead-up to a Kurdish referendum, scheduled for Monday, on creating an independent Kurdish state in what is now northern Iraq. Early indications are that the vote will go in favour of independence, and Kurdish president Masoud Barzani said Wednesday he expects negotiations for an independent state will take around two years.
But several nations have been calling on the Kurds to rethink their referendum, warning that it could hurt efforts to battle ISIL.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his cabinet will meet Friday to decide whether to impose sanctions on the Kurds if they separate from Iraq. “Steps such as demands for independence that can cause new crises and conflicts in the region must be avoided,” Erdogan told the UN on Tuesday.
The U.S. State Department has warned the Kurds they could see aid to their region cut off, and on Wednesday Saudi Arabia called for the referendum to be cancelled.
Iraq has declared the referendum unconstitutional, and its parliament voted last week to “take all measures” to preserve the country’s unity amid growing concerns fighting could break our between the two sides.
In July, Gen. Raymond Thomas, head of U.S. Special Forces Command, suggested any moves toward independence by the Kurds, who now control the city of Kirkuk and 40 per cent of Iraq’s oil, will lead to conflict. “I don’t think (the Iraqis are) going to say, ‘Sure, take the oilfields and Kirkuk and go your way,’” Thomas told a security forum. “It’s not going to go peacefully.”
Israel and Russia have been supportive of Kurdish plans to hold the referendum, while Canada has indicated it wants a united Iraq."
FYI General Raymond "Tony" Thomas who currently commands U.S. Special Forces Command is a USMA classmate and old friend of mine.
"Canadian special forces in Iraq are now involved in the battle of Hawija, an offensive against ISIL extremists which started early Thursday.
Iraqi and coalition troops hope to push the forces of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant from the city of 150,000, one of the extremist group’s last remaining strongholds in the country.
The Canadian Forces isn’t releasing details about the numbers of Canadians involved, but the head of Canadian special forces said Hawija is now the major focus of his personnel in Iraq.
In an interview with the Ottawa Citizen on Thursday, Maj. Gen. Mike Rouleau, head of Canadian Special Operations Forces Command, said his soldiers have been involved in planning for the battle and will advise and assist Iraqi troops.
“They won’t be in the vanguard,” Rouleau said, citing the rules that have governed Canadian troops during their time in Iraq. But he said Canadian special forces can use lethal force to protect themselves or their Iraqi counterparts if needed. In the past, Canadian commandos have directed air strikes and launched anti-tank missiles against ISIL forces. Canadian snipers have also targeted ISIL troops.
An estimated 2,000 ISIL fighters are thought to be in Hawija, located 50 kilometres west of the city of Kirkuk in the north of Iraq. Hawija has been under their control since June, 2014.
Rouleau said Canadian special forces will also continue to train Kurdish troops, of whom they have so far trained 2,450. In addition, the Canadian Army will provide about a dozen specialized personnel to support the Canada’s special operations task force in Iraq. Rouleau said these will be army engineers from Garrison Petawawa in the Ottawa Valley. The engineers will help improve fortifications and bolster force protection for both special forces and the Kurds, he said.
Canada has also sent a small team of Canadian Army engineers to observe ongoing explosive-threat training the Iraqis are receiving under a NATO program, the first step in plans to have Canadian combat engineers providing such training to the Iraqis later this fall, the military said.
Kurdish forces, also known as the Peshmerga, will not take part in the offensive to retake Hawija. Jabar Yawar, the secretary general of the Peshmerga ministry, told the Kurdish news outlet Rudaw that the troops will prevent ISIL gunmen from infiltrating their lines. But he also told Rudaw they would not allow any units of the Iraqi military to cross the lines into Peshmerga-controlled areas.
That decision is a further sign of the tension between Iraqis and Kurds in the lead-up to a Kurdish referendum, scheduled for Monday, on creating an independent Kurdish state in what is now northern Iraq. Early indications are that the vote will go in favour of independence, and Kurdish president Masoud Barzani said Wednesday he expects negotiations for an independent state will take around two years.
But several nations have been calling on the Kurds to rethink their referendum, warning that it could hurt efforts to battle ISIL.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his cabinet will meet Friday to decide whether to impose sanctions on the Kurds if they separate from Iraq. “Steps such as demands for independence that can cause new crises and conflicts in the region must be avoided,” Erdogan told the UN on Tuesday.
The U.S. State Department has warned the Kurds they could see aid to their region cut off, and on Wednesday Saudi Arabia called for the referendum to be cancelled.
Iraq has declared the referendum unconstitutional, and its parliament voted last week to “take all measures” to preserve the country’s unity amid growing concerns fighting could break our between the two sides.
In July, Gen. Raymond Thomas, head of U.S. Special Forces Command, suggested any moves toward independence by the Kurds, who now control the city of Kirkuk and 40 per cent of Iraq’s oil, will lead to conflict. “I don’t think (the Iraqis are) going to say, ‘Sure, take the oilfields and Kirkuk and go your way,’” Thomas told a security forum. “It’s not going to go peacefully.”
Israel and Russia have been supportive of Kurdish plans to hold the referendum, while Canada has indicated it wants a united Iraq."
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Thank you for sharing your experience sir those were some of the most craziest years in Iraq hearing from this I can see why.
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LTC (Join to see)
Thank you both for your service and I'm glad that I live in Canada and I saw the story especially For You, Dwayne, I'm sure it's bringing back some bad memories but at least you know that there are some Canadians who are maybe even killing some of the guys who killed your guys using air strikes and or training the Iraqi military to take back that City or soon-to-be what's left of it. I honor you for your time serving there. I was only privy to some of this because as a first lieutenant working of the warrior Toc, I had to substitute for the Battalion executive officer or the S3 operations officer and I learned quite a bit in those targeting meetings and that made me decide later to join civil affairs after I left Idaho National Guard at the end of the mission. I joined the 426 civil Affairs Battalion in California. Some of those guys were there at fob Warrior I had talked to them in the dining facility and they were part of an economics team. Those guys are spread all over and different fobs but I want to thank you for your service and I'm sorry if you lost men in the vicinity of hawija. I was in the Warrior tactical operations center when they yelled "attention in the TOC!" we have a Sig act here and the General was called in and they described what I described about the attempted destruction of Powerline and how the helicopters happened to see it and how they reacted and how they captured some of the insurgents. Luckily, the Powerline did not collapse or break because the other power lines were suspending it. It was still screwed up but at least the power wasn't cut. Thanks for your posting as well
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Pretty cool stuff buddy. I sometimes forget one bad American habit.
When I was a kid we were taught that the Russians and the Chinese always kept their people in the dark regarding the news around the world.
As an adult I realized how easy it is to accomplish the same thing simply by not reporting that same news. The we are far evolved beyond those savages seems to remain the theme of the day.
Thanks for sharing.
When I was a kid we were taught that the Russians and the Chinese always kept their people in the dark regarding the news around the world.
As an adult I realized how easy it is to accomplish the same thing simply by not reporting that same news. The we are far evolved beyond those savages seems to remain the theme of the day.
Thanks for sharing.
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LTC (Join to see)
PO3 John Wagner - If Fox did not publish this story, I will write them as well since maybe my rank and living in Canada will make them feel ashamed they missed this story.
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PO3 John Wagner
LTC (Join to see) - For all I know they just aren't paying attention.
What they need to figure out is that we deplorables are actually interested enough in international news to tune in a bit more.
They could do a Sunday supplement. Who cares about watching the rerun news cycle from Friday?
People are home and bored enough on Sunday evening that they might actually sell some advertising to high end market. BMW buyers perhaps?
What they need to figure out is that we deplorables are actually interested enough in international news to tune in a bit more.
They could do a Sunday supplement. Who cares about watching the rerun news cycle from Friday?
People are home and bored enough on Sunday evening that they might actually sell some advertising to high end market. BMW buyers perhaps?
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PO3 John Wagner
LTC (Join to see) - Mayby add a segment on international swimsuit fashions to prime the pump.....?
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PO3 John Wagner
LTC (Join to see) - Trump could host a segment on his hot stock picks for the coming week.. let your imagination run with it. Lots of deplorables play the markets after all.
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