WoW ! Islamic State seizes one third of Syrian town Kobani: monitor

Islamic State fighters have seized more than a third of the Syrian border town of Kobani despite U.S.-led air strikes targeting them in and around the town, a monitoring group said on Thursday.

They moved into two districts on Wednesday in a three-week battle that Kurdish defenders say will end in a massacre and give the militants a garrison on the Turkish border if they win.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the country’s civil war, said clashes continued into Thursday morning as the forces of Islamic State – still widely known by its former acronym of ISIS – pushed forward “ISIS control more than a third of Kobani.

All eastern areas, a small part of the northeast and an area in the southeast,” the Observatory’s head, Rami Abdulrahman, said by telephone. An explosion was heard on Thursday on the western side of the mainly Kurdish town, with thick black smoke visible from the Turkish border a few kilometers (miles) away.

The sound of a jet flying overhead and sporadic gunfire from the besieged town was audible. Several ambulances sped from the border to the town of Suruc in Turkey. Islamic State hoisted its black flag on the eastern edge of Kobani on Monday. Since then, the air strikes have been redoubled but failed to halt the advance.

In Washington, the Pentagon cautioned that there are limits to what the air strikes can do in Syria before Western-backed, moderate Syrian opposition forces are strong enough to repel Islamic State. U.S. President Barack Obama has ruled out sending American ground forces on a combat mission there.

Kurds have complained that Washington is giving only token support through its air strikes, which are focused in Iraq where the United States works with the
Iraqi Army. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Wednesday: “As horrific as it is to watch in real time what is happening
in Kobani … you have to step back and understand the strategic objective.”

Source: Reuters

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WoW ! French, U.S. planes strike Islamic State, Britain to join coalition

French fighter jets struck Islamic State targets in Iraq on Thursday, and the United States hit them in Syria, as a U.S.-led coalition to fight the militants gained momentum with an announcement that Britain would join.

The French strikes were a prompt answer to the beheading of a French tourist in Algeria by militants, who said the killing was punishment for Paris’
decision last week to become the first European country to join the U.S.-led bombing campaign.

In the United States, FBI Director James Comey said Washington had identified the masked Islamic State militant in videos with a knife at the beheading of two American hostages in recent weeks. Those acts helped galvanize Washington’s bombing campaign.

“I’m not going to tell you who I believe it is,” Comey told reporters. He said he knew the person’s nationality, but declined to give further details.

A European government source familiar with the investigation said the accent indicated the man was from London and likely from a community of immigrants. U.S. and European officials said the principal investigative work identifying the man was conducted by British government agencies.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, in New York to attend a U.N. meeting, said on Thursday he had credible intelligence that Islamic State networks in Iraq were plotting to attack U.S. and French subway trains. Senior U.S. officials and French security services said they had no evidence of the specific threat cited by Abadi.

But New York Police Commissioner William Bratton said the department boosted its presence on subways and city streets after the Iraqi warning.
City officials added there was no specific, credible threat, and Mayor Bill de Blasio said: “We are convinced New Yorkers are safe.”

Officials in Chicago and Washington, D.C., said they knew of no threats to their transit systems. Some Iraqi officials in Baghdad questioned Abadi’s comments. One high-level Iraqi government official told Reuters it appeared to be based on “ancient
intelligence”.

France said earlier on Thursday it would boost security on transport and in public places after the killing of French tourist Herve Gourdel by Islamic State sympathizers in Algeria. Britain, the closest U.S. ally in the past decade’s wars, announced on Thursday that it too would join air strikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq, after weeks of weighing its options.

Prime Minister David Cameron recalled parliament, which is expected to give its approval on Friday. While Arab countries have joined the coalition, Washington’s traditional Western allies had been slow
to answer the call from U.S. President Barack Obama. But since Monday, Australia, Belgium and the Netherlands have said they would send planes.

The Western allies have so far agreed to join air strikes only in Iraq, where the government has asked for help, and not in Syria, where strikes are being carried out without formal permission from President Bashar al-Assad. France said on Thursday it did not rule out extending strikes to Syria, too.

Overnight, U.S.-led air strikes in eastern Syria killed 14 Islamic State fighters, according to a monitoring group, while on the ground, Kurdish forces were reported to have pushed back an advance by the Islamists toward the border town of Kobani.

The air raids follow growing alarm in Western and Arab capitals after Islamic State, a Sunni militant group, swept through a swath of Iraq in June, proclaimed a “caliphate” ruling over all Muslims, slaughtered prisoners and ordered Shi’ites and non- Muslims to convert or die.

KURDS HALT ISLAMIC STATE ADVANCE
One danger the U.S.-led campaign faces in Syria is the lack of strong allies on the ground. Washington remains hostile to the Assad government. It wants other Syrian opponents of Assad to step into the breach as Islamic State is pushed back, but such “moderate opposition” groups have had limited success.

One group that has fought hard against Islamic State on the ground in Syria has been the Kurds, who control an area in the north but complain they have been given no support from the West.
On Thursday, two Kurdish officials said Kurdish forces had pushed back the advance by Islamic State fighters toward the border town of Kobani in overnight
clashes.

Fighting near the town in recent days had prompted the fastest exodus of refugees of the entire three-year-old Syrian civil war. Islamic State, which launched a fresh offensive to try to capture Kobani more than a week ago,
concentrated its fighters south of the town for a push late on Wednesday, but Kurdish YPG forces repelled them, the Kurdish officials said.

Islamic State fighters also remain to the east and west of the town and fighting continues in the south. Near Damascus, Assad’s Syrian army overran rebels
in a town on Thursday, strengthening the Syrian leader’s grip on territory around the capital.

Assad’s forces, backed by the Lebanese Shi’ite movement Hezbollah, have been gradually extending control over a corridor of territory from Damascus to
the Mediterranean coast. Many Syrian activists and rebels have criticized the
United States for focusing on striking Islamic State and other militant groups while doing little to bring down Assad.

Iraq’s prime minister told reporters that he conveyed to Syria a message from Washington that U.S. strikes would target Islamic State militants rather than
Assad’s government.

“What they emphasized is that their aim in Syria is not to destabilize Syria, is not to have a threat of Syrian sovereignty, is not to attack the regime in Syria, but rather to diminish the capabilities of Daesh (and other) terrorist organizations,” Abadi said, referring to
Islamic State.

Commenting on the fight in Iraq against Islamic State militants, Abadi said that in addition to seeking air cover, Iraqi forces were starting to run low on ammunition and needed a steady supply. While acknowledging U.S. air strikes on Islamic State forces in the north of the country, he said the United States had not helped in the south.

“The onslaught of Daesh we have stopped and we are reversing it,” he said. “It is slow, but we have managed
with zero support – I can say – with zero support from the Americans or from anybody else,” he said.

“Yes, the Americans … intervened when Arbil was endangered, but there was no intervention whatsoever in the south,” he said. “And of course that was painful at the time.”

Culled from Reuters

WoW ! Obama says need to ‘snuff out’ militant groups like Islamic State

President Barack Obama said on Friday the goal of an international coalition he is helping to form is to “ultimately snuff out” the type of extremism demonstrated by Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

It is a “sobering time,” said Obama at a Democratic fund-raising event in Baltimore following his decision to authorize U.S. air strikes against Islamic State targets in Syria for the first time, and to add to targeted areas in Iraq.

The threat from Islamic State has had an important silver lining, he said. It has focused the world’s attention on the need to “ultimately snuff out this particular brand of Islamic extremism that really has no place in the 21st century.”

Obama is leading an effort to form a coalition of Western allies and Gulf Arab states to take on the extremist group, whose savage methods have included beheading two American journalists.

“We’re going to be able to build the kind of coalition that allows us to lead, but also isn’t entirely dependent on what we do,” said Obama, who wants to avoid a
repeat of the Iraq war and has vowed not to send large numbers of U.S. combat troops there.

Obama met with NATO allies last week in Wales and later this month will hold a leaders security conference at the U.N. General Assembly in New York, aimed at gaining commitments from nations willing to join the coalition.

Saudi Arabia has agreed to host a training mission for those Syrian rebels deemed moderate by the United
States. The Baltimore fund-raising event was held at the home of Howard Friedman, a former head of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Residents in the heavily Jewish neighborhood spilled out into their
front yards, many waving pro-Israel signs.

“Thank you for standing by Israel,”

Friedman told Obama in introducing him to the small crowd at the fund-raiser.

Source: Reuters

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