Today Peshmerga starts second phase of “Sinjar Operation”
Kurdish Peshmerga forces has started the second phase of Sinjar operation to free the town from the Islamic State militants, however the advance of Peshmerga in to the center of the town has been slowed due to numerous of IED inside Sinjar.
According to information obtained by BasNews from Peshmerga forces, on early Friday morning Peshmerga force have started moving in to the Kurdish Yazidi-town, which has been under the control of Islamic State since August 2014.
A special team from Peshmerga have been deployed to defuse the IEDs that have been planted by IS militants inside the town.
BasNews has learned that one of the IEDs has been blown up and inside a house and as a result four Peshmerga have been killed and 10 more injured.
Peshmerga forces on Thursday successfully reached Sinjar town from two flanks, East and West, as part of Operation Free the town.
Operation Free Sinjar, conducted under the direct supervision Kurdistan Region President Masoud Barzani and supported by International Coalition airstrikes, has the strategic objective of cordoning off Sinjar town and disrupting IS supply routes.
According to Kurdistan Region Security Council (KRSC) Peshmerga forces had taken control of a significant stretch of the main road from Ba’aj to Sinjar.
Ba’aj is an IS stronghold and a staging ground for VBIEDs for use against Peshmerga positions. Video footage from Thursday morning shows IS mobilizing VBIEDs from Ba’aj to Sinjar in an effort to prevent Peshmerga advances.
Control of these key IS supplies routes will both reduce IS’s ability to reinforce its positions at Sinjar and, importantly, and limit IS’s freedom of movement between Iraq and Syria. This will in turn allow the International Coalition increase its pressure on IS militants.
On the Eastern Front, Peshmerga succeeded in reaching Shkefte Mountain, which overlooks Tal Afar and IS villages nearby. This vantage point, previously used by IS to fire mortars at Peshmerga positions, will enable the Peshmerga to monitor ISIL activity and target their positions.
On the Western Front, Peshmerga forces reached the military base of the 11th Brigade, part of the 3rd Division of the Iraqi Army.
More than 150 square kilometres have been retaken from IS. Peshmerga units will continue from three fronts to set up defensive positions, allowing engineering teams to clear the heavily mined area. Peshmerga forces have already achieved two of three strategic goals, dealing a significant blow to IS morale.
The remains of dozens of ISIL militants were left abandoned in the field. Reports indicate that over 100 IS militants were killed in Thursday operation.
KRSC reports that IS radio chatter has proven IS’s loss of morale: an IS Emir was overheard threatening any ISIL deserters from Sinjar with execution.
basnews.com
Russia to supply radar system for Iraqi Air Force airfield
Russia is supplying to Iraq flight radio-technical support equipment for an aerodrome of the country’s Air Force, a source in the military-technical cooperation sphere told TASS on Friday.
“The supply of this equipment for the Iraqi Air Force is currently underway. The contract provides for equipping an aerodrome in Iraq with flight radio-technical support equipment,” the source said.
According to him, the Russian equipment will ensure radar control and navigation at a distance of up to 400 kilometres form the aerodrome and instrument landing of aircraft in poor visibility conditions.
In recent years Iraq has been a major buyer of Russian weapons and equipment. In 2012, the sides signed a contract package on the supply to Baghdad of various military equipment worth $4.2 billion. Iraqi officials have repeatedly displayed an interest in the development of military-technical cooperation with Russia.
‘Italy mustn’t ignore Iran human rights abuses’
Rouhani is heading to both Italy and France in what is the first visit of an Iranian leader to Europe in 16 years, as ties thaw after Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.
In Rome on Saturday and Sunday, Rouhani will meet Italian officials and Pope Francis, while on Monday and Tuesday in Paris he will see President Francois Hollande.
On the agenda will be potential business deals – as Iran opens up to the global economy after the historic July nuclear agreement – and talks on regional issues including the conflict in Syria.
But Italian lawmakers urged the government not to turn a blind eye to human rights abuses in Iran, which they said have sharply deteriorated under Rouhani’s rule. At least 2,000 executions have taken place since Rouhani came to power in 2013.
“Iran has the highest number of executions of minors,” the senators said in a statement.
“Hangings of those belonging to ethnic and religious minorities have intensified. Some Christian priests are in prison for their beliefs. Violations of the rights of minorities, women and citizens are institutionalized.
The last visit to Europe by an Iranian leader was in 1999, when Mohammad Khatami, like Rouhani a reformist, travelled to Rome and Paris in separate trips in March and October.
He had been the first president of Iran to visit Europe since the country’s 1979 Islamic revolution. Khatami during that visit also held talks at the Vatican, meeting then pontiff John Paul II.
The choices of France and Italy for both visits are hardly surprising – before sanctions were imposed on Iran in 2006 over its nuclear programme, the two countries were the oil-and-gas-rich nation’s main European economic partners.
Both are keen to resume that cooperation after the July 14th accord, which saw Iran agree with six world powers (Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia, and the United States) to curb its nuclear programme in exchange for the lifting of sanctions.
A steady stream of foreign business leaders have been making their way to Tehran since the deal, eager to seize their share of the Iranian market and its 78 million people.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius and Italian counterpart Paolo Gentiloni were among the first Western officials to visit Tehran over the summer, bringing the invitations for Rouhani’s European trip.
In an interview with France 2 public television on Wednesday, Rouhani said he expected to sign a number of documents that would “form the basis for industrial and commercial agreements”.
Among them, he said, will “probably” be a move to buy Airbus aircraft to renew Iran’s ageing fleet.
Fabius was followed in Iran in September by a delegation of some 150 French business leaders seeking opportunities.
Some – like automakers PSA Peugeot Citroen and Renault or oil giant Total, all long present in Iran – want to restart operations in the country which were reduced under the sanctions.
Shadow of Syria
In Paris, Rouhani will speak Monday at UN cultural and science agency Unesco, before meeting Hollande on Tuesday for talks on Syria and bilateral cooperation.
Iran, with Russia, is the main supporter of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, providing it with financial and military aid, including with military advisers on the ground.
Arab and Western countries including France have backed Assad’s opponents, insisting the Syrian leader must go for there to be any hope of ending the civil war that has left more than 250,000 dead since March 2011.
After initially being frozen out of diplomatic talks on the crisis, Iran for the first time joined an international meeting on the conflict in late October in Vienna. It will take part in another round in the Austrian capital on Saturday.
thelocal.it
US airstrike targets UK militant Jihadi John in Syria
The British IS militant Mohammed Emwazi, known as Jihadi John, has been targeted by US forces in an airstrike, and is almost certainly dead.
The Pentagon is assessing whether the extremist was killed in the military action carried out in Syria.
Emwazi came to notoriety in a video in August 2014 which showed the beheading of US journalist James Foley.
He also appeared in videos showing the killings of UK hostages Alan Henning and David Haines, American journalist Steven Sotloff, aid worker Abdul-Rahman Kassig and Japanese journalists Kenji Goto and Haruna Yukawa shortly before they were killed, such as in this image.
A US official told the Associated Press a drone had been used to carry out the attack on a vehicle in Raqqa which was believed to be carrying Emwazi.
A Downing Street spokeswoman said: “We are aware of the US statement about the airstrike targeting Mohammed Emwazi. Like them, we are not commenting further at this stage.”
Mr Haines, an aid worker from Scotland, was executed in September last year, having been held captive for 18 months.
His daughter Bethany later said she felt families of Emwazi’s victims would only feel closure “once there’s a bullet between (his) eyes”.
A video released a month later showed 47-year-old Salford taxi driver Mr Henning appearing to be beheaded.
His daughter Lucy said she found out he had been killed when she saw an image posted on social media site Instagram.
Emwazi appeared in the videos dressed in black with only his eves visible, and spoke with a British accent as he went on anti-western rants to the camera while wielding a knife.
It was not until February this year that the jihadist was unmasked as Kuwaiti-born Emwazi, who lived in the UK since the age of six.
It emerged that Emwazi had been known to British intelligence services, but managed to travel to Syria in 2013.
breakingnews.ie
‘At least 100 killed’ as Islamic State clashes with Syrian army in north
At least 100 combatants including 60 Islamic State fighters were killed in 24 hours of clashes as the Syrian army and IS battled for control of the key northeast military base of Kuwairis, a monitor said on Thursday.
Eight militiamen from the militant Lebanese Shia movement Hezbollah and 13 Iranians, as well as more than 20 Syrian soldiers died in the clashes at Kuwairis air base, east of Aleppo, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Clashes and air strikes at the base were continuing, said the UK-based watchdog, which relies for its information on a network of activists and doctors in Syria.
On Tuesday, Syrian troops backed by pro-government militia reportedly penetrated IS lines west of the airport and reached government troops inside the base, breaking a more than one-year-long IS siege.
It was the Syrian army’s first major breakthrough since Russia’s air campaign against IS began on 30 September.
Experts said the base could be used by Russian planes in their air war against rebels fighting the rule of president, Bashar al-Assad, aiding their efforts to re-take Syria’s second city of Aleppo.
stripes.com
Perils ahead for Turkey’s possible anti-ISIL ground offensive in Syria
While the Turkish media is abuzz with talks of a possible ground operation against the terrorist Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Syria by the Turkish military, security experts and former military officials warn of risks and perils attached to that operation.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu recently told CNN International Turkey is ready to take part in anti-ISIL ground offensive in Syria under an “integrated strategy” by the global anti-ISIL coalition.
His remarks are interpreted as the strongest sign over Turkey’s resolve against the radical militant group amid new deployments of Western and US aircraft at İncirlik Air Base for a large-scale new air campaign against ISIL in Syria and Iraq.
But the Turkish military, which is traditionally reluctant to take a more active role in Syria’s combustible battlefield, has firm conditions before undertaking any sort of incursion into foreign territories and is seeking strong legitimate ground for an operation — a UN decision or a collective action by NATO.
In the face of recent signals from Ankara, former military officials have offered a cautious and sober assessment of the risks associated with an intervention in Syria, urging a calm and thorough analysis of all factors before a move.
Retired Assistant Col. İsmail Yılmaz believes any unilateral action without UN or NATO would plunge Turkey into a quagmire in Syria.
On Wednesday, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said at a business group meeting in Ankara Turkey will bring the issue of Iraq and Syria to the G-20 summit in Antalya next week and wants world leaders to discuss the creation of a safe zone in Syria.
He said Turkey’s allies are coming closer to the idea of forming a safe zone. He added issues of a “zone free of terrorist elements” and a “no-fly zone” will be discussed at the G-20 summit.
According to diplomatic sources that spoke to Today’s Zaman, Ankara will propose the US-led anti-ISIL coalition launch a coordinated air and ground operation to free the Syrian side of the Turkish border of ISIL elements.
Recent talks with Ankara’s security and diplomatic sources suggest preparations are under way for an operation to liberate the northern Syrian border town of Jarablus from ISIL.
Of the concerns over the situation in northern Syria, the expanding Kurdish influence is singled out as the most urgent one for Ankara and the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government wants to prevent main Kurdish political party the Democratic Union Party (PYD) and its armed wing the People’s Protection Units (YPG) from expanding its reach beyond the west of Euphrates.
Ankara has declared any crossing by the PYD beyond west of the Euphrates as a “red line,” vowing to strike the group should it attempt to expand further west to Jarablus.
For Yılmaz, Turkey’s unilateral foray into the complex battleground of Syria may have inadvertent and unintended consequences such as risky encounters, even clashes, with the other combatants on the ground, Russia, Iran and Hezbollah.
He said Turkey might not be able to withstand the financial, diplomatic and military cost, with likely high casualties, of such an operation.
Yılmaz thinks an intervention without the endorsement of a UN decision may give Syria a legitimate cause to declare war against Turkey. Even an operation along with an international coalition may prove to be too costly for Turkey, he argues, because of the financial, military and political crises it may trigger due to Turkey’s close geographical proximity to the conflict zone.
todayszaman.com
U.S. should consider no-fly zone in Islamic State fight
The United States should consider all measures including a no-fly zone in the fight against Islamic State, Gen. John Allen, the U.S. special envoy for the coalition against the militant group in Iraq and Syria, told CNN on Thursday.
“We should consider all the measures,” Allen said when asked about the possibility of a no-fly zone in Syria.
U.S. NATO ally Turkey has long campaigned for a no-fly zone in northern Syria to keep Islamic State and Kurdish militants from its border and help stem the tide of displaced civilians trying to cross.
President Barack Obama has not supported the idea. Allen, who is stepping down this year, told CNN the goal of such a zone would have to be carefully considered, citing its complexities and costs.
“I have to tell you we have looked at this: that the intricacies and the complexities and the cost, frankly, in terms of additional resources, of a no-fly zone or a safe zone, are not insignificant,” said Allen, a retired four-star general.
At a White House briefing last month, spokesman Josh Earnest said a no-fly zone was not being considered at the time.
Allen’s job as special envoy, which he has held since last September, included rallying a U.S.-led coalition that has carried out air strikes against Islamic State fighters in both Syria and Iraq.
Syria conflict: Turkey’s Erdogan issues a ‘friendly warning’
Turkey renewed calls for a safe zone for refugees in Syria on Wednesday as war continues to tear that country apart.
Images uploaded to social media purportedly showed a double explosion in the eastern Syrian town of Bukamal.
Separately, Syrian state television said the army had fought its way to an airbase near Aleppo that has been under attack from ISIL militants for nearly two years.
Hundreds of soldiers were reported freed from the Kweires airbase, in the most high-profile victory for Syria’s army since Russia launched its air campaign in support of Bashar al-Assad on September 30.
A staunch opponent of Syria’s President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan is expected to use Turkey’s presidency of the G20 to try to persuade allies including Washington against giving Syrian Kurdish rebels a greater role in the fight against ISIL.
Turkey, which opened its air bases in July to the US-led coalition against the so-called Islamic State, sees advances by the Syrian Kurds as a threat to its national security, fearing they could stoke separatism among its own Kurds.
Issuing what he called ‘a friendly warning’ – he didn’t specify to whom – the Turkish president said:
“If you do not take a principled stand against terrorism, at the end this fire will fly back in your face. Those countries who think they are living in confidence and prosperity,should not forget that you never know what can happen tomorrow.”
Speaking at a business meeting in Ankara, Erdogan said Turkey’s allies were coming round to the idea of a no-fly zone in Syria, according to Turkish media reports.
Turkey wants world leaders to discuss Syria and Iraq at the G20 summit it is hosting this weekend.
syriahr.com
Tehran accuses Saudi Arabia of financing terrorist attack in Iran
A senior Iranian official has accused Saudi Arabia of financing a recent terrorist attack in southwestern province of Khuzestan in Iran.
“The team that has recently carried out a shooting against religious gatherings and martyred two individuals received payment from Saudi security services,” the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, Ali Shamkhani, told al-Alam TV Nov 11.
He also mentioned that the existing problems between Tehran and Riyadh are resolvable if Saudi officials stop acting “wicked” against Iran.
On October 16 two people were killed following a shooting incident in Dezful County in Khuzestan Province.
Masked gunmen in a car opened fire with automatic weapons on a group of people who were holding a ritual mourning for the third Shia imam Hussain ibn Ali.
Shamkhani also accused Saudi Arabia of launching air strikes against the civilians in Yemen.
trend.az
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