Showing posts with label Peshmerga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peshmerga. Show all posts

Monday, March 14, 2016

American ISIS member mistakenly walks into Peshmerga lines on his way to Turkey.


American ISIS member mistakenly walks into Peshmerga lines on his way to 'Sometimes NATO Ally' Turkey. (Rudaw).

The Kurdish Peshmerga captured an American member of the Islamic State (ISIS) on the Shingal front on Monday, said a local commander.

Muhammad Jamal Amin is a Virginia-born American citizen of a Palestinian father and Iraqi mother from Mosul.

According to the Peshmerga commander of the Shingal front who didn’t want to be named, the ISIS militant had mistaken the Peshmerga territory for the Turkish border.

The commander said that Amin had entered Syria from Turkey two months ago from where he had traveled to Mosul.

On his way back to Turkey he had mistakenly walked into the Peshmerga hands.

The Peshmerga commander said that a number of cell phones, some money and ID cards were seized from the militant.

The Peshmerga fired on him before he reached their base and later detained him. Hmmm......I Wonder how many times he used his 'Capital one in Turkey'

Friday, November 13, 2015

Video - Two ISIS fighters, one Female captured alive by Kurds in Sinjar



Video - First footage emerging of Peshmerga entering the liberated town of Sinjar

Video - Battle for Sinjar won - Kurdish pres Barzani "the only flag that would stay in Sinjar is the Kurdish flag and no other"

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Details emerge on the Christian captives of ISIS.


Some Christian captives of ISIS may involve Syriac Christian militia fighters trained by Peshmerga. HT: Bilalabdulkareem.


The story of ISIS holding 150 Christian hostages according to my sources is true.

However the story being reported now seems to have left out a few relevant details. The official story is that ISIS stormed villages in the Hasaka region and kidnapped Christians in the villages.

Osama Edward, founder of the Assyrian Human Rights Network who is based in Stockholm, Sweden said, “They are facing death, people are unarmed, they are peaceful. And they need help, they are just left alone — no one’s protecting them.”

However rebel sources in the area have said that many of the prisoners are from the Sootoro Christian militia, a group that is headed by Maliki Rabbaho. This group was being trained by Peshmerga forces to fight ISIS. Sources say that when ISIS attacked the villages these prisoners fell into their hands.

Rebel fighters in the area have said that there is a good chance that some civilians are mixed in with the fighters as well from amongst the hostages. Read the full story here.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

24 Yazidi women and children break out of ISIS prison in Iraq, safely reach Kurds.

Yazidi women

24 Yazidi women and children break out of ISIS prison in Iraq, safely reach Kurds.(AQ).[Googletranslate].

Iraq - Anatolia - arrived 24 Yazidi of detainees held by the organization Daash to a safe area in Sinjar in northern Iraq,

A source in the Peshmerga (northern region of Iraq's army), "The 24 people from Yazidis, all of them women and children, who were languishing in jails one organization Daash, arrived in a safe place under the control of the Peshmerga."

He added that they "were in detention Daash more than 6 months, were transported from one place to another during this period."

The source declined to clarify whether the survivors had fled or been released in accordance with the deal, saying only that "the most important thing they have come in peace."

The organization Daash has swept Sinjar (124 km west of Mosul), which is inhabited by a majority of Kurds, Yazidis in August 3 / August last, before the Peshmerga enhanced forces could aerial cover of the International Alliance of editing the northern part of the district of Sinjar, lifting the siege on thousands of families The fighters who were trapped in Jebel Sinjar in mid-December last year.

And talking to press reports and activists Aesidein for the organization of committing heinous crimes, from murder, kidnapping and captivity of thousands of civilians Yazidis.

The Yazidis are the religious group most of its members live near Mosul and the Sinjar Mountains in Iraq, and an estimated 600 thousand people, and smaller groups living in Turkey, Syria, Iran, Georgia, Armenia.

According to the researchers, the Yazidi religion of the ancient Kurdish religion, and all texts are recited in religious rituals and rites in the Kurdish language.

On the other hand, announced an official source in Anbar police leadership preferred not to be named, said security forces were able Tuesday to foil the biggest storm the government compound in Ramadi by organizing Daash terrorists.

The source explained that the organization Daash was digging a tunnel adjacent to the start of the government complex and controlled by the organization for more than 6 months and managed to drill 700 meters long to target government complex Haouz region.

"The security forces were able to find out what the organization is why we have to immediately intervene and address the situation and we blew the entire tunnel.""The explosion led to the deaths and injuries of elements Daash still under the rubble"

Video ISIS tunnel found.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Some 234 men and women from the Iraqi Yazidi minority were freed by IS.


Some 234 men and women from the Iraqi Yazidi minority were freed by IS. (Taz).

Some 234 men and women from the Iraqi Yazidi minority were freed after being kidnapped by militants of the Islamic State (IS) group which took control of their town a few months ago, the Kurdish regional government said on Monday, Xinhua reported.

"Some 234 members of Yazidi minority, including 150 females and many children, have been released after months in captivity by the IS militants," Nouri Othman Sinjari, spokesman for the Kurdistan Regional Government, told Xinhua by phone.

The release of the kidnapped Yazidis was a difficult and complicated task, as some were freed through mediation of tribal leaders and others by paying ransom to their abductors from the IS militants, Sinjari said without giving further details.

Since early August, hundreds of Yazidi minority members have been killed or kidnapped when IS militants seized the town of Sinjar, some 100 km west of Nineveh's provincial capital city of Mosul.
The militants also reportedly kidnapped up to 500 Yazidi women, taking them to bases in neighboring Syria and in the militants- seized city of Mosul, some 400 km north of the Iraqi capital of Baghdad.

The Yazidi minority is primarily Kurdish. The religion of the Yazidis incorporates elements of many faiths, as a result of some of their beliefs and the mystery surrounding their religion, many Muslims and non-Muslims have come to see Yazidis as "infidels." This has led to violent attacks by extremist Islamist groups against them. Read the full story here.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Neo Ottoman 'conqueror' Turkey will not accept 'de facto' borders in Iraq, Syria


Neo Ottoman 'conqueror' Turkey will not accept 'de facto' borders in Iraq, Syria. (Taz).

Turkey cannot agree to de facto borders in Syria or Iraq, and the terrorist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant will not be able to realize such an aim, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said, Anadolu agency reported.

"Turkey cannot say 'yes' to any de facto borders in the Middle East. Steps to be taken in that regard are of the utmost importance," Erdogan said in an address at the prominent French think tank IFRI on Friday.

"I do not believe that ISIL could achieve such a result in Syria and Iraq. I hope that the peoples of both Syria and Iraq will succeed at the end of all this," he continued.

The U.S. is leading an international coalition, which includes France, Germany, and Saudi Arabia, among others, and has carried out numerous airstrikes against ISIL in Iraq and Syria.

Syrian Kurdish fighters, predominantly from armed units affiliated to Democratic Union Party -- an offshoot of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK -- are fighting against ISIL in Kobani, a town bordering Turkey.

Turkey has recently allowed the passage of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga forces through Turkey to reach the battle-torn town.

The first batch of Kobani-bound peshmerga troops landed on a private plane at Turkey's GAP Airport from Erbil International Airport early on Wednesday.

They were then stationed in the Suruc district of Turkey's border province of Sanliurfa.

A separate truck convoy carrying their heavy weaponry also entered Turkey on Wednesday via the Habur border crossing in the southeastern province of Sirnak.

Erdogan also mentioned the solution process to end PKK terrorism during his talk, saying that the process is continuing despite the damage dealt by several provocations.

Turkey’s EU accession process.

Referring to Turkey's moves to join the European Union, Erdogan said he had asked his French counterpart to lift his country's block of four chapters of the accession process as Turkey had fulfilled all the requirements for them.

Turkey, which first applied to join the bloc in 1987, must comply with 35 "chapters" of reforms.
So far, 14 have been opened, while 17 remain blocked and a further four have yet to be discussed.
Erdogan said that Hollande had given a "green light: but in a "foggy" way.

“ I hope that he will be less vague so I can go back to Turkey today with the good news that those chapters are unblocked," he said.

However, Hollande said it was possible for his country to “open” the chapters, but he gave no precise date or details.

The chapters blocked by France are on “economic and monetary policy”, “agriculture and rural development,” “institutions” and “financial and budgetary provisions".

Turkey's EU Minister and Chief Negotiator Volkan Bozkir said during a visit to Paris on Tuesday that his country had embarked on a set of reforms in order to advance the EU accession negotiations.  Hmmm.....Please God keep 'bully' Turkey out of Europe.


Friday, October 31, 2014

VIDEO: Turkish police beat Kurdish journalist at border with Kobani



HT:

Video - live coverage of Turkey's border with Syria near embattled Kobane



Isil advance: live coverage of Turkey's border with Syria near embattled Kobane. HT: Telegraph.

Live scenes from Kobane, on the Turkey-Syria border, where US and allied air forces are battling Islamic State militants for control of the town – Guidance: Footage available intermittently.

This live footage, shot from Turkey's southeastern province of Sanliurfa shows air strikes and miliary activity in the area as Kurdish forces try to repel attempts by Islamic State fighters to cut off the Syrian town. Read the full story here.

HT:

Greece, Egypt, Cyprus urge 'bully' Turkey to quit gas search off island.


Greece, Egypt, Cyprus urge 'bully' Turkey to quit gas search off island. (Bugun).

The governments of Egypt, Greece and Cyprus urged Turkey on Wednesday to stop trying to chart gas deposits in areas of the east Mediterranean claimed by Cyprus, saying the work was illegal.

Cyprus, a member of the European Union, is anxious to develop the gas reserves in its so-called exclusive economic zone -- an offshore region lying south of the island.

Turkey does not recognize Cyprus, ethnically split between its Greek and Turkish Cypriot populations, and the government in Nicosia has accused it of dispatching a research vessel to collect seismic data in the disputed area.

The foreign ministers of Egypt, Greece and Cyprus met in Nicosia on Wednesday to prepare for a summit between the three nations next month, and condemned Turkey's actions.

"The ministers deplored the recent illegal actions perpetrated within Cyprus's EEZ, as well as the unauthorised seismic operations being conducted therein," they said in a statement.

Cyprus discovered an estimated 5 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of gas in one offshore field in late 2011 and has licensed U.S. energy firm Noble, Italy's ENI and France's Total to search for gas.

"We are hopeful all activity in the eastern Mediterranean will conform with international regulations ... understandings which are based on good neighbourly relations," Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri told reporters, flanked by his Cypriot and Greek counterparts.

The gas row has already triggered a suspension of peace talks between Greek and Turkish Cypriots on the island partitioned by a 1974 Turkish invasion that followed a brief coup engineered by the military junta then ruling Greece.

Egypt, which lies south of Cyprus, has penned a deal with the Nicosia government recognising sea boundaries between the two countries for the purpose of commercial exploitation. Cyprus has also signed a similar deal with Israel.

Egypt is facing its worst energy crisis in decades, with declining gas production and high consumption that has turned the country from an energy exporter to a net importer in the past three years.

Last week BG Egypt, a subsidiary of global energy company BG, said it had held talks with Cypriot officials on the potential of Cyprus supplying Egypt with gas.

Cyprus has become particularly keen to develop offshore gas reserves as a potential source of revenue since it was compelled to seek an international financial bailout in early 2013. Hmmm......I've warned many times 'bully' Turkey will go after the Cypriot gas, no doubt about it.



Video - Free Syrian Army In Heavy Clashes With ISIS In Kobane



HT:

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Peshmerga crossing 'Sometimes NATO Ally' Turkey being mistreated by 'Islamist' Turkish authorities.

Seems ISIS drives White Toyota's , while Pesmerga drives White Nissan pickups.

Peshmerga crossing 'Sometimes NATO Ally' Turkey being mistreated by 'Islamist' Turkish authorities. (KurdishQuestion).

Peshmerga doctor Izzettin Temo who is in the group crossing over from Turkey into Kobane has said that they are being treated badly by Turkish authorities.

Phoning Rudaw after having travelled to GAP Airport in Urfa last night (28 Nov) peshmerga doctor Izzettin Temo said, 
'There are no facilities in the place we are staying. We do not have a bar of soap nor a washbasin to wash our hands. We feel like prisoners. We have no connection with the outside world. However we can do nothing but wait for our guns to reach us. Our journey is being delayed because of this.'
Temo also said that Turkish authorities in Hewler (Erbil) had not allowed the peshmerga to travel in their military uniforms and with their guns.

He added, 'The Turkish soldiers are angry because the people came out onto the streets to greet the peshmerga. They are mistreating and insulting us because of this.'

Temo called on Kurdish authorities to come to their rescue and end the bad treatment.

A statement has not been made by the Peshmerga Ministry yet.


Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Video - Exclusive images FSA enters Kobanî to fight ISIS



Do i trust those 'FSA' reinforcements? No Way!

"Goodbye Turkey, nice knowing you" - Turkey and U.S., a 60-year alliance shows signs of crumbling.


"Goodbye Turkey, nice knowing you" - Turkey and U.S., a 60-year alliance shows signs of crumbling. (WaPo).

The increasingly hostile divergence of views between Turkey and the United States over Syria is testing the durability of their 60-year alliance, to the point where some are starting to question whether the two countries still can be considered allies at all.

Turkey’s refusal to allow the United States to use its bases to launch attacks against the Islamic State, quarrels over how to manage the battle raging in the Syrian border town of Kobane and the harsh tone of the anti-American rhetoric used by top Turkish officials to denounce U.S. policy have served to illuminate the vast gulf that divides the two nations as they scramble to address the menace posed by the extremists.

Whether the Islamic State even is the chief threat confronting the region is disputed, with Washington and Ankara publicly airing their differences through a fog of sniping, insults and recrimination over who is to blame for the mess the Middle East has become.

At stake is a six-decade-old relationship forged during the Cold War and now endowed with a different but equally vital strategic dimension. Turkey is positioned on the front line of the war against the Islamic State, controlling a 780-mile border with Iraq and Syria. Without Turkey’s cooperation, no U.S. policy to bring stability to the region can succeed, analysts and officials on both sides say.

If Turkey is not an ally, then we and Turkey are in trouble,” said Francis Ricciardone, who served as the U.S. ambassador to Turkey until the summer. “It is probably the most important ally.”

There are growing doubts over whether the U.S. and Turkey share the same priorities and even whether they share the same goals,” Aliriza said. “Even when it comes to defining the enemy — there is no common enemy.”

It is hard, however, to avoid the impression that Turkey and the United States are moving on separate tracks — “parallel tracks that don’t converge,” said Gokhan Bacik, a dean at Ipek University in Ankara.

From now on, this is only a relationship of necessity,” he said. “There is nothing ideologically that the United States and Turkey share. Turkey has changed.Hmmmm.....OMG The U.S. finally woke up? What have I been saying the last Five years? Sadly the Turkish 'Caliph of the Muslim Brotherhood' is their creation ...deal with it. Read the full story here.

Pictures - Iraqi peshmerga convoy, greeted by Turkey’s Kurds


Iraqi peshmerga convoy, greeted by Turkey’s Kurds. (BgnNews).

Full picture gallery here.

Video - Peshmerga soldiers on their way to Kobane.



Hmmm.....Lets hope ISIS is not awaiting their arrival, i can't say i would trust the Turkish MIT, certainly considering the rumors they provided military aid to ISIS in the past.

HT:

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Turkish intelligence coordinates Peshmerga crossing to Syria.




Turkish intelligence coordinates Peshmerga crossing to Syria.(FactsOnTurkey).

As Peshmerga forces of the Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) reportedly departed from Arbil by air on Oct. 28 for the Syrian town of Kobane to help Syrian Kurds in their battle against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the Turkish intelligence agency has been commissioned to manage the crossing via Turkey.

“Forty vehicles carrying machine guns, weapons and artillery with 80 of the Peshmerga forces will head to Dohuk [province] and then cross the border today,” a Kurdish officer told AFP.

“There is now no political problem. There is no problem in the way of them crossing. They can cross at any moment,” Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu was quoted as saying by the official Anadolu Agency.

After arriving at the airport in Turkey’s southeastern province of Şanlıurfa, Peshmerga forces are expected to travel to Kobane by land, through Mürşitpınar border crossing.

The initial number of Peshmerga forces offered by the autonomous region was 2,000, but was first decreased to 200 and then 150 upon the Syrian Kurds’ request.

Their weaponry will be transferred by land through Turkey. The cargo will not include heavy weaponary like artillery batteries and tanks.

After the Turkish army stated its unwillingness to manage the Peshmerga crossing during the latest security summit, the National Intelligence Agency (MİT) has been given the responsibility, Hürriyet has learned. The Turkish army is only expected to take initiative during the crossing through the military zone on the border.   Hmmm.....'Turkish intelligence'....ISIS probably got all info on the Peshmerga arrival first hand.

Breaking: Heavy weaponry battalion Peshmerga to leave for Kobane today.


Breaking: Heavy weaponry battalion Peshmerga to leave for Kobane today. HT: KurdishQuestion.


After days of uncertainty surrounding the Peshmerga forces transfer to the besieged town of Kobane, it has been reported that the 150 Peshmergas will leave for Kobane today.

While the Peshmerga have been ready to go for the past two days, the Turkish state delayed the crossing of the Peshmerga citing technicalities.

The force, consisting of 150 Peshmergas, will be a heavy weaponry battalion. While the fighters will leave from Erbil airport, the weapons will be transported to Kobane by road.

While the YPG and Peshmerga had agreed on the quantity and quality of the force to be transferred, the Turkish state stalled the crossing that was expected to happen two days ago.

The Turkish President Erdogan had said that rather than the Peshmerga, they were hoping for the FSA to cross into Kobane. It now seems like Turkey was unable to compile an FSA unit of their liking to enter the besieged town.

So far, the YPG has been resisting on its own against an ISIS onslaught for the past 43 days. More here from Rudaw English.


UPDATE: Peshmerga due at Kobane front in early hours of Wednesday


VIDEO: Peshmerga on route to Kobane


Thursday, June 26, 2014

Israel tells Obama 'Admin' Kurdish independence is 'foregone conclusion'


Israel tells Obama 'Admin' Kurdish independence is 'foregone conclusion' (HD).

Israel told the United States on June 26 Kurdish independence in northern Iraq was a "foregone conclusion" and Israeli experts predicted the Jewish state would be quick to recognise a Kurdish state, should it emerge.

Israel has maintained discreet military, intelligence and business ties with the Kurds since the 1960s, seeing in the minority ethnic group a buffer against shared Arab adversaries.

The Kurds have seized on recent sectarian chaos in Iraq to expand their autonomous northern territory to include Kirkuk, which sits on vast oil deposits that could make the independent state many dream of economically viable.

Washington wants Iraq's crumbling unity restored. On June 24, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry visited Iraqi Kurdish leaders and urged them to seek political integration with Baghdad.

Kerry discussed the Iraqi crisis with Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman in Paris on June 26. "Iraq is breaking up before our eyes and it would appear that the creation of an independent Kurdish state is a foregone conclusion," Lieberman's spokesman quoted him as telling Kerry.

A day earlier, Israeli President Shimon Peres had a similar message for U.S. President Barack Obama, who hosted the dovish elder statesman at the White House.

Briefing reporters, Peres said he had told Obama he did not see unifying Iraq as possible without "massive" foreign military intervention and that this underscored Kurdish separation from the Shiite Muslim majority and Sunni Arab minority.

"The Kurds have, de facto, created their own state, which is democratic. One of the signs of a democracy is the granting of equality to women," Peres said.

He added that neighbouring Turkey appeared to accept the Kurds' status as it was helping them pump out oil for sale.Read the full story here.
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