Sunday, August 31, 2014

IRAQ: U.S. Airstrikes Help Break ISIS’ blockade of Northern Town


BY: By TIM ARANGO




[caption id="attachment_94223" align="alignleft" width="300"] Break Militants’ blockade of Northern Town hav been leave Break Militants’ blockade of Northern Town hav been leave [/caption]BAGHDAD — A coalition of Shiite militias, regular Iraqi Army units and Kurdish forces, backed by American air power, on Sunday broke a long siege of Amerli, a town in northern Iraq that for weeks had been surrounded by Sunni extremists who threatened to slaughter thousands of Shiite residents.




The American airstrikes on positions held by fighters of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, near Amerli, about 105 miles north of Baghdad, were carried out Saturday night in conjunction with airdrops of supplies to the town’s thousands of besieged residents. The American operation was supporting a ground offensive led by Shiite militia fighters, many of whom once fought fierce battles against American soldiers.




“ISIS militants have fled as our heroes in the Army and the volunteers are progressing at Amerli,” said Qassim Atta, the Iraqi military spokesman, according to a report on state television Sunday.




Security officials said on Sunday that Amerli, a cluster of villages whose population is dominated by Shiite Turkmen who are considered infidels by the ISIS, was not fully liberated but that the combined forces had cleared several villages from the militants. Fierce fighting in the area was continuing Sunday afternoon.




The operation around Amerli is the latest expansion of American military operations in Iraq in recent weeks. First, the American military sent warplanes and drones to destroy millions of dollars of American equipment that had been abandoned on the battlefield by the Iraqi Army and seized by ISIS. Now, the United States has provided air support for several Iranian-backed Shiite militias that are leading the fight against ISIS in Ameril with the help of Kurdish pesh merga forces and Iraqi Army units.




Both the United States and Iran, while not coordinating operations in Iraq, are nevertheless on the same side in the conflict against ISIS. The United States, though, has been reluctant to pursue military operations with Iraq’s Shiite militias. The militias have taken on a primary role in providing security in Baghdad and responding to the advances of ISIS; the Iraqi Army, which had been financed and trained by the United States, has proved largely ineffective.




The Obama administration has tried to avoid being seen as taking sides in Iraq’s sectarian war, because the militias are especially feared by Iraq’s Sunni population. The reality on the ground, however — the growing brutality of ISIS, the humanitarian crisis and the threat of a slaughter in Amerli — appeared to override those concerns.




The nature of the two sides in this war has become increasingly evident as the conflict has evolved. The Sunni extremists of ISIS have been rampaging through Iraq, beheading some of those it captures, carrying out large-scale massacres of Shiites and expelling hundreds of thousands of residents. The Shiite militias, which have in the past been responsible for abuses against Sunni civilians, are largely protecting their own communities and have proved essential to the defense of Baghdad.




Among the militias fighting for Amerli are Asaib Ahl al-Haq, perhaps the most experienced group, as well as Badr Corps, which is led by Hadi al-Ameri, the transportation minister, and a militia linked to the Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr, who was one of the United States’ most implacable foes during the long American occupation. All those groups are supported by Iran.




Many officials on Sunday said it was Asaib, a militia that was a particularly fierce enemy of the United States as it was winding down its military role in Iraq in 2011, that has taken on the most prominent role in the fighting for Amerli, in Salahuddin Province.




“I would like to thank the jihadists from Asaib Ahl al-Haq, as they are sacrificing their lives to save Amerli,” said Mahdi Taqi, a member of the regional council in Salahuddin Province.




Mr. Taqi said that Amerli, whose residents chose to defend their city against ISIS rather than flee as residents of other communities did in the face of the onslaught, had been partly liberated from the east side.




Other fighters were advancing toward Amerli from the north.




Karrar Ibrahim al-Asadi, an Asaib fighter in Suleiman Bek, a village to the north of Amerli where ISIS has been in control, said in an interview: “I have been here for 15 days. Today we have destroyed 40 armed vehicles and an entire convoy of ISIS. We will eliminate them all in the next few hours in Sulaiman Bek and once we do, only eight kilometers remain until we enter Amerli. I can see their black flag from here.”




On Saturday night, the Pentagon said that American planes had carried outairstrikes on several ISIS positions, destroying three Humvees, one armed vehicle, a tank and an ISIS checkpoint. In addition, American aircraft, along with aircraft from France, Australia and Britain, dropped humanitarian aid into Amerli. Two American airplanes, the Pentagon said, dropped 10,500 gallons of water and about 7,000 packages of field rations.




The Pentagon statement said that the American operations “will be limited in their scope and duration as necessary to address this emerging humanitarian crisis and protect civilians” trapped in Amerli.




When President Obama first authorized American airstrikes in Iraq several weeks ago, the justification was to protect American civilians in Erbil, the Kurdish capital, which was being threatened by ISIS fighters, and to support humanitarian aid drops on Mount Sinjar, where thousands of Yazidis, members of an ancient sect, had sought refuge from the advancing militants.




More recently, pressure has increased to help the besieged residents of Amerli, as officials worried that ISIS would carry out another mass killing of civilians




 BY:  NEWYORK AND AGENCEIS