Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Coalition Warplanes Reportedly Strike ISIS in Support of Kurds - New York Times

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Turkish soldiers stood guard on Tuesday just across the border from Kobani, Syria. Credit Sedat Suna/European Pressphoto Agency

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LONDON — Warplanes from the American-led coalition fighting militants of the Islamic State were reported on Tuesday to have struck targets in Syria near the Turkish border in support of Kurdish forces locked in street fighting with the militants.


If confirmed, the reports could indicate an escalation in American-led efforts to help the Kurds resist, if not repel, an onslaught by the Sunni militants whose forces control portions of Syria and Iraq.


The latest fighting has centered on the border town of Kobani, within full view of Turkish forces who have massed tanks with their cannons pointing toward Syria but who have not opened fire or otherwise intervened.


The United States Central Command did not immediately confirm the reports from reporters close to the border. Its most recent statement on Monday listed earlier strikes in the area surrounding the beleaguered town, where two black flags have been raised by the attacking militants.



News reports on Tuesday, however, said new attacks by allied warplanes hit militant positions west of Kobani. Reporters were said to have heard the sound of jet engines before two large plumes of smoke rose from the area.


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ISIS’ Goals and Tactics Worldwide



ISIS’ Goals and Tactics Worldwide



Some background on goals, tactics and the potential long-term threat to the United States from the militant group known as the Islamic State.


Video by Natalia V. Osipova and Christian Roman on Publish Date September 10, 2014. Photo by Reuters.

The fighting for Kobani has coincided with deepening concerns about the impact of Western involvement on the fate of hostages held by the militants, who have claimed to behead four of them — two Americans and two Britons — and to have threatened a fifth, a 26-year-old American convert to Islam, Abdul-Rahman Kassig.


The most recent decapitation came last week when video images by the Islamic State purported to show the death of Alan Henning, a British cabdriver abducted last December.


Britain has committed warplanes to attack Islamic State targets in Iraq, but it has said it will not immediately join the United States in bombing targets in Syria.


The British authorities’ handling of the crisis drew criticism on Tuesday from both the Henning family and from a British former detainee at Guantánamo Bay, who was released in Britain last week from a pretrial detention lasting seven months. He had been held on suspicion of helping militants in Syria, but the authorities freed him after abruptly withdrawing terrorism-related charges days before he was to stand trial.


Reg Henning, the brother of Alan Henning, challenged Prime Minister David Cameron’s insistence that Britain, like the United States, would not commit ground forces to the fight against Islamic State.


“We need to send ground forces in to find out where these monsters are,” he said, referring to his brother’s captors. “The sooner we do it, the sooner the killing stops,” he told the BBC.


Separately, Moazzam Begg, the former detainee, said he had offered to intervene with fighters in Syria to secure Mr. Henning’s release, but the authorities rejected the idea. He said he had played a role in the past to free captives.


“I intervened by getting some other groups who could pressurize them to release those individuals and I got them released,” he told the BBC. “The problem is that the government in its attempts to demonize and criminalize me simply refused to look at anything to do with what I was about.”


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