The Islamic State Thread

ERDOGAN SAYS KOBANE 'ABOUT TO FALL' TO JIHADISTS

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday warned that the Syrian border town of Kobane is on the verge of falling to jihadists, saying a ground operation was needed to defeat the militants.

"The terror will not be over... unless we cooperate for a ground operation," Erdogan said in a televised speech in the eastern city of Gaziantep, adding that air strikes were not enough on their own. "Months have passed but no results have been achieved. Kobane is about to fall."


Source : Sapa-AFP /ar
Date : 07 Oct 2014 14:22
 
DUTCH F-16S CARRY OUT FIRST STRIKES ON IS IN IRAQ: MINISTRY

Dutch F-16s on Tuesday carried out their first strikes on the Islamic State (IS) group in Iraq, the defence ministry said, with militants possibly killed.

"Two Dutch F-16s this morning used weapons for the first time in Iraq against the IS terror group. They dropped three bombs on armed IS vehicles that were shooting at (Kurdish) Peshmerga fighters in the north of the country," the statement said.

"Vehicles were destroyed in the attack and IS fighters possibly killed," it added.

The F-16s are being deployed as close air support, backing up Iraqi and Kurdish ground troops fighting IS militants.

The United States has been building an international coalition for an air campaign against IS since first launching air strikes in August.

Britain and France have joined the strikes in Iraq and five Arab nations -- Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates --have taken part in Syrian raids.

The Netherlands has sent six F-16s to take part in the campaign, plus two in reserve.

Apart from the F-16s, the Dutch will also deploy 250 military personnel and 130 trainers for the Iraqi military.

The Netherlands has said it would not join air strikes in Syria without a UN mandate.

But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned on Tuesday that the town of Kobane on the Syrian-Turkish border was about to fall to IS, and that only troops on the ground could defeat the Islamists in the wider conflict.


Source : Sapa-AFP /ar
Date : 07 Oct 2014 14:12
 
How have they not helped the Kurdish fighters yet :(

BBC reports that airstrikes have pushed IS almost completely out of Kobane this afternoon, supposedly multiple airstrikes hit IS all day today.

However, our correspondent says more air strikes could be heard on Tuesday afternoon, bringing the total to eight since 04:00 local time (02:00 GMT) - by far the most sustained coalition action in the area.

He says that as a result, fighting in the city has died down considerably - it was quiet but for occasional crackles of gunfire in the afternoon.

UK-based monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said IS had crossed into a southern district of Kobane, after heavy fighting on Monday evening had forced it to pull back from eastern districts.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-29526783
 
This is going to be a fight to remember. ISIS must be 7 kinds of stupid wanting to pull in the Turks now as well :D

The Turks "support" ISIS or at least don't give a hoot about the Kurds. ISIS know not to cross the border. That's the deal.

And to think these tossers have hopes of joining the EU!
 
[video=youtube;Ob-m9CUNl3o]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ob-m9CUNl3o&list=UU1yBKRuGpC1tSM73A0ZjYjQ&index=7[/video]
 
[video=youtube;5nLGFDWjkEI]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nLGFDWjkEI&index=8&list=UU1yBKRuGpC1tSM73A0ZjYjQ[/video]
 
The Turks "support" ISIS or at least don't give a hoot about the Kurds. ISIS know not to cross the border. That's the deal.

And to think these tossers have hopes of joining the EU!

I don't agree. They are there only to defend their borders. They will not engage unless someone threatens their border. ISIS knows better than to attack the border for sure.
 
INDONESIA'S RELEASED MILITANTS FEARED TO JOIN IS FORCES
by Angela Dewan

The looming release of hundreds of militants from Indonesia's prisons, hotbeds of radicalism where influential Islamists openly preach extremist ideology, is ringing alarm bells and raising fears some will join forces with the Islamic State group.

More than a decade after Indonesia vowed to dismantle terrorist networks to stem a series of attacks, neglect of jails has allowed top detainees to promote their views behind bars, and even beyond thanks to smartphones and laptops.

About 200 convicted militants are due for release in the next two years, and experts say inadequate deradicalisation efforts mean many will leave jail with their ideology intact.

"Prisons are still the epicentre of terrorism in Indonesia. The most dangerous militants are behind bars and recruitment is going on," said terrorism expert Taufik Andrie from the Jakarta-based Institute for International Peace Building.

The alarming trend in the world's most populous Muslim-majority country comes despite authorities' growing concern about Islamic militancy and in particular Islamic State (IS), which has declared an "Islamic caliphate" across swathes of Syria and Iraq.

Authorities say about 60 Indonesians are believed to have joined IS, although most analysts believe the true figure is up to 200, and concerns are mounting that they could return and revive sophisticated militant networks.

Singapore has said that IS jihadists from Malaysia and Indonesia have formed their own group -- Katibah Nusantara Lid Daulah Islamiyyah, or Malay Archipelago Unit for the Islamic State -- which poses a clear security threat to Southeast Asia.

Indonesia began a long clampdown on extremists following the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people on the resort island, mostly foreigners. That attack and others were blamed on the Al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), which has since been severely weakened.

The government has banned support for IS, while other nations, including Britain and Australia, have tightened counter-terrorism laws to prevent nationals joining or supporting the and other jihadist outfits.

But experts say such efforts in Indonesia are being undermined by a failure to tackle the prisons problem.

Abu Bakar Bashir, the former spiritual leader of JI, was photographed pledging allegiance to IS in jail. The photos were posted on radical websites almost in real-time.

Aman Abdurrahman, an influential Islamist cleric, is Indonesia's main translator for IS and has been able to disseminate information online from inside a maximum-security prison, including the group's recent call on Muslims to kill Westerners indiscriminately.

Their oaths were followed by a wave of IS pledges by large radical groups, as well as by 23 inmates imprisoned with Bashir, according to Jakarta-based think-tank, the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC).

The government's deradicalisation schemes remain so ad-hoc and poorly targeted that they barely make up a programme at all, critics say.

Irfan Idrus, head of deradicalisation at the national counter-terrorism agency, admitted there was no system in place to identify those who have developed extremist views and need post-release monitoring.

When Haris Amir Falah was freed after serving three years for terrorism offences, he went straight back to his Bashir-led extremist group.

Falah was convicted of funding a militant training camp that was planning gun attacks on "enemies of Islam", including the president.

Before that he had fought with JI in parts of Indonesia during bouts of religious conflict, a source with knowledge of his case told AFP. Falah claims he went to give aid.

Just three deradicalisation sessions were held during his time in prison, involving dialogue with moderate Islamic clerics.

"It was interesting enough, but it didn't change anything about the way I think," he said.

Falah is now a senior figure of another offshoot group, and says that while IS is "too extreme" he supports jihad in Syria and backs the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Nusra Front.

"There have not been useful programmes on a national scale inside the prisons that you can point to clear impact," said IPAC director Sidney Jones, adding that Indonesia's deradicalisation drive was "vague" and a "bit of a mess".

She pointed to a programme to educate convicted terrorists about the "Pancasila" -- Indonesia's five-point state ideology that celebrates "unity in diversity" -- to inculcate a sense of nationalism in them.

"But it wasn't as if these prisoners didn't feel Indonesian, so it was the wrong solution to the problem. A lot of these programmes have been equally misguided."


Source : Sapa-AFP /mjs
Date : 08 Oct 2014 07:26
 
IRAQ HUMANITARIAN CRISIS MAY TURN DEADLY IN WINTER

A senior U.N. official is warning that the grave humanitarian crisis in Iraq will become "a deadly life-threatening situation" if shelter isn't found for over 160,000 displaced people in Kurdistan before winter weather arrives in about six weeks.

Kevin Kennedy, the deputy humanitarian coordinator in Iraq, also told a news conference Tuesday by video link from Irbil that getting aid to close to 500,000 people in need of support in Anbar province, where the Islamic State terrorist group continues to capture territory, is very difficult and people will suffer.

Iraq is one of four top-level humanitarian crises the United Nations is trying to tackle, with 1.8 million people fleeing their homes since December and fears of thousands more trying to escape the ongoing conflict.


Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 08 Oct 2014 00:41
 
Only a few years ago, Turkish foreign policy in the Middle East was riding high. The country’s leaders were confident that its economic and political power, along with changes brought on by the Arab Spring uprisings, would make Ankara the most important power in the region. Davutoglu, who was foreign minister during that time, declared in 2010 that “not even a leaf can stir in the Middle East without us knowing about it.” Turkey, in league with the hugely wealthy emirate of Qatar, lent conspicuous support to the Muslim Brotherhood and other Sunni groups in the region who seemed to be on a roll.

In Syria, after protests erupted in 2011 against the government of President Bashar Assad, Turkey threw its backing behind his opponents, who had long been led clandestinely by the Muslim Brotherhood. But as Assad fought back with effective savagery, Ankara turned to supporting a broader political and military opposition. It also tolerated an uncontrolled traffic of men and weapons across the long border. “At the time, the Turks were certain that they could control those groups,” a foreign diplomat told The Daily Beast. “Now it’s blowing up in their face.”

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/09/11/turkey-joins-the-coalition-of-the-unwilling.html
 
NEW COALITION AIR STRIKE AROUND KOBANE: AFP

An aircraft of the international coalition on Wednesday carried out a new air strike against Islamic State (IS) targets around the Syrian border town of Kobane, an AFP correspondent reported.

The air strike sent a cloud of thick black smoke billowing into the air from a hill on the eastern side of Kobane, the correspondent reported from inside the Turkish border. It was the first air strike witnessed Wednesday after a flurry of strikes Tuesday.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 08 Oct 2014 11:05
 
JIHADISTS CONTROL MORE THAN A THIRD OF SYRIA'S KOBANE: MONITOR

Islamic State group jihadists were in control Thursday of more than one-third of the Syrian border town of Kobane after pushing back its Kurdish defenders, a monitoring group said.

"Despite fierce resistance from the Kurdish forces, IS advanced during the night and controls more than a third of Kobane," Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told AFP.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 09 Oct 2014 09:51
 
FRESH AIR STRIKES TARGET IS JIHADIST POSITIONS IN KOBANE: AFP

The US-led coalition on Thursday carried out two fresh strikes on IS jihadist positions in the key Syrian town of Kobane, said an AFP reporter just across the border in Turkey.

The strikes targeted the city's southwest, which is under control of Kurdish forces who have been fighting off a three-week IS advance on the strategic town.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 09 Oct 2014 09:21
 
US, ALLIES CHAFING AT TURKISH INACTION ON SYRIA
By DESMOND BUTLER
Associated Press

As U.S. generals and Secretary of State John Kerry warn that a strategic Syrian border town could fall to Islamic State militants, the Turkish military has deployed its tanks on its side of the frontier but only watched the slaughter.

Turkey's inaction despite its supposed participation in a coalition forged to crush the extremist group is frustrating Washington and its NATO allies, and reviving a rebellion by Turkish Kurds.

Amid fears the Kurdish town of Kobani could fall any day, U.S. and NATO officials are traveling to Turkey on Thursday to press negotiations for more robust Turkish involvement in the coalition.

But Turkey is taking a hard line, insisting that it will only consider involvement in military action as part of a broader strategy for ending the rule of Syrian President Bashar Assad. The U.S. and its allies want to keep the focus on the Islamic State group, which they say poses a more global threat.

Emphasizing the U.S. position, Kerry said Wednesday that although the Obama administration is "deeply concerned about the people of Kobani," preventing the town's fall to Islamic State militants was not a strategic objective for the U.S.

"As horrific as it is to watch in real time what's happening in Kobani, it's also important to remember, you have to step back and understand the strategic objective," Kerry told a news conference in Washington.

Rear Adm. John Kirby, the Pentagon press secretary, also conceded Kobani could fall because "air power alone is not going to be enough to save that city."

"We all need to prepare ourselves for the reality that other towns and villages - and perhaps Kobani - will be taken by ISIL," Kirby said, adding that the key to eventually defeating the militants is to train and enable indigenous ground forces.

Turkey is ambivalent about the fight across its border, because of its distrust of the Kurdish fighters protecting Kobani, also known as Ayn Arab. It views them as an extension of the Kurdish PKK, the rebel group that has waged a long and bloody insurgency against Ankara. In recent days, Turkish officials have emphasized that they view both the Islamic State group and the PKK as terrorist groups.

Left unsaid is which group they view as the greater threat. But, Turkey's strict neutrality as the lightly-armed Kurds face annihilation speaks volumes.

While Turkey maintains it does not want Kobani to fall, Turkish officials say they will not enter combat until they are assured that the U.S.-led coalition has a long-term strategy in Syria. They see Assad as a greater nemesis on their border than even the Islamic State. Taking out the militants without a plan to fill the inevitable vacuum, they say, will lead to further chaos that will only strengthen Assad. They want the U.S. to set up a no-fly zone and a humanitarian corridor, as well as ramp up assistance to Syrian rebels battling to overthrow Assad.

With its ambitious demands, Turkey may be betting that its geography makes it an indispensable partner and that it can leverage that position to force the U.S. and its allies to expand the coalition mission - an assumption that is causing frustration in Washington and strains within NATO, a senior U.S. administration official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record.

On Thursday, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, as well as President Barack Obama's two envoys to the anti-Islamic State coalition, retired Gen. John Allen and Ambassador Brett McGurk, arrive for talks with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to push for greater Turkish action.

Adding to the pressure on Ankara, Kurds in Kobani and in Turkey accuse the Turkish government of standing idly by while their people are being slaughtered and even impeding their own efforts to save Kobani. The anger boiled into violence Tuesday, amid widespread protests that threatened to derail promising talks to end three decades of insurgency by the PKK militant group. Nineteen people were killed as Kurdish activists clashed with police and members of an Islamist group in Kurdish areas across the country. The jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan has warned that the peace process will end if Kobani falls.

While two days of U.S.-led airstrikes seem to be slowing the advance of thousands of Islamic State fighters armed with heavy weapons, Kurdish officials warn they have failed to turn the tide.

"The airstrikes have helped. They were good strikes, but not as effective as we want them to be," said Idriss Nassan, deputy head of Kobani's foreign relations committee. "Kobani is still in danger and the airstrikes should intensify in order to remove the danger."

Around noon Wednesday, warplanes believed to be from the U.S.-led coalition bombed Islamic State positions near Kobani. One airstrike, visible from the border, struck a hill and an open space near the town. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Wednesday's strikes targeted Islamic State fighters east of Kobani.

The U.S. Central Command said in a statement that coalition forces had launched airstrikes on six locations around Kobani since Tuesday. Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said there were mixed reports about how many Islamic State militants pulled back from the town under pressure from the air.

"We don't have a force inside Syria that we can cooperate with and work with," Kirby said, adding that the U.S. administration is planning to train and arm 5,000 moderate opposition Syrian fighters at sites elsewhere in the Middle East and then insert them back into Syria to take on Islamic State forces.

Since Monday night, the strikes have killed 45 Islamic State fighters in and around Kobani, targeting 20 separate locations and destroying at least five of their vehicles, said the Britain-based Observatory, which relies on a network of activists inside Syria.

---

Associated Press writers Lefteris Pitarakis in Mursitpinar, Turkey, and Bassem Mroue in Beirut contributed to this report.

---

Follow Desmond Butler on Twitter at: twitter.com/desmondbutler


Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 09 Oct 2014 04:37
 
JUDGE TO RULE ON DETENTION IN ISLAMIC STATE CASE

A federal magistrate judge will decide if a 19-year-old U.S. citizen from suburban Chicago accused of trying to travel to Syria to join Islamic State militants should stay behind bars pending trial.

Mohammed Hamzah Khan's detention hearing in federal court in Chicago Thursday follows his Saturday arrest at O'Hare International Airport as he attempted to board a plane to Turkey.

Prosecutors filed a motion Wednesday evening asking Judge Susan Cox to close part of Thursday's hearing to the public. Their explanation was itself sealed.

Investigators said Khan left a letter for his parents in his bedroom at the family's Bolingbrook home expressing disgust with Western society.

He's charged with attempting to provide material support to foreign terrorists. A conviction carries a maximum 15-year prison term.


Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 09 Oct 2014 07:45
 
But let's be honest, it's not the Turks war now is it?

They not part of the alliance and it's not an attack on their country. I find this pretty silly from the Americans.
 
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