The Islamic State Thread

IRAQI KURDS FIGHT ISLAMIC STATE WITH AGED WEAPONS

The exhausted Kurdish fighters leaned against a pair of antiquated green cannons on a hill overlooking this northern Iraqi village, the ground around them littered with shrapnel from fierce battles with Islamic State militants.

One of them, Moustafa Saleh, tapped the cannon with his mud-caked boots. "Russian-made," he said, with a smirk. "My grandfather used the same one."

Iraqi Kurdish fighters on the front lines of battle say they have yet to receive the heavy weapons and training pledged by the United States and nearly a dozen other countries to help them push back the Sunni militants.

U.S.-led airstrikes have forced the militants to retreat or go into hiding in towns and villages across northern Iraq, paving the way for ground forces to retake territory seized by the militant group in its lightening advance since June across western and northern Iraq.

But without more sophisticated weaponry, the Kurdish fighters, known as peshmerga, have had to rely on aging arms like the Soviet-era cannons, a centerpiece of the offensive Tuesday to retake Mahmoudiyah and the nearby strategic towns of Rabia and Zumar.

While some newly sent arms have stacked up in the Kurdish capital, including a shipment from Germany this week, Kurdish officials say they can't be distributed until the Kurdish fighters are trained. The delay shows the difficulties on the ground as the U.S. and its allies bomb the militants from the air.

"Peshmerga were only trained before to save Kurdistan and to prevent terrorists from coming inside Kurdistan," said Halgurd Hekmat, spokesman for the Iraqi Kurdish force in Irbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region. "We plan to send the heavy weapons, but only after making sure the soldiers know how to use them in battle and fix them when the weapons have a problem."

At a checkpoint outside Rabia in northwestern Iraq, some two dozen peshmerga soldiers stood guard Wednesday to secure the town they had just retaken. Only one wore a flak jacket. "We don't have them," Special Forces commander Hakar Mohsen said. "One of many things we need."

A half-mile away, the Rabia hospital remained an active battleground, with Islamic State militants holed up inside sniping at the Kurdish soldiers. At one point, the Kurdish fighters fired off a round from one of their aging cannons, to a chorus of cheers, though it was unclear if it hit its target.

"We could retake the hospital so easily if we had the right rockets," said Mohsen. "Most of our injuries here were from (roadside bombs), which could have been limited if we had bomb detectors, for example."

As he spoke, several Kurdish units were fanning westward to try to reclaim the strategic town of Sinjar, which would almost certainly secure the main road between Syria and Iraq, used now by militants to ferry weapons and fighters between the two embattled countries.

The U.S. and Western allies including Britain, France, Germany and the Netherlands have committed to arming the Kurds, agreeing to send machine guns, assault rifles and ammunition. Hekmat said some units had received the ammunition, since it requires no training. However, fighters at more than a half-dozen units interviewed by The Associated Press said they had yet to receive anything.

Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Barbero, a former U.S. commander in Iraq who just returned from a trip to Irbil, said it was clear to him that the U.S. is not delivering the weapons the Kurds need to fight the Islamic State group.

"The short answer is 'no,' they are not getting the heavy weapons they need," he said, adding that the Kurds were in great need of American technology to counter roadside bombs. "They took a lot of casualties in the fight on the Syrian border."

Cmdr. Elissa Smith, a Pentagon press officer, said in an email that efforts by the U.S. to arm the Kurds, "have already begun and will accelerate in the coming days with more nations also expected to contribute. "

Kurdish fighters on the front lines said they could not have retaken the towns in Iraq's northern Nineveh province were it not for the U.S.-led airstrikes. "We could not do this without the help of America," said Captain Hoshyar Harki, a peshmerga fighter based in Mahmoudiyah.

Meanwhile, in neighboring Syria, Kurdish fighters have been on the defensive as the Islamic State militants pressed a relentless assault on the strategic northern town of Kobani, also known as Ayn Arab, near the Turkish border.

Nine Kurdish fighters, including three women, captured in clashes in the border region were beheaded by the Sunni extremists, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Dozens of militants and Kurdish fighters were killed in the fighting, it said.

Images posted on social media networks showed women's heads placed on a cement block, said to be in the northern Syrian city of Jarablous, which is held by the militants. The photos could not be independently verified but corresponded to AP reporting of the event.

The creation of the peshmerga in the 1920s coincided with Kurdish independence movements following the collapse of the Ottoman and Qajar empires, and for much of their history, they have operated much like a rebel movement. During the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, the highly disciplined peshmerga swept down from the semi-autonomous Kurdish region and established a strong presence in a belt of largely Kurdish towns and villages stretching south toward Baghdad.

The disintegration of Iraqi forces in the face of the Islamic State group's advance in June led the peshmerga to assume full control in areas they have long coveted, further enhancing their autonomy from Baghdad and undermining U.S. efforts to bring about a stable, multiethnic Iraq. They have fought well, many analysts say, considering their lack of training.

"Peshmerga is fundamentally a militia," said Richard Brennan, an Iraq expert with RAND Corporation and former U.S. Department of Defense policymaker, who said that much of their arsenal to date includes AK-47s and a few Soviet-era weapons and vehicles.

"But they are fighting for their homeland and they are motivated unlike what we saw with Iraqi security forces in Mosul when they fell apart upon the first sign of threat."

The Islamic State militants captured many of the weapons left behind by the Iraqi army, including Kalashnikovs, machine guns, anti-aircraft guns and mortars, said an Iraqi intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media. The militant group is also in possession of about 35 Iraqi military tanks, about 80 armored police vehicles and hundreds of Humvees.

"They got so many weapons from the Iraqi military that they're taking some to Syria now," said Khalil Abdulrahman Zebari, one of the Kurdish fighters in Mahmoudiyah.

As for the pershmerga's aging weaponry, Mohsen, the Rabia commander joked: "We are so used to fixing old, broken weapons that peshmerga fighters also have a good future as weapons repairmen."

---

Associated Press writers Ken Dilanian and Sagar Meghani in Washington contributed to this report.


Source : Sapa-AP /aw
Date : 02 Oct 2014 01:57
 
TURKISH ARMY VOWS TO DEFEND SOLDIERS AT TOMB IN NORTHERN SYRIA

The Turkish military vows to defend its soldiers stationed at the Suleyman Shah tomb exclave in northern Syria, amid reports that Islamic State fighters are in the vicinity.

"With one word from you, have no fear that the Turkish Armed Forces will be at your side immediately," says General Necdet Ozel, Chief of the General Staff, in a message addressing several dozen soldiers based at the tomb.

"Don't forget that you are not alone over there," he says in a statement.

The message notes that Turkey considers the tomb to be its territory.


Source : Sapa-dpa /kd
Date : 02 Oct 2014 11:51
 
40 JIHADISTS, 17 POLICE AND ARMY KILLED IN IRAQ CLASHES

The Islamic State group launched attacks on Iraqi bases in two western towns that left at least 17 members of the security forces and 40 jihadists dead, security and medical sources said Thursday.

Seven policemen and four soldiers were killed when IS fighters attacked the police headquarters in the town of Heet, while at least six members of federal forces were killed in an assault on a major army base in Ramadi.

In Heet, a town on the Euphrates about 150 kilometres (95 miles) west of Baghdad, 25 gunmen attacked the police headquarters shortly after midnight.

"They smashed the gates open with suicide car bombs, the 25 men tried to break into the HQ, sparking heavy clashes," police colonel Jabbar al-Nimrawi told AFP.

"The police killed 20 of them and the remaining five withdrew to the electricity building. They are still under siege, they have sniper rifles," he said.

Nimrawi said the building was now surrounded by police, army, counter-terrorism elite troops and anti-jihadist Sunni tribal forces.

Doctor Nael Ahmed, from Heet hospital, said seven police officers and four soldiers were killed in the attack and the ensuing clashes.

In Ramadi, less than 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of Baghdad, further down the Euphrates river, a similar suicide unit attacked the 8th Brigade headquarters, just outside the city, on Wednesday.

"They attacked from three directions. They used suicide armoured vehicles to break into the compound, then 13 fighters with suicide vests entered," said senior army officer Awad al-Dulaimi.

"We killed the last one at 5:00 am (0200 GMT) after fierce exchanges. We also killed seven who had come from another direction," he said.

A doctor at Ramadi hospital, Ahmed al-Ani, confirmed that he had received the bodies of three members of Iraq's elite counter-terrorism force, including a colonel, and three soldiers.

Some of the last pockets still under government control in the Sunni province of Anbar are in Heet in Ramadi.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 02 Oct 2014 13:32
 
KURDISH TOWN 'PRACTICALLY EMPTY' AS JIHADISTS PRESS ASSAULT

Nearly all residents of the embattled Syrian Kurdish town of Kobane and surrounding area have fled an advance by Islamic State group jihadists, a monitor said Thursday.

"Some 80 to 90 percent of residents of Kobane and nearby villages have fled for fear of an imminent assault by the Islamic State group," said the director of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdel Rahman.

"We are looking at a total of some 300,000 displaced people and refugees in Turkey. Kobane is practically empty of its residents now," Abdel Rahman told AFP.

IS fighters launched a major offensive against Kobane on September 16 and have advanced to within less than a kilometre (mile) of the eastern and southeastern edges of the town.

"Kobane town is now completely surrounded by IS" except for the northern side of the border town leading into Turkey, Abdel Rahman said.

The Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) militia have been fighting the jihadists' bid to break into Kobane, which in Arabic is known as Ain al-Arab, but are poorly equipped and massively outgunned.

Kurdish leaders have appealed to the US-led coalition battling IS to provide air support to the town's defenders. There were strikes on Wednesday, but they failed to stop the jihadists' advance.

On Thursday, local activist Mustafa Ebdi criticised Washington and its mainly Gulf Arab allies carrying out strikes in Syria for their apparent failure to stop the IS advance.

"The international community has abandoned us," Ebdi said via the Internet.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 02 Oct 2014 13:19
 
IS AT GATES OF SYRIA BORDER TOWN AS TURKEY MULLS ACTION
by Fulya Ozerkan with Serene Assir in Beirut

Islamic State fighters were at the gates Thursday of a key Kurdish town on the Syrian border with Turkey, whose parliament was set to vote on authorising military intervention against the jihadists.

Kurdish militiamen backed by US-led air strikes were locked in fierce fighting to prevent the besieged border town of Kobane from falling to IS group fighters.

Heavy mortar fire around the town was heard across the Turkish border, an AFP correspondent reported.

"There are real fears that the IS may be able to advance into the town of Kobane itself very soon," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights warned.

The Britain-based watchdog reported fresh US-led air strikes on the advancing jihadists overnight after the heavily outgunned Kurdish fighters were forced to fall back west and southeast of the town, also known as Ain al-Arab.

The strikes in Syria by the United States and Arab allies, now in their 10th day, come as European allies step up their support for the air campaign Washington launched against IS in neighbouring Iraq on August 8.

The US-led coalition had already carried out at least seven strikes on IS targets around Kobane over the five days to Wednesday, US Central Command said.

A Kurdish official inside Kobane acknowledged that the better armed IS fighters had advanced during the night.

"They are closer, two to three kilometres (less than two miles) in some places," Idris Nahsen told AFP by telephone.

"Compared to IS, our weaponry is simple. They have cannons, long-range rockets and tanks."

IS seized large stocks of heavy weaponry from fleeing troops when they captured Iraq's second city of Mosul in June. They took more when they overran the Syrian garrison at Tabqa air base south of Kobane in late August.

As the jihadists neared the outskirts of Kobane, there was a quickening of the exodus of civilians which had already seen tens of thousands take refuge across the border in Turkey.

"Kobane is practically empty of its residents now," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

Kobane would be a major prize for IS, giving it unbroken control of a long stretch of the Syrian-Turkish border.

But its fall would be a big blow to Kurdish dreams of self-rule and jailed Turkish Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan warned that it would have implications across the border.

In a message to supporters, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) leader said it could spell the collapse of the peace process under way since last year to end the group's three-decade insurgency in southeastern Turkey.

After months of caution, the Turkish government has decided to harden its policy towards IS, with parliament due to vote later Thursday on a request for authorisation for military action against the jihadists in both Iraq and Syria.

Ankara has not yet indicated what form its assistance could take.

But according to the Hurriyet newspaper, the government is requesting permission from parliament for the presence and transit of foreign soldiers in Turkish territory as well as the deployment of Turkish military forces to Iraq or Syria.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pressed the West on Wednesday to find a long-term solution to the crises in Syria and Iraq, saying dropping "tons of bombs" on IS would provide only temporary respite.

US officials kept up their warnings that such a solution would take time.

Retired US general John Allen, who is leading the international effort against IS, told CNN "it could take years" to train a Syrian rebel force to take on the jihadists.

Based on rough outlines offered by US officials, the war strategy is counting on defeating IS fighters first in Iraq through a combination of Kurdish forces, Iraqi army troops, Shiite volunteers and a militia or "national guard" of Sunni Arab tribes -- which does not yet exist.

In Syria, Washington is pinning its hopes on training and arming a new rebel army composed of vetted "moderate" recruits, at a rate of about 5,000 fighters a year.

Even in Iraq, the fightback is proving slow, despite coalition air support.

Kurdish forces have recaptured the crossing town of Rabia on Iraq's border with Syria and made advances north of IS-held Mosul and south of key oil hub Kirkuk.

Iraqi troops have fought off IS forces southwest of the capital.

But there has been no let-up in the daily violence in either Iraq or Syria.

On Wednesday, deadly bombings hit both the Iraqi capital and Syria's third-largest city Homs, with 41 children among the dead in Homs, which has been devastated by the three-year civil war but is under government control.

IS has seized control of large parts of Syria and Iraq, declaring an Islamic "caliphate" and committing widespread atrocities.

UN human rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein said Thursday the "array of violations and abuses" carried out by the jihadists was "staggering" and included attacks on civilians, executions of captured soldiers, abductions, rapes and the desecration of religious and cultural sites.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 02 Oct 2014 13:06
 
BEHEADING VIDEO ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF IS BRUTALITY: TOP US OFFICIAL

The White House said Friday that a video showing the apparent execution of British hostage Alan Henning was yet another example of the "brutality" of the Islamic State group.

President Barack Obama's top counter-terrorism advisor Lisa Monaco said Washington was taking steps to confirm the authenticity of the tape.

"If it in fact proves to be authentic, it is yet another demonstration of the brutality of ISIL and our hearts go out to the British aid worker who we believe is in that video," she said, using an alternative acronym for the group.

"This is yet again another clear example of the brutality of this group and why the president has articulated and (is) moving out in a comprehensive way to degrade and destroy ISIL."

The jihadist group earlier claimed responsibility for the murder of Henning, an aid worker, in a video showing his apparent execution.

In the video, almost identical to those released after three previous murders, a masked IS militant also displays a hostage he identifies as an American, Peter Kassig.

IS has previously released videos showing the beheadings of American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and another British aid worker David Haines.

Source : Sapa-AFP /aw
Date : 03 Oct 2014 23:55
 
OBAMA CONDEMNS 'BRUTAL' MURDER OF BRITISH CAPTIVE

President Barack Obama condemned the "brutal" murder of British captive Alan Henning on Friday, saying the United States would bring those responsible to justice.

"Standing together with a broad coalition of allies and partners, we will continue taking decisive action to degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL," he said in a statement, referring to the Islamic State jihadist group that killed the aid worker.

In a video released by the group in response to US-led air strikes against it, a masked IS fighter beheads Henning and threatens a US captive, aid worker Peter Kassig.

The footage, almost identical to three previous execution films released by the group, inspired revulsion around the world and drew a stark warning from Obama and Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron.

"Mr Henning worked to help improve the lives of the Syrian people and his death is a great loss for them, for his family and the people of the United Kingdom," Obama said in the statement.

"Standing together with our UK friends and allies, we will work to bring the perpetrators of Alan's murder -- as well as the murders of Jim Foley, Steven Sotloff and David Haines -- to justice."

American reporters Foley and Sotloff, and Haines, a British aid worker, were all previously executed on camera.

Source : Sapa-AFP /aw
Date : 04 Oct 2014 00:47
 
FRANCE'S HOLLANDE OUTRAGED BY 'HEINOUS' MURDER OF BRITISH CAPTIVE

French President Francois Hollande on Friday expressed outrage over the murder of a British aid volunteer by the Islamic State group, pledging to help bring the perpetrators to justice.

Hollande "is outraged by the heinous crime carried out by the terrorist group Daesh which has murdered Alan Henning, a humanitarian volunteer", said a statement issued by the French presidency which used the Arabic acronym for the IS group.

"This crime, like previous ones, will not be unpunished.

"France will continue to lend support to the people and the authorities of Iraq in their fight against terrorism," added the statement in which Hollande also sent his condolences to Henning's family.

Source : Sapa-AFP /aw
Date : 04 Oct 2014 00:54
 
AUSTRALIAN JETS FLY FIRST MISSION AGAINST IS IN IRAQ

Australian fighter jets have flown their first armed combat mission in Iraq against the Islamic State group but did not launch air strikes, the military said Monday.

Head of the defence force Air Chief Marshal Mark Binskin said the two Royal Australian Air Force F/A18 combat aircraft had returned safely to base.

"The Super Hornet aircraft conducted an air interdiction and close air support mission over northern Iraq overnight," the Australian Defence Force said in a statement.

"The Super Hornets were on-call to attack targets as identified.

"On this occasion the aircraft did not use their munitions and have returned to base to disarm and prepare for future sorties."

The flights are the first since the Australian government on Friday authorised strikes on Islamic State (IS) militants in Iraq.

Australia is part of the international coalition conducting an air campaign against the IS group that the United States has been building since first launching air strikes in August.

Like France, Britain, Denmark, Belgium and the Netherlands, Australia has limited its operations to Iraq. The United States and several Arab coalition partners have been conducting air strikes against IS militants in Syria.

Former chief of the Australian army Peter Leahy said it was normal for jets to return from missions without carrying out airstrikes.

"You would expect something like this to happen, particularly as we want to minimise collateral damage. We don't want to be hitting the wrong target," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

"What we have seen from ISIS over the last week or so is that they've made themselves a much harder target... they've dispersed, they're adapting camouflage patterns, they've moved back inside the cities and getting close to the forces and holding on. "

IS militants have seized swathes of Iraq and Syria, declaring a "caliphate" and imposing a harsh interpretation of Islamic law.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has spoken strongly against the IS organisation, saying the decision to support international operations is in Australia's national interest.

"The beheadings, the crucifixions, mass executions, ethnic cleansing and sexual slavery that are occurring in northern Iraq and Syria, are only the beginning if ISIL has its way," he said on Saturday.

Australia deployed some 600 troops and several aircraft to the United Arab Emirates in mid-September as it geared up to join the US-led international coalition.

It wants to deploy special forces to Iraq to advise and assist Iraqi forces but is awaiting approval from the Iraqi government.

Australia's involvement in Iraq has the support of both Abbott's conservative coalition and the opposition Labor Party.

"This is a humanitarian mission that is important for the peace and freedom of the people of Iraq and also for global stability and global peace," Labor's Chris Bowen said.

Government Senator Mitch Fifield said Australians would be pleased the first foray had ended safely.

"The mission obviously will have many iterations. This is the first," he told Sky News.


Source : Sapa-AFP /ar
Date : 06 Oct 2014 10:10
 
So as it stands:

Syria and Iraq:

USA

Only intervening in Iraq:

Australia
Belgium
Canada
Denmark
France
Netherlands
United Kingdom

Only intervening in Syria:

Bahrain
Jordan
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
UAE

Pretty impressive coalition.
 
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KURDS BATTLE FOR SYRIA TOWN, WOMAN SUICIDE BOMBER HITS IS
by Fulya Ozerkan with Sara Hussein in Beirut

Kurdish militia fought off a fresh assault by the Islamic State group on a key Syrian town early Monday, after one desperate woman defender carried out a suicide attack against the jihadists.

IS militants attempted to storm the town of Kobane on the Turkish border from both east and west of a strategic hill to the south, but Kurdish fighters repulsed the attack, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

A Syrian Kurdish official inside Kobane said the town had come under heavy bombardment by the jihadists and there had been fierce clashes as the Kurdish fighters fought off the assault.

IS fighters seized part of Mishtenur Hill, which overlooks Kobane, late on Saturday, but US-led air strikes slowed their advance.

The Syrian Kurdish official said IS fighters were just one kilometre (less than a mile) from the town and that air strikes alone were not enough to stop them.

Idris Nahsen complained there was no coordination between coalition commanders and Kurdish fighters on the ground.

In a sign of the Kurdish defenders' mounting desperation, a female suicide bomber blew herself up at an IS position east of Kobane on Sunday, the Observatory said.

It was the first reported instance of a female Kurdish fighter employing a tactic often used by the jihadists, said the Britain-based watchdog, which has a wide network of sources inside Syria.

The Kurdish official confirmed the suicide bombing but was non-committal about whether there would be more.

"I don't know. It is related to the situation. We don't have this strategy," Nahsen said.

Sunday's fighting around Kobane -- also known as Ain al-Arab -- killed at least 19 Kurdish fighters and 27 IS jihadists, the Observatory said.

Under assault by IS for nearly three weeks, the town has become a crucial battleground in the international fight against the jihadists, who sparked further outrage at the weekend with the release of a video showing the beheading of Briton Alan Henning.

The video -- the latest in a series of on-camera beheadings of Western hostages -- included a threat to another hostage, US aid worker Peter Kassig.

Kassig's parents have issued a video plea for their son's release, urging his captors to show mercy towards the 26-year-old former US soldier who is a Muslim convert.

His parents have also revealed that Kassig wrote them a letter in June expressing his fears of death and concern for his family.

"I am obviously pretty scared to die but the hardest part is not knowing, wondering, hoping and wondering if I should even hope at all. I am very sad all this has happened and for what all of you back home are going through," Kassig wrote in the letter.

IS began its advance on Kobane on September 16, seeking to cement its grip over a long stretch of the Syria-Turkey border.

The offensive prompted a mass exodus from the town and surrounding countryside, with some 186,000 people fleeing into Turkey.

One mortar round hit a house on Turkish territory just a few kilometres (miles) from Kobane on Sunday, wounding five people, medical sources said.

The source of the fire was unclear, but residents of two small border villages were ordered evacuated as a precaution.

The Turkish parliament last week authorised the government to join the campaign, but so far no plans for military action have been announced, to the dismay of Turkey's own large Kurdish minority.

Extremist Sunni Muslim group IS has seized large parts of Syria and Iraq, declaring a "caliphate" in June and imposing its harsh interpretation of Islamic law.

The group has been accused of carrying out widespread atrocities including mass executions, abductions, torture and forcing women into slavery.

It has also released videos of the on-camera beheadings of two US journalists, a British aid worker and on Friday of Henning, a 47-year-old British volunteer driver who went to Syria with a Muslim charity.

After first launching strikes against IS in Iraq in August, Washington has built a coalition of allies to wage an air campaign against the group.

In Iraq, the pace of the coalition air campaign against IS picked up on Sunday with the first strike by Belgium and maiden combat sorties by Australia and The Netherlands.

Britain, France and Denmark have also committed aircraft to the campaign against IS in Iraq, where a fightback by Kurdish forces in the north has made slow progress while federal troops have come under renewed assault by the jihadists west of Baghdad.

In Syria, Washington relies on the support of five Arab allies --Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.


Source : Sapa-AFP /ar
Date : 06 Oct 2014 11:13
 
INDONESIA STRUGGLES WITH ISLAMIC STATE RECRUITING
By NINIEK KARMINI
Associated Press

A businessman who proclaims himself leader of the Indonesian chapter of the Islamic State group says he has personally overseen the departure of scores of fighters from this Southeast Asian nation to Syria and Iraq. Police detained him for a night recently, but were unable to charge him with a crime.

Chep Hernawan reflects both the success IS has had in attracting support in the region, and the challenges Indonesia faces in responding.

The government, home to most of the up to 200 Southeast Asians believed to be fighting in Syria and Iraq, has forcefully spoken out against the Islamic State, as have mainstream Muslim organizations in the country. But Indonesia is limited in what it can do to stop suspected militants from traveling abroad.

The country lacks the sort of laws that neighboring Malaysia and Singapore have, allowing for detention without trial or criminal charges under limited, legally defined circumstances. It also does not ban speech that could incite hatred and intolerance.

National Police spokesman Brig. Gen. Boy Rafli Amar said his force could only monitor IS supporters.

"If they have no record of terrorism activities then they can't be charged under our criminal law," he said.

Any changes will be a challenge given the fractious nature of the new Parliament and other legislative priorities, according to a recent report into the evolution of the Islamic State group by the Institute of Policy Analysis for Conflict.

For the first time since the 1990s and the Afghan jihad, Indonesians, Malaysians and other extremists in Southeast Asia are traveling abroad in an organized fashion to join a global militant movement, picking up battlefield skills and militant contacts.

Security officials fear they could take part in terrorism on their return to Southeast Asia, as those trained in Afghanistan did in attacks such as the 2002 Bali bombings, which killed 202 people. Radicals at home also could heed the Islamic State group's exhortations to carry out revenge attacks on Western targets.

In response to the threat posed by foreign fighters, the United Nations Security Council last month adopted a resolution demanding member states prevent the recruitment and travel of people to join militant groups like IS.

Hernawan's brush with the law has not stopped him from campaigning on behalf of the group or defending its actions, including the beheading of journalists and opposition forces.

"I'm convinced that these are religious acts based on Islamic teachings (permitting acts) that strike fear in the hearts of enemies of Islam," he told The Associated Press recently at his white, colonial-style house, which stands prominently on the edge of Cianjur town's main road. His home's decor includes a real stuffed tiger, and at the time of his interview he had a pile of warm clothes and blankets ready to be delivered for refugees in the Gaza Strip.

Hernawan, 63, owns hotel and manufacturing companies and is a longtime public supporter of radical Islam. He said he was appointed the head of IS head in Indonesia at a meeting of radicals on March 16.

While he is a well-known for speaking on IS's behalf in the country, two experts on militancy in Indonesia said it was unclear or even unlikely whether he had any structural links to the group's leadership in Syria.

Like some other radicals in Indonesia, he says violent jihad within Indonesia is not justified because the country doesn't meet the conditions required under Islamic law. Not so elsewhere.

"In countries where there are wars such as Iraq, Syria and Palestine, you either kill or get killed," Hernawan said.

Earlier this year he addressed a gathering of IS supporters in the heart of the Indonesian capital, Jakarta.

On the stage with him was a man called Bahrumsyah, who in July later appeared in an IS propaganda video with other Indonesians in Syria.

The Islamic State group has quickly achieved popularity among a section of extremists in Southeast Asia because it has a territory that welcomes those willing to fight, a slick social media campaign and a reputation for battlefield success.

The danger posed to Indonesia from IS was brought into focus last month when police arrested four ethnic Uighurs they allege were being taken to meet the country's most wanted militant to discuss recruitment for IS. The militant, Abu Wardah Santoso, has taken responsibility for the killings of several Indonesian police officers and has pledged allegiance to IS.

The Indonesian government has outlawed IS and ordered regional leaders to improve coordination and cooperation with security agencies to monitor activities regarding the spread of the group's ideology. The Indonesian Ullema Council, the country's top Muslim clerical body, has declared IS to be a violent and radical movement that tarnished the image of Islam as a peaceful religion.

In Malaysia, authorities have revoked the passports of 30 suspected militants who had previously been arrested under the country's now-defunct national security act, said Ayob Khan Mydin Pitchay, head of the national police counterterrorism unit.

In late September, police detained three suspected jihadists at Kuala Lumpur International Airport as they were about to board a flight to Turkey. Ayob Khan said at least 22 Malaysians were known to have left for the war in Syria.

Sri Yunanto, an expert on militancy at Indonesia's anti-terrorism agency, said many jihadi groups within Indonesia are trying to use the war in Syria to create a pool of combat-trained and indoctrinated recruits.

"Their goal is to send young people to Syria to provide them with expertise and experience," Yunanto said. "When the time comes for terrorism, they will have skilled operatives."

At least four Indonesians are known to have been killed in Syria and Iraq. The first was Wildan Mukhollad, who blew himself up in a restaurant in Baghdad earlier this year. He grew up in the same village as two notorious militants convicted and later executed for their role in the Bali bombings, and attended a school founded by them.

Ali Fauzi, his teacher at Al Islam boarding school, remembers Mukhollad watching the funerals of the two militants in the village.

"He was a good boy, a smart boy," Fauzi said. "I knew that it was his dream, he had reached what he dreamed of as a kid: to be martyred and go to heaven."

---

Associated Press writers Jim Gomez in Manila and Eileen Ng in Kuala Lumpur contributed to this report.


Source : Sapa-AP /ar
Date : 06 Oct 2014 11:47
 
US HOSTAGE SAYS 'SCARED TO DIE' IN IS CAPTIVITY

The parents of American hostage Peter Kassig, who is being held by the Islamic State group, have released a letter he wrote in June in which he said he was "scared to die."

The 26-year-old former US soldier was paraded at the end of an IS video last week that showed the murder of British aid worker Alan Henning.

The video ended with a threat to kill Kassig.

Hostages threatened at the end of four previous, near-identical IS videos have subsequently been murdered.

Kassig's letter referred to his conversion to Islam during captivity, which his parents Ed and Paula Kassig said took place voluntarily at some point between October and December 2013 when he shared a cell with a devout Syrian Muslim.

They noted that Kassig had observed the holy fasting month of Ramadan in July-August 2013 before being taken captive and "spoke of the great impact this spiritual practice had on him."

Kassig also took the Muslim name Abdul-Rahman, and has been following the religion's practices, such as praying five times a day.

"We see this as part (of) our son's long spiritual journey," his parents said in a statement released Saturday.

The Kassigs did not indicate how they obtained the letter, saying they had received it in June and were releasing it now in an effort to "more fully" tell his story to the world.

The militant group has justified killing Western hostages as retaliation for US-led air strikes on the group over swathes of territory it has seized in Iraq and Syria.

"We continue to pressure the government to stop its actions and continue to call on his captors to have mercy and release him," the Kassigs said in releasing portions of their son's June 2 letter.

The text was edited to remove unspecified "sensitive information," though his parents said all words were written by him.

"I am obviously pretty scared to die but the hardest part is not knowing, wondering, hoping and wondering if I should even hope at all. I am very sad all this has happened and for what all of you back home are going through," Kassig writes in the letter.

"If I do die, I figure that at least you and I can seek refuge and comfort in knowing that I went out as a result of trying to alleviate suffering and helping those in need."

Kassig had founded an aid group through which he trained some 150 civilians to provide medical aid to people in Syria. His group also gave food, cooking supplies, clothing and medicine to the needy.

His parents have said he had disappeared in Syria on October 1 last year.

"In terms of my faith, I pray every day and I am not angry about my situation in that sense. I am in a dogmatically complicated situation here, but I am at peace with my belief," Kassig wrote.

The letter ends with a simple: "I love you."


Source : Sapa-AFP /ar
Date : 06 Oct 2014 12:04
 
FIGHTING IN SYRIA'S KOBANE SPREADS TO SOUTH, WEST: MONITOR

Fighting between Islamic State group jihadists and Kurdish militia in the key Syrian border town of Kobane has spread to new areas in the south and west, a monitor said on Tuesday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and an activist from the town also reported new air strikes by a US-led coalition against IS on the eastern side of the town overnight.


Source : Sapa-AFP /aa
Date : 07 Oct 2014 08:20
 
AIRSTRIKES HIT JIHADISTS NEAR EMBATTLED SYRIA TOWN
By LEFTERIS PITARAKIS and BASSEM MROUE
Associated Press

Warplanes believed to have been sent by the U.S.-led coalition on Tuesday struck positions held by Islamic State militants near a Syrian border town that beleaguered Kurdish forces have been struggling to defend.

The airstrikes began late Monday and came as Kurdish forces pushed Islamic State militants out of the eastern part of Kobani, where the jihadists had raised their black flag over buildings hours earlier, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. On Tuesday morning journalists on the Turkish side of the border heard the sound of warplanes before two large plumes of smoke billowed just west of Kobani.

The U.S.-led coalition has launched several airstrikes over the past two weeks near Kobani in a bid to help Kurdish forces defend the town, but the sorties appear to have done little to slow the Islamic State group, which captured several nearby villages in a rapid advance that began in mid-September.

The assault has forced some 160,000 Syrians to flee and put a strain on Kurdish forces, who have struggled to hold off the extremists. Hundreds more civilians fled Kobani on Monday as the jihadists advanced, according to the Observatory, which relies on a network of activists inside Syria.

On Tuesday morning, occasional gunfire could be heard in Kobani, also known by the Arabic name Ayn Arab. A flag of the Kurdish force known as the People's Protection Units, or YPG, was seen flying over a hill in central Kobani.

On Monday, jihadi fighters raised two of their black flags on the outskirts of Kobani and punctured the Kurdish front lines, advancing into the town itself.

But the Observatory said the Kurds forced the jihadists to withdraw from the eastern part of the town in heavy clashes after midnight. It said five loud explosions were heard in the town as warplanes soared overhead.

The Observatory said the jihadists were meanwhile able to capture several buildings on the southern edge of Kobani as well as a hospital under construction on the western side.

The Observatory and the Local Coordination Committees, another activist group, also reported coalition airstrikes on the eastern province of Deir el-Zour.

The United States and five Arab allies launched an aerial campaign against the Islamic State group in Syria on Sept. 23 with the aim of rolling back and ultimately crushing the extremist group. The U.S. has been bombing Islamic State targets in neighboring Iraq since August.

The Islamic State group has conquered vast swaths of Syria and Iraq, declaring a self-styled caliphate governed by a harsh version of Shariah law.

The militants have massacred captured Syrian and Iraqi troops, terrorized minorities in both countries and beheaded two American journalists and two British aid workers.

---

Mroue reported from Beirut.


Source : Sapa-AP /ar
Date : 07 Oct 2014 11:20
 
[video=youtube;KHMLW3-xECE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHMLW3-xECE&list=UU1yBKRuGpC1tSM73A0ZjYjQ&index=8[/video]
 
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
Aside from being a nato member (if that counts for anything anymore) the turks have a formidable army. Better than Israel in fact.

My bet is that IS will take the town and close up the border and leave it there. They won't touch turkey
 
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