by Eli Leon and Yoni Hirsch
Iraqi troops with U.S. air force backing are trying to lift a two-month siege against the mostly Turkmen Shiite town of Amirli • Australia drops weapons to Kurdish fighters in Iraqi army • UK ambassador: We'll help Jordan against foreseeable threats.
Shiite militiamen patrol in
Amirli, 105 miles north of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Aug. 31, 2014
|
Photo credit: AP |
After breaking the siege against the Iraqi
Yazidi people atop Mount Sinjar, the Iraqi army and the U.S. air force
have set off on a new mission -- hitting Sunni militants who have
besieged the Shiite Turkmen at the town of Amirli for two months.
Iraqi forces already made an incursion into the 12,000-person town on Sunday, backed by precise U.S. airstrikes.
"Amirli has been liberated," said Mahdi Taqi, a
member of the provincial council, speaking with The Washington Post.
"We resisted these people and we won. Now all we need is food and
water."
Meanwhile, former commander in chief of U.S.
Central Command, Anthony Zinni, said the U.S. should not rule out
putting "boots on the ground" to fight the Islamic State (ISIS).
"Very simply put, if you put two brigades on
the ground right now of U.S. forces, they would push ISIS back into
Syria in a heartbeat. And probably take less time, less cost and, I
think in the long run, fewer casualties overall," said Zinni.
Even Australia joined the battle, with Prime
Minister Tony Abbott acceding the U.S. request to help drop weapons and
munitions to Kurdish fighters, who are at the front lines against ISIS.
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabian media reported on
Sunday that Jordan had handed secret intelligence over to the NATO with
details about infiltrations of ISIS fighters into Jordanian territory
through its borders with Syria and Iraq. The British ambassador to
Jordan, Peter Millett, said the U.K. and NATO were prepared to assist
Jordan in dealing with the dangers posed by ISIS.
Meanwhile, it appears as though ISIS is
beheading their own people as well. Such was the fate of Abu Obeida
al-Maghrebi, who was until recently commanding the prison in which
American journalist James Foley, whose beheading was filmed by ISIS, was
also being held.
Members of ISIS apparently suspected, according to
reports, that Maghrebi passed information along to British intelligence
agency MI6.
Eli Leon and Yoni Hirsch
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=19793
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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