(Reuters) - Kurdish forces attacked Islamic State fighters near the Kurdish regional capital of Arbil in northern Iraq on Wednesday in a change of tactics supported by the Iraqi central government to try to break the Islamists' momentum. The attack 40 km (25
miles) southwest of Arbil came after the Sunni militants inflicted a
humiliating defeat on the Kurds on Sunday with a rapid advance through
three towns, prompting Iraq's prime minister to order his air force for
the first time to back the Kurdish forces. "We
have changed our tactics from being defensive to being offensive. Now
we are clashing with the Islamic State in Makhmur," said Jabbar Yawar,
secretary-general of the ministry in charge of the Kurdish peshmerga
fighters. The location of
the clashes puts the Islamic State fighters closer than they have ever
been to the Kurdish semi-autonomous region since they swept through
northern Iraq almost unopposed in June. Shortly
after that lightning advance, thousands of U.S.-trained Iraqi soldiers
fled. Kurdish fighters, who often boast of their battles with Saddam
Hussein's forces, stepped in as did Iranian-trained Shi'ite militias. But
the Islamic State gunmen's defeat of the peshmerga, whose name means
"those who confront death", has called into question their reputation as
fearsome warriors. Yawar
said the Kurds had re-established military cooperation with Baghdad.
Ties had been strained with the Shi'ite-led Baghdad government of Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki over oil, budgets and land. But
the dramatic weekend offensive by the Sunni militants - who seized more
towns, a fifth oilfield and reached Iraq's biggest dam - prompted them
to bury their differences. YAZIDI MINORITY AT RISK "The
peshmerga ministry sent a message to the Iraqi defense ministry
requesting the convening of an urgent meeting on military cooperation.
The joint committees have been reactivated," Yawar said by telephone. The
Islamic State, which has declared a 'caliphate' in swathes of Iraq and
Syria that it controls and threatens to march on Baghdad, poses the
biggest threat to OPEC member Iraq since a U.S.-led invasion toppled
Saddam in 2003. Islamic State fighters and their Sunni militant and tribal allies also hold parts of western Iraq. Efforts
to neutralize the Islamic State have been undermined by political
deadlock and sectarian tensions fuelling levels of violence not seen
since the height of a civil war in 2006-2007. Bombings, kidnappings and executions have become part of daily life for many Iraqis once again. On
Wednesday, a roadside bomb killed three Shi'ites who volunteered to
fight the Islamic State on a road between the town of Samarra and Mosul,
said a police official. Critics
say Maliki is an authoritarian leader whose sectarian agenda has
sidelined Sunnis and driven them to find common cause with the Islamic
State, even though they reject the group's radical view of Islam. Maliki,
who has been serving in a caretaker capacity since an inconclusive
election in April, has rejected calls by Kurds, Sunnis, some fellow
Shi'ites and even regional power-broker Iran to step aside and make room
for a less polarizing figure. In
his weekly televised address to the nation on Wednesday, he warned that
any unconstitutional attempt to form a new government would open "the
gates of hell" in Iraq. Maliki
rejected any outside interference in the process, an apparent reference
to Tehran, which Iranian officials have said believes Maliki can no
longer hold Iraq together. Iran
is now backing calls by Iraq's top cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani for Maliki to go and is looking for an alternative leader to
combat the Sunni Islamist insurgency, said the Iranian officials. The
United States, which was a key backer of Maliki when he fist came to
office as an unknown in 2006, has urged Iraqi politicians to form a more
inclusive government that can unify Iraqis and take on the Islamic
State. The Islamic State,
which believes Iraq's majority Shi'ites are infidels who deserve to be
killed, has put Iraq's survival as a unified state in jeopardy. It seized three more towns and a fifth oilfield and reached Iraq's biggest dam during the weekend offensive. The capture of one of the towns, Sinjar, home to many of Iraq's Yazidi minority sect, could lead to a humanitarian crisis. Yazidis,
ethnic Kurds who follow an ancient religion derived from
Zoroastrianism, are at high risk of being executed because the Islamic
State militants view them as devil worshippers. Yawar said 50,000 Yazidis now hiding on a mountain risked starving to death if they were not rescued within 24 hours. "Urgent
international action is needed to save them. Many of them, mainly the
elderly, children and pregnant women, have (already) died," he said. "We
can't stop the Islamic State from attacking the people on the mountain
because there is one paved road leading up to the mountain and it can be
used by them. They (Islamic State fighters) are trying to get to that
road." There are no signs
that revived military cooperation between the Kurdish Regional
Government and the Baghdad government has eased the dangers posed by the
Islamic State. State
television reported that Kurdish forces backed by Maliki's air force
launched a surprise attack on the city of Mosul, a major urban center
held by the Sunni militants. Scores of Islamic State fighters fled, it said. Witnesses
told Reuters there was no major assault, just hit-and-run attacks by
both sides and exchanges of mortar fire over the past few days which had
damaged residential areas. People
in nearby Bashiqa, a diverse town with churches, mosques and a Yazidi
temple, were taking no chances and have fled, a source at a non-profit
organization in the town said by telephone.
Kurds, Islamic State clash near Kurdish regional capital
Reuters
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