(Reuters) - Iraqi
Kurdish peshmerga fighters and moderate Syrian rebels bombarded Islamic
State positions in Kobani on Monday, but it was unclear if their
arrival would turn the tide in the battle for the besieged Syrian border
town. Kobani has become a
symbolic test of the U.S.-led coalition's ability to halt the advance of
Islamic State, which has poured weapons and fighters into its assault
of the town that has lasted more than a month. The battle has deflected attention from significant gains elsewhere in Syria
by Islamic State, which has seized two gas fields within a week from
President Bashar al-Assad's forces in the center of the country. In Iraq,
the group has executed more than 300 members of a Sunni tribe that
dared oppose it last week, after seizing the tribe's village in the
Euphrates valley west of Baghdad. On Monday a member of the tribe said
another 36 members had been executed in the provincial capital Anbar. For
now, the eyes of the world have been on Kobani, where weeks of fighting
have taken place within full view of the Turkish border, causing
outrage among Kurds in Turkey who blamed their government for doing too little to help defend the town. The
arrival in Kobani of the Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga and additional Syrian
Free Syrian Army (FSA) fighters in recent days has escalated efforts to
defend the town after weeks of U.S.-led air strikes slowed but did not
reverse the Islamists' advance. White
smoke billowed into the sky as peshmerga and FSA fighters appeared to
combine forces, raining cannon and mortar fire down on Islamic State
positions to the west of Kobani, a Reuters witness said. The U.S. military said it bombed Islamic State positions in Syria five times and in Iraq nine times on Sunday and Monday, including near Kobani. An
estimated 150 Iraqi Kurdish fighters crossed into Kobani with arms and
ammunition from Turkey late on Friday, the first time Ankara has allowed
reinforcements to reach the town. "(Their)
heavy weapons have been a key reinforcement for us. At the moment
they're mostly fighting on the western front, there's also FSA there
too," said Meryem Kobane, a commander with the YPG, the main Syrian
Kurdish armed group in Kobani. She said fierce fighting was also continuing in eastern and southern parts of the city. The
peshmerga, the official security forces of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish
region, have deployed behind Syrian Kurdish forces and are supporting
them with artillery and mortar fire, according to Ersin Caksu, a
journalist inside Kobani. The fiercest fighting was taking place in the
south and east, areas where the reinforcements were not deployed, he
said. Despite weeks of
air strikes, Islamic State has continued to inflict heavy losses on
Kobani's defenders. Late last week hospital sources in Turkey reported a
jump in the number of dead and wounded Kurdish fighters being brought
across the frontier. TRIBES In
Iraq, Islamic State fighters have stormed through mainly Sunni Muslim
cities and towns in the Tigris and Euphrates valleys north and west of
Baghdad, in part with the support of many Sunni Muslims angry at
perceived mistreatment by the Shi'ite-led government in Baghdad. Washington
hopes that Sunni tribes can be lured to switch sides, as they did
during the U.S. "surge" campaign against al Qaeda in 2006-2007. But so
far, Sunni tribes that have dared to stand up to Islamic State have
suffered brutal fates, while complaining of little support from the
Baghdad government. More
than 320 members of the Albu Nimr tribe, including women and children,
have been hunted down, captured, shot and buried in mass graves since
their village fell to the fighters. Hamdan
al-Nimrawi said on Monday 36 more members of the tribe had been shot
dead in Ramadi, capital of the vast Anbar province west of Baghdad,
where fighters control towns and villages stretching from the Syrian
frontier, down the Euphrates to the western outskirts of Baghdad itself. Setting
up an international coalition to fight Islamic State in both Iraq and
Syria has been a tricky diplomatic task for the United States, requiring
consensus for intervention in two complex, multi-sided civil wars where
nearly every country in the Middle East has a stake. "PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR" The
fight for Kobani within sight of the Turkish frontier has heaped
pressure on Ankara, which has been reluctant to intervene, accusing the
town's defenders of links with Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants,
who have fought a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state. Some
40 people died in riots in Turkey last month after Kurds, who make up
around 15 percent of the population and the majority in the southeast,
rose up in anger at the government for doing too little to help protect
Kobani. President Tayyip
Erdogan on Monday decried what he called a "psychological war" being
waged by international media against Ankara over its Syria policy. A
survey by pollster Metropoll appeared to show sympathy for Erdogan's
stance, with a majority of respondents saying the PKK, listed as a
terrorist organization by Europe and the United States, posed a greater
threat to Turkey than Islamic State. Three
soldiers were killed last week by suspected Kurdish militants while out
shopping, the latest attack on Turkish security forces amid growing
tension over a stalled Kurdish peace process. With the world's attention on Kobani, Islamist forces have continued to gain ground elsewhere in Syria. The
Islamic State seized a gas field in the central province of Homs,
according to the SITE jihadist website monitoring service -- the second
gas field reported captured in a week from Assad's forces. On
Monday, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said a
Western-backed Syrian opposition group, the Hazzm movement, had lost
positions and equipment including heavy weapons after being overrun by
al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front fighters in Idlib province, near the
Turkish border. On Saturday, Nusra fighters seized the bastion of another western-backed group, also in Idlib.
Peshmerga, Syrian rebels battle Islamic State in besieged Kobani
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Reuters
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