IRBIL, IRAQ, OCT 29 -
A group of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga troops arrived in Turkey early Wednesday and headed toward the border to help their Syrian brethren fight Islamic State extremists in the embattled town of Kobani.
Earlier, they received a rousing send-off from thousands of cheering, flag-waving supporters as they left the Iraqi Kurdish capital of Irbil by plane for Turkey.
The unprecedented mission by the 150 fighters to help fellow Kurds in their battle with the Islamic State
group came after Ankara agreed to allow the peshmerga to cross into
Syria via Turkey — although the Turkish prime minister reiterated that
his country would not be sending any ground forces of its own to Kobani.
The peshmerga forces landed early Wednesday at the Sanliurfa airport in
southeastern Turkey, according to AP video journalists. They left the
airport in buses escorted by Turkish security forces and are expected to
travel to Kobani through the Mursitpinar border crossing.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told the BBC that sending the peshmerga
was "the only way to help Kobani, since other countries don't want to
use ground troops."
The Islamic State
group launched its offensive on Kobani and nearby Syrian villages in
mid-September, killing more than 800 people, according to activists. The
Sunni extremists captured dozens of Kurdish villages around Kobani and control parts of the town. More than 200,000 people have fled across the border into Turkey.
The U.S. is leading a coalition that has carried out dozens of airstrikes targeting the militants in and around Kobani.
The deployment of the 150 peshmerga fighters, who were authorized by the Iraqi Kurdish government to go to Kobani, underscores the sensitive political tensions in the region.
Turkey's government views the Syrian Kurds defending Kobani as loyal to
what Ankara regards as an extension of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or
PKK. That group has waged a 30-year insurgency in Turkey and is
designated a terrorist group by the U.S. and NATO.
Under pressure to take greater action against the IS militants — from
the West as well as from Kurds inside Turkey and Syria — the Turkish
government agreed to let the fighters cross through its territory. But
it only is allowing the peshmerga forces from Iraq, with whom it has a
good relationship, and not those from the PKK.
A separate Iraqi Kurdish
peshmerga convoy of Toyota Land Cruisers and trucks carrying cannons
and machine guns crossed into Turkey early Wednesday at the Ibrahim
Khalil border crossing at Zakho in northern Iraq en route to Kobani.
Peshmerga soldiers carrying Kurdish
flags were atop some of the vehicles as they headed from Irbil to the
border crossing. The troops made the victory sign for the cameras. An
ambulance and government vehicles blaring their sirens accompanied the
convoy.
Scores of people waited by the side of the road in villages for the
troops to pass. Thousands of people awaited them at the border. The
crowd sang and chanted traditional peshmerga songs and had to be pushed
back by every vehicle that tried to make its way through the masses.
Many people carried colorful Kurdish flags and portraits of the Iraqi Kurdish regional President Massoud Barzani.
The Kurds of Syria and Iraq have become a major focus in the war against the Islamic State group, with Kurdish
populations in both countries under significant threat by the
militants' lightning advance as they seek to establish an Islamic
caliphate in the region.
The Kurdish
parliament voted overwhelmingly to send fighters to Kobani,
underscoring the growing cooperation among the Kurds in Iraq and Syria.
The action marked the first mission for the peshmerga outside Iraq.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said U.S. officials
"certainly encourage" the deployment of Iraqi peshmerga forces to
Kobani.
It will provide much-needed support for the Syrian Kurds, although it
is not clear whether Turkey will allow the peshmerga fighters to carry
enough weaponry to make an impact.
The Obama administration has worked with Turkey and the semi-autonomous Kurdish
regional government in northern Iraq "on a sustainable way forward to
support forces in Kobani and over the long term to degrade and
ultimately defeat ISIL," Psaki said, using an acronym for the Islamic State group.
The U.S. Central Command said U.S. military forces carried out four
airstrikes near Kobani in the past 24 hours, destroying four IS fighting
positions and a small IS unit.
An AP reporter on the Turkish side of the border facing Kobani saw
several airstrikes by the coalition. Occasional shooting could be heard
from the town.
In Berlin, Syria's neighbors urged European countries at a conference
of foreign ministers and representatives from 40 nations to open their
doors to more refugees, and for immediate financial and technological
help as their infrastructures buckle under the massive influx of
civilians fleeing the conflict.
Turkey has agreed to train and equip moderate Syrian rebel forces that
have for more than three years sought to oust Syrian President Bashar
Assad.
More than 3 million people have fled Syria because of the conflict,
mostly to neighboring countries. Another 6 million are displaced within
Syria.
The conflict began with largely peaceful protests in March 2011 calling
for reform. It eventually spiraled into a civil war as people took up
arms following a brutal military crackdown on the protest movement.
Islamic extremists including foreign fighters have joined the war,
playing an increasingly prominent role in the conflict. Thousands have
died in battles between opposing rebel groups since the beginning of the
year.
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