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TERROR WARS
Obama to send special forces to Syria
By Andrew BEATTY
Washington (AFP) Oct 30, 2015


Kerry does not rule out more US commandos in Syria
Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (AFP) Oct 31, 2015 - Secretary of State John Kerry refused Saturday to rule out more US commandos being sent to Syria beyond the 50 already assigned to the fight against the Islamic State group.

Speaking in the Kyrgyz capital during a tour of Central Asia, Kerry said he fully supported President Barack Obama's decision to put troops on the ground in Syria.

He said the soldiers were not being sent to battle President Bashar al-Assad's regime or become embroiled in the Syrian civil war, but simply to help destroy the IS group.

"ISIL is the modern personification of evil," he said, using an alternative acronym for the jihadist force that has seized eastern Syria and northern Iraq.

"President Obama has made a very straightfoward and simple decision entirely in keeping with his originally reported policy, that we must defeat and destroy Daesh," he said, using an Arabic term for the IS group.

"It is not a decision to enter into Syria's civil war. It is not a decision or a choice focused on Assad.

"It is focused exclusively on Daesh and on augmenting our ability to be able to more rapidly attack Daesh and do a better job of eliminating Daesh," he continued.

Asked whether he could rule out more troops being assigned to the mission, he said: "I can't predict what the future will bring when our policy is to destroy Daesh, to fight back against this evil.

"But I do think the president has made a judgement that I completely advocated for and concur in."

Kerry was speaking at a news conference with Kyrgyzstan's Foreign Minister Erlan Abdyldaev, and noted that the IS group had recruited fighters from that country.

Both diplomats said their countries would work together more closely against the threat.

IS beheads four Iraq Kurd fighters after joint US raid
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 30, 2015 - The Islamic State group beheaded four Iraqi Kurdish fighters following a joint raid with American special forces against the jihadists, according to a video posted online.

The US-Kurdish operation last week, which freed some 70 people from an IS prison, deepened American involvement in the war against the jihadists and led to the first US combat fatality in Iraq since its 2011 withdrawal from the country.

The video sought to portray the operation as a failure, with speakers saying the attacking forces were unable to overcome numerically inferior jihadists and displaying used first aid supplies that were left behind.

It included images of areas said to have been hit by air strikes in the course of the operation, and ended with the execution of four men, said to be members of the Kurdish peshmerga security forces.

Four black-clad masked militants used knives to behead the men, who were dressed in orange jumpsuits and had their hands bound behind their backs.

It was not clear when the beheadings took place.

IS has seized control of large parts of Iraq and Syria, declaring a cross-border "caliphate", imposing its brutal interpretation of Islam and committing widespread atrocities.

A US-led coalition launched air strikes against the jihadists in August 2014, supporting Iraqi forces, including Kurdish fighters, in attempts to retake lost ground.

President Barack Obama has authorized the first sustained deployment of special forces to Syria, the White House said Friday, reversing a long-standing refusal to put US boots on the ground.

Obama okayed a deployment of "fewer than 50" special operations personnel in the north of the war-ravaged nation, in a bid to strengthen forces fighting the Islamic State group, spokesman Josh Earnest said.

While US fighters are believed to have previously carried out covert missions in Syria -- they had not been deployed there on a continuous basis.

For over a year, the US has led a 65-member coalition that has conducted air strikes against more than 13,000 Islamic State targets in Iraq and Syria.

But that has had only a limited impact in stopping the jihadi advance.

Efforts in Syria have been plagued by the complexities of a civil war that has killed more than 240,000 people since March 2011 and prompted the most serious refugee crisis since World War II.

Obama has been reluctant to involve the United States in another ground war in the Middle East, backing opposition groups that are an uneasy mix of Kurds, Turkomen, Shiite and Sunni Arabs.

Many have proven keener to fight Syrian President Bashar al-Assad than the Islamic State.

Obama was recently forced to scrap a half billion dollar mission to train Syrian opposition fighters, who had come under sustained attack from Assad's forces, IS fighters, Iranian-backed Hezbollah, groups linked to Al-Qaeda, and, more recently, Russian air strikes.

"The point is to get some guys on the ground, get eyes on, work with units that are there fighting (Islamic State) and see what more is possible," said one official.

The source also said that weapons would not go to the Kurdish People's Protection Units, known as the YPG, who have recently been accused of war crimes by Amnesty International.

- Mission creep? -

The White House denied the move was a reversal of Obama's pledge not to put combat troops in Syria, saying Americans would not be "leading the charge up the hill."

"Our strategy in Syria hasn't changed," said Earnest, rejecting accusations of "mission creep."

But a senior US defense official seemed to leave open the possibility of an increased US ground presence.

"As we develop new opportunities to support capable and local forces, we will consider those, we will make recommendations to the President," the official said on condition of anonymity.

"He's given every indication of his willingness to consider recommendations provided they are consistent with the strategy of achieving a victory that sticks."

Obama came to office vowing to end two wars in Muslim nations that had cost thousands of US lives, sapped the coffers and done little to advance US interests in the region.

Officials indicated the new mission would echo existing operations in Iraq, where military personnel coordinate local ground forces, channel weapons supplies and direct air support.

But in Iraq, the line between combat and non-combat troops has been hazy.

US forces took part in a recent raid on a jihadist-run prison in northern Iraq, resulting in the first death of a US serviceman in action in Iraq since 2011.

Experts said the US announcement could foreshadow an assault on the Islamic State group's bases in Raqa in Syria and Ramadi in Iraq.

The White House also announced Friday the deployment of A-10 ground-attack planes and a dozen F-15 tactical fighter jets to the Incirlik base in southern Turkey and increased assistance to Lebanon and Jordan as part of the ramped up effort.

"It's not clear that this will be enough to take Raqa," said Faysal Itani of the Atlantic Council.

"However, it could help attract local recruits to what will be seen as an empowered effort, and perhaps help build some trust between Kurdish and Arab forces."


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Previous Report
TERROR WARS
No immediate increase in Syria anti-IS campaign
Washington (AFP) Oct 28, 2015
The US-led coalition attacking Islamic State militants showed no immediate sign of increasing strikes in Syria, figures released Wednesday showed, even though the Pentagon chief has said America would intensify its campaign. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter on Tuesday said the coalition would conduct extra bombing runs against IS jihadists in Iraq and Syria, but only two strikes have been con ... read more


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