MESOP : JOINT PROGRESS – US & PESHMERGA Kurdish Peshmergas fight to retake Iraq’s largest dam after Yazidi ‘massacre’
August 17, 2014 AFP – ERBIL-Hewlêr, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Kurdish Peshmerga forces backed by US warplanes battled on Saturday to retake Iraq’s largest dam from jihadist fighters, a day after militants carried out a “massacre” of dozens of villagers. Two months of violence have brought Iraq to the brink of breakup, and world powers relieved by the exit of long-time premier Nuri al-Maliki were sending aid to the displaced and arms to the Kurds.
Kurdish forces attacked the Islamic State (IS) fighters who had wrested the Mosul dam from them a week earlier, a general told AFP. “Kurdish Peshmerga, with US air support, have seized control of the eastern side of the dam” complex, Major General Abdulrahman Korini told AFP, saying several jihadists had been killed.The US military said it carried out nine airstrikes Saturday near the dam and Kurdistan capital city, Erbil, in an effort to help the Kurdish forces.US Central Command said fighter jets and drones had destroyed or damaged four armoured personnel carriers, seven armed vehicles, two Humvees and an armored vehicle. Buoyed by the air strikes US President Barack Obama ordered last week, the Peshmerga fighters have tried to claw back the ground they lost since the start of August. The dam on the Tigris provides electricity to much of the region, and is crucial to irrigation in vast farming areas in Nineveh province.The recapture of Mosul dam would be one of the most significant achievements in a fightback that is also getting international material support.
Jihadists ‘took their revenge
Fear of an impending genocide against members of Iraq’s Kurdish Yazidi minority, whose faith is anathema to the Sunni Muslim extremists, was one reason Washington cited for air strikes it began on August 8. Senior Kurdish official Hoshyar Zebari said that in the village of Kocho, jihadists on Friday “took their revenge on its inhabitants, who happened to be mostly Yazidis who did not flee their homes”.Human rights groups and residents say IS fighters have demanded that members of religious minorities in Iraq’s Nineveh province, where Kocho is located, either convert or leave, unleashing violent reprisals on any who refused.
Zebari put the toll at around 80 people killed in Kocho, while a senior official of one of Iraq’s main Kurdish parties said 81 had lost their lives, and a Yazidi activist said the death toll could be even higher. The village lies near the northwestern Kurdish town of Shingal (Sinjar in Arabic), which the jihadists stormed on August 3, sending tens of thousands of civilians, many of them Yazidi Kurds, fleeing onto Mount Sinjar to the north. They hid there for days with little food or water.
Mohsen Tawwal, a Yazidi fighter, said he saw a large number of bodies in Kocho on Friday. “We made it into a part of Kocho village, where residents were under siege, but we were too late,” he told AFP by telephone. “There were corpses everywhere. We only managed to get two people out alive. The rest had all been killed.”