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Syrian Kurds hold out against ISIL assault on Kobane

Kurdish fighters in the battleground Syrian town of Kobane have weathered an onslaught by Islamic State group militants as they await promised reinforcements from Iraq.

The Kurdish militia faced a fierce attack by ISIL fighters, including suicide bombers, late on Monday, that appeared aimed at cutting off the border with Turkey before any reinforcements could arrive, the British-based opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Ankara’s announcement on Monday that it would help Kurdish forces from Iraq to relieve Kobane’s beleaguered defenders marked a major shift of policy and was swiftly welcomed by the United States.

Kobane has become a crucial symbolic battleground in the war against IS, which is fighting to extend areas under its control in Iraq and Syria where it has declared an Islamic “caliphate”.

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An influx of well-trained peshmerga fighters into Kobane could be a major boost for the Syrian Kurds.

Iraqi Kurdish officials said they would provide training, although any forces sent would be Syrian Kurds.

The US administration has stepped up its commitment to the town’s defence in recent days, with Secretary of State John Kerry saying it would be “irresponsible” and “morally very difficult” not to help.

Three C-130 cargo aircraft carried out what the US military called “multiple” successful drops of supplies early on Monday, including arms provided by Kurdish authorities in Iraq.

The supplies were “intended to enable continued resistance against ISIL’s attempts to overtake Kobane”, said US Central Command.

One of the 27 bundles dropped went astray and US warplanes bombed it to prevent it falling into ISIL hands.

The US-led coalition has carried out more than 135 air strikes against ISIL targets around Kobane, but it was the first time it had delivered arms to the town’s defenders.

ISIL lost at least five of its militants to coalition air strikes on Monday and a further 12 in ground fighting, including two suicide bombers, the Observatory said.

Five Kurdish fighters were also killed.

A senior US administration official said Monday’s airdrop was in recognition of the “impressive” resistance put up by the Kurds and the losses they were inflicting on ISIL.

Top priority still Iraq

But US commanders said the top priority remains Iraq, where ISIL swept through much of the Sunni Arab heartland north and west of Baghdad in June and both government and Kurdish forces are under pressure.

The jihadists attacked the Kurdish-controlled town of Qara Tapah on Monday, killing at least 10 people and prompting half of its population of 9000 to flee.

“We are afraid ISIL will encircle us and turn this town into a second Amerli,” said one resident of the town.

He was referring to a mainly Shi’ite Turkmen town further north which was besieged by IS for two months before government troops backed by militia broke through in late August.

Since last week, there has been an increase in the number of bomb attacks in the Iraqi capital, several of which have been claimed by ISIL.

On Monday a suicide bomber detonated explosives outside a Shi’ite mosque in the central Baghdad neighbourhood of Sinak, killing at least 11 people.

The violence has raised fears ISIL will attack large gatherings of Shi’ite worshippers during the upcoming Ashura commemorations, the target of devastating bombings in past years.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi was in Tehran on Tuesday for talks with his Shi’ite ally on the fight against ISIL.

The jihadists hold towns just a few kilometres from the Iranian border, and Tehran has been a key backer of Baghdad’s efforts to hold them back.

According to a senior Iraqi Kurdish official, Iran has deployed troops on the Iraqi side of the border in the Khanaqin area northeast of Baghdad.

Iranian forces also played a role in breaking the siege of Amerli, another senior Kurdish official said.

But Abadi ruled out any foreign ground intervention to assist government forces in retaking territory lost to jihadists.

“No ground forces from any superpower, international coalition or regional power will fight here,” Abadi told reporters.

“This is my decision. It is the decision of the Iraqi government,” he said.

He was speaking after a rare meeting with revered Shi’ite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.

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