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The Syrian Arab Army (SAA), supported by the Russian Aerospace Forces, have made more gains against ISIS in Deir Ezzor province.
Northwest of Mayadin city, SAA units liberated the villages of Salu, Toub, Aliyat and Zabari and advanced on Mu Hasan.
North of Deir Ezzor, the SAA reportedly took control of Al-Husayniyah and Safirah at-Tahtaniyah, and advanced inside the remaining ISIS-held pocket. In inside the city, government troops liberated Kenamat, Khassarat and the old airport area and separated the ISIS-held area into two parts.
Now, the SAA will likely focus on ISIS terrorists blocked in the Industrial Centre, al-Sina and Saqr Island. When this area is liberated, government forces will be able to liberate the rest of the city.
The separatist Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) headed by its president Masoud Barzani is facing hard times in northern Iraq.
On October 16, the Iraqi Army, the Federal Police and the Popular Mobilization Units took back the contested city of Kirkuk as well as nearby oil and military installations.
On October 17, the Peshmerga withdrew from the Yazidi-populated town of Sinjar. Iraqi forces embedded with Yazidi members of the PMU entered Sinjar from the direction of Tal Qasif and Tal Banat and established control over the town as well as nearby points.
Meanwhile, Germany has temporarily suspended its training and assistance program to the Peshmerga in response to tensions over the contested areas in northern Iraq. About 150 German service members involved in the program are stationed in the KRG capital of Ebril.
The US-led coalition has released a statement that it does not support either side of the conflict. The US consulate in Baghdad said that it supports “the peaceful exercise of joint administration by the central and regional governments, consistent with the Iraqi Constitution, in all disputed areas.”
Considering that Baghdad sees the KRG’s will to turn the Kurdish autonomous region and the September 25 independence referendum as an unconstitutional move, it is clear that the US just abandoned the KRG in the standoff for contested areas seized by KRG forces during the conflict with ISIS.
An interesting article by Alexander Mercouris about the collapse of Iraqi Kurds in Kirkuk:
http://theduran.com/collapse-in-iraqi-kurdistan-uss-plan-c-fails-before-begins/
I have to say that the myth of the great Kurdish fighters was really pushed by the Western MSM. They have been in cahoots with ISIS, US and its allies. Without that easy ability to go anywhere in Iraq and Syria without really fighting (the way the SAA has had to) as proven in Deir-Ez-Zor & taking advantage of the collapse of the Iraqi Govt. and benefiting financially – I can’t say I am surprised by the sudden collapse in Kirkuk. Plus they had no where to send their oil.
It will be interesting to see what happens in Syria now. Raqqa has been “Dresdened” – it is not a Kurdish City; the SAA is making its way across the region and taking the oil fields back and the arms trade across the border with Iraq is going to become difficult now for the Kurds. I don’t see the Syrian Govt. backing down and the Kurds are going to have to decide whose side they are on…..Turkey will happily take them out too. The US & its allies have already shown they will leave the Kurds hung out to dry.