Battle for Tikrit Enters Second Week
Last updated on: March 08, 2015 3:25 PM
The
coalition is battling for al-Dour and Albu Ajil, where IS snipers are
hampering efforts to clear the towns of the rebel extremists.
Thousands
of troops launched Iraq’s largest anti-IS offensive last Sunday to
reclaim Tikrit, a strategic stronghold between government-controlled
Baghdad to the south and Islamic State-held Mosul to the north.
Iraqi
forces with tactical help from Iran are carrying out the operation
without intervention from the U.S.-led coalition, which continued to
bomb IS targets Sunday in Iraq and Syria.
The
airstrikes have not supported the Tikrit offensive, but hit 12 other IS
positions in Iraq on Sunday, including Mosul, Kirkuk, and Fallujah, as
well as in the Syrian border city of Kobani.
The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported Sunday that at least 40
Kurdish fighters and Islamic State militants were killed in 24 hours of
fierce clashes in the northern Syrian province of Hassakeh.
Baghdad
has also requested extra air power from the U.S.-led coalition to
protect the country’s antiquities, which have been targeted for
destruction by Islamic State militants in recent weeks.
Iraq’s
Tourism and Antiquities Minister Adel Shirshab told reporters, “Our
airspace is not in our hands. It’s in their hands… I am calling on the
international community and coalition to activate its airstrikes and
target terrorism wherever it exists.”
Also
on Sunday, a peshmerga spokesman in Irbil shed more light on the
shooting death of a Canadian soldier by friendly fire in northern Iraq
last week.
In
an interview with the Associated Press, Halgurd Hikmat said special
forces Sergeant Andrew Doiron and three other Canadians approached the
Kurdish militia on the front lines and responded to questions in Arabic.
Peshmerga fighters mistook them for Islamic State forces and opened
fire
“The
biggest part of the responsibility for this incident lies with them,
because they went there without our permission,” Hikmat said.
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