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Military版 - 保卫 AMERLI :一个打退 ISIS 的伊拉克小镇 (转载)
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话题: amerli话题: isis话题: iraq话题: mr话题: militants
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Waging Desperate Campaign, Iraqi Town Held Off Militants
By AZAM AHMEDSEPT. 2, 2014
Residents of Amerli, a town of Shiite Turkmens, celebrated this week after a
nearly three-month siege by Sunni militants ended. Credit Andrea Bruce for
The New York Times
AMERLI, Iraq — The children lined the unkempt boulevard in this northern
Iraqi town on Tuesday to welcome some of the men who had saved them from the
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
Convoy after convoy of armed men raced past, blaring victory music from
loudspeakers and bristling with weaponry. They waved as the young residents
clapped and chanted religious slogans, celebrating the men who had broken
the militants’ chokehold on Amerli and allowed in the first shipments of
food and water in nearly three months.
It took an odd coalition of Iraqi and Iranian militias backed by American
air support to drive off the ISIS fighters. But for long weeks before, the
minority Shiite Turkmens who live here held the line, waging a desperate
campaign for survival as they took up arms to protect the estimated 15,000
residents.
Continue reading the main story
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Amid daily shelling and at least four major assaults by ISIS, the people
subsisted on onion soup and dry bread. Children joined the front lines
during the day because there were not enough men for two shifts. Without gas
, families cooked on open fires fueled by sheep dung.
Photo
A militia fighter who defended Amerli. A coalition of militias backed by
American air support ultimately drove off the militants. Credit Andrea Bruce
for The New York Times
The siege of Amerli is thought to be the first time a town has managed to
keep the militants at bay since the group, which now calls itself the
Islamic State, began its march through wide areas of Iraq. By Monday, aid
from the United Nations had begun reaching the starving residents.
“The families in this village are so brave,” said Abu Abdullah, the
commander of the Kataib Hezbollah militia that aided the residents. “There
was no water, no electricity, no food and no milk for children, but they
stood and fought ISIS.”
On Tuesday, the colorful flags of at least four militias competed for
prominence on the streets and buildings of Amerli. Along with the banner of
Kataib Hezbollah, an Iraqi group unrelated to the better-known Lebanese
Hezbollah, were those of the Badr Brigades, Saraya al-Salam and Asaib Ahl al
-Haq.
The fact that American air power had helped was not as celebrated. Some of
the militiamen had fought the Americans after the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Mr. Abdullah spoke for many when he said, “We do not like the Americans,
and we didn’t need their airstrikes.”
In a video released Tuesday, the killer of Steven J. Sotloff, an American
journalist, made an apparent reference to the United States’ strikes near
Amerli.
In Amerli, Mr. Abdullah said his men had arrived on Iraqi military
helicopters about two weeks into the siege. They carried aid and weaponry,
but also specialized skills. Among them were experts in communications,
operations and explosives.
Mr. Abdullah said his forces had joined those inside Amerli to help beat
back the ISIS militants. He refused to say how many of his fighters had
assisted, to offer operational details or to expound on why his men had come
at all. He said only that his troops were willing to take on the mission.
“Everyone heard the calls for help, but not everyone answered,” he said.
“We answered.”
By the time the militias began arriving, ISIS had surrounded the town
entirely. To the west, they were two kilometers away; to the east, just 500
meters. Residents had dug giant trenches in the mud around Amerli. Some had
planted improvised explosive devices in the earth surrounding the town,
hoping to keep ISIS out.
Continue reading the main storyContinue reading the main storyContinue
reading the main story
They had been planning for a long time. The day Mosul fell, tribal leaders
in Amerli called a meeting in the town mosque to discuss their options, sure
that the militants would eventually reach them, according to one of the
leaders, Sheikh Shahab Ahmed Barash.
The men swore an oath on the Quran to protect the town. They would not flee
as others had. The leaders began to divide the town into areas, typically by
landmarks. One leader had the cemetery. Another had the tower.
ISIS made four major assaults on the town, sometimes with more than 100 men
at a time and the benefit of armored vehicles.
Continue reading the main storyVideo
PLAY VIDEO|1:46
Iraq’s Factions and Their Goals
Iraq’s Factions and Their Goals
The goals of of the three main groups in Iraq — Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish
— as the country threatens to split apart along sectarian lines. Video
Credit By Quynhanh Do and Christian Roman on Publish Date June 13, 2014.
Image CreditReuters
But the biggest fight the residents of Amerli faced was against hunger, as
the militants’ cordon kept supplies from entering.
During a series of interviews with commanders, several struggled to remember
exact dates that major attacks had occurred. Ibrahim Hamid Ali, an elder in
Amerli, believes the first assault began shortly after 6 p.m. on July 17,
when the militants stormed the perimeter the residents had set up.
“We were told not to leave our positions,” said Mr. Barash, who controls
an area in Amerli where about 200 families live. “If they broke through,
then we would decide what to do.”
Continue reading the main story
RECENT COMMENTS
Yes I Am Right 1 hour ago
Hillary's War proved horrendously expensive but we should have left 10,000+
troops there to protect our investment and sent the bill to...
B.D. 1 hour ago
In all seriousness, though, kudos to the town of Amerli for stepping up and
defending themselves. I'm glad their Beu Geste worked out.
B.D. 1 hour ago
it's not like we will gain any credits anyway, so simply go back in, retake
Syria and give it to who we want there. That worked out well.
SEE ALL COMMENTS WRITE A COMMENT
Mr. Barash and others said the fight lasted until dawn, when the Iraqi Air
Force began to hit the areas under the militants’ control. The ISIS
fighters slowly retreated, having been unable to breach the town, despite
trying from multiple fronts.
For the next several weeks, Mr. Barash said, the militants studied the
habits of the fighters for Amerli. They knew the town required boys to aid
in the defense, but only during the day, when the youths could see the enemy.
On what residents believe was Aug. 5, the ISIS fighters struck at 4:30 a.m.,
just as Amerli’s defenders were switching to the day shift. The militants
drove armored vehicles up to the mud berms, seizing a few houses on the edge
of the city, according to Mr. Barash and Mr. Ali.
Continue reading the main story
GRAPHIC
The Iraq-ISIS Conflict in Maps, Photos and Video
A visual guide to the crisis in Iraq and Syria.
OPEN GRAPHIC
The account was substantiated by video footage from ISIS fighters who later
abandoned those homes, leaving a flash drive that the Amerli fighters
recovered.
The defenders of Amerli began fighting along the edge of the town. Members
of Kataib Hezbollah fired mortars on the militants from inside the town.
While ISIS had armored vehicles, so did some of the defenders, including
members of the Iraqi military who had fled earlier but brought their Humvees
with them and decided to aid Amerli.
The Iraqi Air Force at one point accidentally struck an area with Amerli
fighters, residents said, wounding nine people. Eventually, after
coordination with forces on the ground, they corrected and began striking
areas farther from the town, residents said. By sunset, the militants began
to retreat.
As they surveyed the area afterward, Mr. Barash encountered several bodies
of ISIS fighters that the militants had not claimed. Standing over one, Mr.
Barash heard a phone ring from inside the insurgent’s pocket. He grabbed
the phone and spoke: “Come and take your body.”
But an old man answered, weeping. He told Mr. Barash that ISIS had taken his
son from him when they swept through his village. The militants had given
him a choice: He could give them his daughter or one of his sons.
Crying on the phone, the old man said his son was a teenager, not even old
enough for facial hair, and never learned how to fight.
“I told him I was sorry,” Mr. Barash said.
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相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: amerli话题: isis话题: iraq话题: mr话题: militants