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TERROR WARS
Turkey hits IS after deadly strikes on Syria border town
By Fulya OZERKAN
Ankara (AFP) April 13, 2016


Pentagon says first step in anti-IS battle in Iraq, Syria 'complete'
Washington (AFP) April 13, 2016 - The US-led coalition campaign against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria has successfully completed its first "phase" of operations, a US military spokesman said Wednesday.

The coalition is working through three main steps as it wages its 20-month-old fight against the IS group, Baghdad-based spokesman Colonel Steve Warren said.

"Our enemy has been weakened and we now are working to fracture him. Phase one of the military campaign is complete," Warren told Pentagon reporters, noting that this initial step was to "degrade" the IS group by stopping it from making additional territorial gains.

"We are now in phase two, which is to dismantle this enemy," he added.

Warren said the final phase of the campaign is to ensure the IS group is dealt a lasting defeat, primarily by enabling local forces to prevent a resurgence of jihadist influence.

On Tuesday, Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken said IS's ranks have been pared back in Iraq and Syria to their lowest level since Washington began monitoring the group.

Though the IS group maintains a firm grip on vast areas of the two countries, the jihadists have suffered some serious setbacks including the loss of Ramadi in Iraq.

"While ISIL can still put together some complex attacks, they have not been able to take hold of any key terrain for almost a year now," Warren said, using an IS acronym.

"We've struck leaders, supply lines, fighters, industrial base and funding sources in both Iraq and Syria."

Turkey's armed forces on Wednesday launched new artillery strikes on jihadist positions in Syria, after three days of deadly fire on a Turkish border town that has left residents on edge.

Kilis, which lies just a few kilometres from the border with Syria, has been hit by fire from Katyusha-type rockets every day this week raising concerns over its vulnerability.

Two people were killed by shelling from an area controlled by Islamic State (IS) jihadists on Tuesday and four more rockets hit the town on Wednesday but caused no injuries, a Turkish official said.

Speaking in Ankara, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu confirmed Turkish troops had hit IS positions in Syria.

In a sign of Ankara's alarm over the repeated firing on Kilis, Defence Minister Ismet Yilmaz, powerful intelligence chief Hakan Fidan and top general Hulusi Akar visited the town on Wednesday to investigate the situation.

Addressing a press conference there, Yilmaz confirmed Turkish artillery hit areas controlled by IS and warned against any further attacks on Turkey.

"If they harm Turkey, they will be subjected to much more," Yilmaz said. "Whoever is friendly with Turkey will find it is to their benefit."

Yilmaz also said the government had established a commission to compensate residents for their losses.

- A town of refugees -

In Ankara, Davutoglu also warned that those who attacked Turkey would pay "the heaviest price", insisting that the government was determined to protect its citizens from the latest cycle of violence.

Dozens of people had rallied in the centre of Kilis on Tuesday to demand protection from the shelling, Turkish media reports said.

The violence comes after IS militants wrested back control of the town of Al-Rai near the Turkish border, which rival rebels had captured last week.

Kilis, a town of just under 100,000, is the only major urban centre in Turkey which now has a majority of Syrians after the influx of refugees from the civil war.

Neither the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Al-Nusra Front nor IS are included in a truce brokered by the United States and Russia that came into force on February 27.

Washington has applauded Turkey's role in the anti-IS coalition but US officials on occasion have urged Ankara to do more.

In a separate development, Turkey's army opened fire on a group of four people -- one man and three women -- who attempted to cross into the border town of Karkamis late Tuesday from IS-held Jarablus in Syria, local media reported.

The man, a Turk, was injured and later died in hospital and the women -- one Turk and two Moroccans -- were detained on suspicion of being IS members, the Dogan news agency reported.

The women were to be brought to court on charges of "membership in an armed terrorist organisation" and "violation of a special security region," it added.

In a separate development, a spokesman for Angela Merkel said the German chancellor was not planning to travel to Turkey this week to inaugurate a new Syrian refugee centre, contradicting a previous announcement by Ankara.

The announcement comes as diplomatic tensions soared between Berlin and Ankara over a vulgar satirical poem by German TV comic.


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Previous Report
TERROR WARS
IS ranks at lowest level since 2014: US official
Washington (AFP) April 12, 2016
The Islamic State group's ranks have been pared back by international and local military action in Iraq and Syria to their lowest level since Washington began monitoring the group, a senior official said Tuesday. The comments from deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken came one day before President Barack Obama was due to convene his national security team at CIA headquarters to take stock ... read more


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