NEAR SINJAR TOWN: Kurdish peshmerga forces backed by US air strikes seized the Iraqi town of Sinjar from Islamic State yesterday, a witness said, in one of the most significant counter-attacks since the militants swept through the north last year.
“ISIL defeated and on the run,” the Kurdistan regional security council said in a tweet, using an acronym for Islamic State. It said the peshmerga had secured Sinjar’s wheat silo, cement factory, hospital and several other public buildings.
Iraqi Kurdish regional President Massoud Barzani also declared victory in an offensive that could provide critical momentum in efforts to capture the western provincial capital Ramadi, and Mosul in the north, an Islamic State bastion. “The liberation of Sinjar will have a big impact on liberating Mosul,” Barzani told reporters atop Mount Sinjar, overlooking the town.
In the Sinjar area itself, the operation severed vital supply routes used by IS to move fighters, weapons and oil and other illicit commodities that provide funding for its self-proclaimed caliphate. Civilians appeared to have fled the town before the operation began. But it was still not clear if most IS militants had carried out a tactical withdrawal. Kurdish forces, backed by US air strikes and volunteers from Iraq’s Yazidi minority entered Sinjar yesterday after cutting it off from east and west.
The Kurdistan council said peshmerga forces had entered Sinjar “from all directions” to begin clearing remaining insurgents. A correspondent saw hundreds of peshmerga fighters walking into the town and along a main road without facing immediate resistance.
Reuters