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Wednesday, 22 October 2014
ISIS: 'We've Got Your Weapons Now' - Terrorist Group Mock US
In a video footage released by ISIS, one of its
fighters is seen in the desert land with a stack
of boxes attached to a parachute.
A US airdrop of weapons to besieged Kurds in
Kobani seems to have missed its target and
ended up in the hands of Islamic State
militants.
In a video footage released by ISIS, one of its
fighters is seen in the desert land with a stack of
boxes attached to a parachute.
The boxes are opened by the militant to show an
array of weapons, some rusty, some new. A
canister is broken out to reveal a hand grenade.
The Guardian UK » reports that the Pentagon
said it is investigating the claim but admitted that
one of its airdrops had gone missing. If
confirmed, it would be an embarrassment for the
US, given the advanced precision technology
available to its air force.
The seemingly bungled airdrop comes against a
steady stream of US-supplied weapons being lost
to Isis forces, mainly from the dysfunctional Iraqi
army. Isis is reported to have stolen seven
American M1 Abrams tanks from three Iraqi army
bases in Anbar province last week.
The Pentagon spokesman, Rear Admiral John
Kirby, told reporters that analysts at Centcom
headquarters in Tampa, Florida, were examining
the video. “We’re still taking a look at it and
assessing the validity of it,” he said. “So I honestly
don’t know if that was one of the one dropped.”
The US began dropping munitions, supplied by
Kurdish authorities in the semi-autonomous
region of northern Iraq, to their compatriots in
Kobani, which sits close the Iraqi-Turkish border;
Isis fighters have encircled much of the town.
Kirby confirmed the weapons shown in the video
were the kind that was dropped. “So it’s not out of
the realm of the possibility in that regard.
“I do want to add, though, that we are very
confident that the vast majority of the bundles
did end up in the right hands. In fact, we’re only
aware of one bundle that did not.”
The airdrops were carried out by three C-130
planes. The video shows a man in camouflage
clothes and balaclava looking through the boxes
of munitions. He says the munitions were
dropped by US forces and had been intended for
the Kurds. He described them as the spoils of war.
As well as grenades, the boxes appeared to
contain parts for rocket-propelled grenades.
Some of the equipment appears to be east
European in origin, which might seem odd given
the weapons were dropped by Americans, but the
munitions were supplied by the Kurdish
authorities who had been stocking up.
Kirby said the situation in Kobani remained tense,
with Kurdish forces in control of most of the city.
The US-led coalition has mounted more than 130
air strikes round the town in an effort to stop Isis
taking complete control.
While the US has carried out air strikes in Kobani,
cloud cover last week prevented them hitting
much of the rest of Iraq, particularly around the
contested Mosul dam. If the dam was to fall to I, it
would provide huge leverage for the group, a
strategic loss with potentially catastrophic
consequences.
Britain has been supplying the Kurdish semi-
autonomous region with weapons but so far
supplies have been limited. The Kurds report
receiving about 40 heavy machine guns but say
they badly need heavier equipment, in particular
armoured vehicles.
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