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by Staff Writers Beirut (AFP) June 22, 2014
Jihadists fighting in Syria's war put to use for the first time on Sunday American-made Humvees that they seized during a lightening offensive in Iraq this month, a monitor said. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL, used the armoured vehicles to capture the villages of Eksar and Maalal in Aleppo province, which borders Turkey, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. It came after heavy fighting against the Islamic Front and its Al-Qaeda-affiliated ally, the Al-Nusra Front, said the Observatory, a Britain-based group that gets its information from a network of sources on the ground. The two villages are located near the town of Azaz, which ISIL militiamen abandoned at the end of February under attack from rebels fighting to oust Syria's President Bashar al-Assad. ISIL, which espouses a radical interpretation of Islam and aims to set up a state stretching across the Syria-Iraq border, is now expected to launch a bid to retake Azaz. ISIL seized the Humvees and sent them to Syria after Iraqi soldiers abandoned them during a surprise Sunni jihadist offensive that claimed Iraq's second city of Mosul and swathes of other territory in mid-June. Also on Sunday, ISIL gunmen abducted 20 Kurdish students on the road between Hasakeh and Qamishli in northeastern Syria, said the Observatory. It comes three weeks after ISIL kidnapped 145 Kurdish students in Aleppo, as well as 193 Kurdish civilians at Qabasine village in the same province. Parents of five students who managed to escape said the jihadists demanded that they join them in the fighting. Kurdish militias, who are also trying to expand their autonomous region, have fought for months with ISIL, which has been seeking to seize from their control oil fields in northern and eastern areas.
Iraq militants threaten other countries: Obama The jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) is rampaging towards the capital Baghdad in its bid to create an Islamic state that will incorporate both Iraq and Syria. But Obama, who has ruled out putting US combat troops once again on the ground in Iraq, says he fears the militants could have an even more widespread impact, while also warning that "their extreme ideology poses a medium and long-term threat" to the United States. "We're going to have to be vigilant generally. Right now the problem with ISIS is the fact that they're destabilizing the country (Iraq)," he said in an interview aired Sunday on CBS television's "Face the Nation". "That could spill over into some of our allies like Jordan," he said, adding: "They are engaged in wars in Syria where -- in that vacuum that's been created -- they could amass more arms, more resources." ISIS is another common acronym used to describe ISIL. Obama, who was speaking on Friday, believes however that Iraqis will ultimately reject the extremist Sunni group that is threatening to tear the country apart, just three years after American troops withdrew. "The thing about an organization like this is that typically when they control territory, because they're so violent, because they're so extreme -- over time, the local populations reject them," Obama said. "We've seen that time and time again. We saw it during the Iraq war in places like Anbar Province, where Sunni tribes suddenly turned against them because of their extreme ideology." Obama, who has warned that no amount of US firepower could keep Iraq together if its political leaders do not work to unite the country, cautioned: "But I think it's important for us to recognize that ISIS is just one of a number of organizations that we have to stay focused on. "Al-Qaeda in Yemen is still very active and we're staying focused on that. "In North Africa, you're seeing organizations including Boko Haram that kidnapped all those young women that is extreme and violent. "And this is going to be a global challenge and one that the United States is going to have to address, but we're not going to be able to address it alone." Republican Senator Rand Paul, a prospective 2016 presidential contender, told CNN's "State of the Union" program that he fears civil war will break out in Iraq. "But there will be a civil war with feckless people on one side who are allies of Iran, and on the other side, allies of Al-Qaeda," he said. "You have to ask yourself: are you willing to send your son? Am I willing to send my son to retake back a city, Mosul, that they weren't willing to defend themselves? I'm not willing to send my son into that mess."
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