The Jerusalem Post

Iraqi units fight Kurds in push to oil hub

- • By MAHER CHMAYTELLI

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Iraqi pro-government paramilita­ries on Tuesday launched an offensive against Kurdish troops near the Turkish frontier, pushing towards a strategic border crossing and oil-export pipeline hub that Baghdad says must come under its control.

The Iraqi government has transforme­d the balance of power in the north of the country since opening a campaign last week to take back territory from the Kurds, who govern an autonomous region of three northern provinces and have seized a swath of other territory in northern Iraq.

The Kurds held a referendum on independen­ce last month that Baghdad called illegal. Baghdad responded by seizing back the city of Kirkuk, the surroundin­g oil-producing areas and other territory the Kurds captured from Islamic State.

Prime Minister Haidar Abadi ordered his army to recapture all disputed territory. He has also demanded central control of Iraq’s border crossings with Turkey, all of which are inside the Kurdish autonomous region.

A Kurdish official said Kurdish security forces known as Peshmerga had successful­ly beaten back an advance by Iranian-backed pro-government paramilita­ries in the region of Rabi’a, 40 km. south of the FishKhabur border area.

Fish-Khabur is strategica­lly vital because oil from both Kurdish and government-held parts of northern Iraq cross at a pipeline there into Turkey, the main route out of the area for internatio­nal export, crucial for any Kurdish independen­ce bid.

The fighting has thus far taken place outside the Kurdish autonomous region. But Fish-Khabur is located within the region. So any assault on the border crossing would mark a major escalation, bringing government troops into undisputed Kurdish territory.

An Iraqi military spokesman denied there had been any clashes in the area. But an Iraqi security source in Baghdad and a rights activist in northwest Iraq said the confrontat­ion had started at dawn and was still going on by midday.

“Peshmerga repelled the attack and pushed Popular Mobilizati­on back in to Rabi’a,” tweeted KRG President Masoud Barzani’s media adviser Hemin Hawrami. A military spokesman in Baghdad said in response: “There are no clashes.”

The fighting is particular­ly tricky for the United States, which is close allies of both sides, arming and training both the Kurds and the central government’s army to fight against Islamic State.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited Baghdad this week. Abadi rebuffed his call for Iraq to reject the role of Iranbacked Shi’ite paramilita­ries that fight alongside government troops and take a hard line on the Kurds.

On Monday, an official of the Kurdistan Regional Government’s Security Council said Iraqi government forces and Iranian-backed Popular Mobilizati­on paramilita­ries were deploying tanks and artillery in Rabi’a, northwest of Mosul.

The Syrian side of the border is under the control of US-backed Syrian Kurdish forces. The FishKhabur crossing has been under effective Kurdish control since 1991, when the US and Western powers imposed a no-fly zone over northern Iraq to protect the Kurds from Saddam Hussein’s army.

The Iraqi government’s advance over the past week has been achieved with comparativ­ely little violence, with Kurds mostly withdrawin­g without a fight.

Neverthele­ss, Amnesty Internatio­nal reported that at least 11 civilians were killed and tens of thousands displaced from Kurdish areas of Tuz Khurmato, a town south of Kirkuk. It said images, videos, photos and dozens of testimonie­s indicated that hundreds of properties had been looted in a rampage targeting Kurdish parts of the ethnically mixed town.

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