You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Iraq
Kurds flee homes as Iran shells villages in Iraq
2007-08-20
Iraqi Kurdish officials expressed deepening concern yesterday at an upsurge in fierce clashes between Kurdish guerrillas and Iranian forces in the remote border area of north-east Iraq, where Tehran has recently deployed thousands of Revolutionary Guards.

Jabar Yawar, a deputy minister in the Kurdistan regional government, said four days of intermittent shelling by Iranian forces had hit mountain villages high up on the Iraqi side of the border, wounding two women, destroying livestock and property, and displacing about 1,000 people from their homes. Mr Yawer said there had also been intense fighting on the Iraqi border between Iranian forces and guerrillas of the Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK), an armed Iranian Kurdish group that is stepping up its campaign for Kurdish rights against the theocratic regime in Tehran.

On Saturday the Iranian news agency Mehr said an Iranian army helicopter which crashed killing six Republican Guard members had been engaged in a military operation against PJAK. Iranian officials said the helicopter had crashed into the side of a mountain during bad weather in northern Iraq. PJAK sources said the helicopter had been destroyed after it attempted to land in a clearing mined by guerrillas. The PJAK sources claimed its guerrillas had also killed at least five other Iranian soldiers, and a local pro-regime chief, Hussein Bapir.

"If this escalates it could pose a real threat to the Kurdistan region, which is Iraq's most stable area," said Mr Yawar, who said he expected the Iraqi government and US officials in Iraq to make a formal protest to Tehran about the "blatant violation of Iraqi sovereignty".

The escalation of tensions in northern Iraq came as a senior US army officer renewed allegations of Iranian support for Shia militias in the south. Major-General Rick Lynch told reporters in the capital that up to 50 members of the elite Revolutionary Guard corps had crossed into Iraq and were training Shia militia members.

Analysts believe PJAK is the fastest growing armed resistance group in Iran. As well as the 3,000 or so members under arms in the mountains, it also claims tens of thousands of followers in secret cells in Iranian Kurdistan. Its campaigning on women's rights has struck a chord with young Iranian Kurdish women. The group says 45% of its fighters are female. Iranian authorities regard the group as a terrorist outfit being sponsored and armed by the US to increase pressure on Iran.

On a recent visit to PJAK camps in the Qandil mountains the Guardian saw no evidence of American weaponry. The majority of its fighters toted Soviet-era Kalashnikovs. In an interview Biryar Gabar, a member of the leadership committee, said the group had no relations with the Americans, but was "open to any group that shares our ideals of a free federal democratic and secular Iran."
Posted by:lotp

#10  Its about time to start poisoning some of these guys.
Posted by: Mike N.    2007-08-20 23:58  

#9  I've gotta agree that there has to come a time (very soon) to publicly confront Iran and smack the shit off their smile. IEDs can work for others, you know? Collapse of their economic system is an option. Killing of Iranian forces shelling across an international border is order one. Once the cars are idle due to refinery/shipment stoppage, let's see who "punches" who
Posted by: Frank G   2007-08-20 22:32  

#8  four days of intermittent shelling by Iranian forces had hit mountain villages high up on the Iraqi side of the border

What is it going to take for Iran to finally be on the receiving end of a major smackdown? Especially hilarious is the following:

Iranian authorities regard the group as a terrorist outfit being sponsored and armed by the US

How priceless. One of this world's principal terrorist sponsors squawking about how the USA sponsors terrorism. Iran has run up such an enormous kharmic tab whereby not even first use of nuclear weapons against them could possibly justify accusations of "terrorism".

If I were not so used to Islam's incredible levels of cognitive dissonance, this might have surprised or amused me. Instead, all it does is confirm how woefully inadequate our responses have been to Iran's constant provocations. There is no reasonable explanation for why Tehran's mullahs are not all taking one huge collective dirt nap.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-08-20 21:31  

#7  Hasn't the US government (i.e. State Department) bought up a whole bunch of knock-off AK-47s and then a whole bunch of them disappeared? Would the reporter be able to tell these from genuine Soviet era Kalashnikovs?
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2007-08-20 14:41  

#6  Soviet Era Kalishnikovs?

Them's some OLD rifles then.

(Moron reporter probably didn't realize what he had just said).
Posted by: OldSpook   2007-08-20 14:08  

#5  Additional info:
Iranian troops are reportedly massing along the northeastern stretch of the Iran-Iraq border near Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, sources in Hajj Omran town in the northern Arbil province said Sunday.

The unnamed Kurdish source said Iranian forces looked about to launch a large-scale offensive targeting members of the Kurdish workers' party and the Party for Freedom and Life known as PJAK.

Members of the 'rebel' groups, who fiercely oppose the governments of Iran and Turkey, are said to be based near mountains that stretch along the borders with Iran.

On Saturday, unconfirmed Iranian reports had said that they succeeded in shooting down an Iranian helicopter involved in military manoeuvres in northeastern Iran.
Posted by: Sherry   2007-08-20 10:58  

#4  I think it would be smart to start a hot war all along the Iraq/Iran border and get the well trained Iraqi forces into it. Give our air superiority something to do and scare the shit outta Basher de Asshat.
Posted by: wxjames   2007-08-20 10:37  

#3  I am not for sponsoring terrorists or terrorists activities like we did in Afganistan against the Soviets.
Look how that has come back to bite us.
So I would not want to support any group using terrorist activities.
But if thousands of IRG are threatening on the border, and since they should be considered terrorists,
they should be considered an appropriate and an attractive target for JDAMs.
Posted by: Push over pushes back   2007-08-20 03:42  

#2  Nevertheless Pappy, Let's see just how long Super "W" turns the other cheek on this one. He's primed for alittle Iranian butt kicking, but it's getting awfully close to the time to 'fish or cut bait'! Less of course he'd like to see the Mullahs establish a beachhead in northern Iraq for future 'chess moves'!
Posted by: smn   2007-08-20 01:29  

#1  Iranian authorities regard the group as a terrorist outfit being sponsored and armed by the US to increase pressure on Iran. On a recent visit to PJAK camps in the Qandil mountains the Guardian saw no evidence of American weaponry. The majority of its fighters toted Soviet-era Kalashnikovs.

Nothing gets by those Grauniad journalists...
Posted by: Pappy   2007-08-20 00:17  

00:00