["We are thankful to the coalition for its intensified airstrikes
against Islamic State positions, which have been instrumental in
limiting the ability of our enemies to use tanks and heavy artillery.
But we had been fighting without any logistical assistance from the
outside world until the limited coalition airdrops of weapons and
supplies on Oct. 20. Airdrops of supplies should continue, so that we
do not run out of ammunition."]

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/29/opinion/turkeys-obstruction-of-kobanis-battle-against-isis.html?_r=0

A Town Shouldn't Fight the Islamic State Alone
Turkey's Obstruction of Kobani's Battle Against ISIS

By MEYSA ABDOOCT. 28, 2014

 Kurdish refugees near Turkey's border with Syria on Oct. 26, as smoke
rises over Kobani in the distance. Credit Yannis Behrakis/Reuters

Since Sept. 15, we, the people of the Syrian town of Kobani, have been
fighting, outnumbered and outgunned, against an all-out assault by the
army of the Islamic State, also known as ISIS.

Yet despite a campaign that has intensified in the past month,
including the deployment of United States-made tanks and armored
vehicles, the Islamic State has not been able to break the resistance
of Kobani's fighters.

We are defending a democratic, secular society of Kurds, Arabs,
Muslims and Christians who all face an imminent massacre.

Kobani's resistance has mobilized our entire society, and many of its
leaders, including myself, are women. Those of us on the front lines
are well aware of the Islamic State's treatment of women. We expect
women around the world to help us, because we are fighting for the
rights of women everywhere. We do not expect them to come to join our
fight here (though we would be proud if any did). But we do ask women
to promote our case and to raise awareness of our situation in their
own countries, and to pressure their governments to help us.

***We are thankful to the coalition for its intensified airstrikes
against Islamic State positions, which have been instrumental in
limiting the ability of our enemies to use tanks and heavy artillery.
But we had been fighting without any logistical assistance from the
outside world until the limited coalition airdrops of weapons and
supplies on Oct. 20. Airdrops of supplies should continue, so that we
do not run out of ammunition.*** [Emphasis added.]

None of that changes the reality that our weapons still cannot match
those of the Islamic State.

We will never give up. But we need more than merely rifles and
grenades to carry out our own responsibilities and aid the coalition
in its war against the jihadist forces. Currently, even when fighters
from other Kurdish regions in Northern Syria try to supply us with
some of their armored vehicles and antitank missiles, Turkey has not
allowed them to do so.

Turkey, a NATO member, should have been an ally in this conflict. It
could easily have helped us by allowing access between different
Syrian Kurdish areas, so as to let fighters and supplies move back and
forth through Turkish territory.

Instead, the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has several
times publicly equated our fighters, who are defending a diverse and
democratic society, with the murderous Islamic State, evidently
because of the controversy surrounding Turkey's Kurdish minority.

Last week, following domestic and international criticism, Turkish
leaders at last said they would open a corridor for a small group of
Iraqi pesh merga fighters, and some Free Syrian Army brigades, to
cross into Kobani. But they still will not allow other Syrian Kurds to
cross Turkish territory to reach us. This has been decided without
consulting us.

As a result, the Islamic State can bring in endless amounts of new
supplies and ammunition, but we are still effectively blockaded on all
sides -- on three by the Islamic State's forces, and on the fourth by
Turkish tanks. There is evidence that Turkish forces have allowed the
Islamic State's men and equipment to move back and forth across the
border. But Syrian Kurdish fighters cannot do the same.

The Turkish government is pursuing an anti-Kurdish policy against the
Syrian Kurds, and their priority is to suppress the Kurdish freedom
movement in Northern Syria. They want Kobani to fall.

We have never been hostile to Turkey. We want to see it as a partner,
not an enemy, and we believe that it is in the Turkish government's
interest to have a border with the democratic administration of a
western Kurdistan rather than one with the Islamic State.

Western governments should increase their pressure on Turkey to open a
corridor for Syrian Kurdish forces and their heavy weapons to reach
the defenders of Kobani through the border. We believe that such a
corridor, and not only the limited transport of other fighters that
Turkey has proposed, should be opened under the supervision of the
United Nations.

We have proved ourselves to be one of the only effective forces
battling the Islamic State in Syria. Whenever we meet them on equal
terms, they are always defeated. If we had more weapons and could be
joined by more of our fighters from elsewhere in Syria, we would be in
a position to strike a deadly blow against the Islamic State, one that
we believe would ultimately lead to its dissolution across the region
as a whole.

The people of Kobani need the attention and help of the world.

Meysa Abdo, who is also known by the nom de guerre Narin Afrin, is a
commander of the resistance in Kobani.

This article was translated from the Kurdish for the New York Times by
Güney Yildiz.

A version of this op-ed appears in print on October 29, 2014, in The
International New York Times.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to