Kurdish peshmerga forces detain Islamic State militants southwest of Kirkuk, Iraq, Oct. 5, 2017. REUTERS/Ako Rasheed
Mahmut Bozarslan, Al-Monitor: Is Islamic State back in Kirkuk?
DIYARBAKIR, Turkey — In the last week of December, an armed group ambushed a convoy on the Kirkuk-Hawija road in Iraq, killing seven people. Iraqi security forces couldn’t track the attackers. The identities of those killed were determined quickly: They were Col. Fazil Sebawi of the Iraqi police, his son and five bodyguards.
Shortly afterward, reports of another attack came from south of Kirkuk. Walid Nuri, the leader of the Jiheshad tribe and commander of Hashd al-Ashayer forces southwest of Kirkuk, his wife and son were killed.
Nobody could explain the attacks. After ousting Kurdish forces from Kirkuk, the Iraqi army and Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) had imposed total control over the area and ensured its security. However, the Islamic State (IS) soon claimed responsibility for both attacks.
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WNU Editor: This type of low-intensity warfare is probably going to be the new normal in these parts of Iraq.
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