IS torches oil wells near Tikrit

Published March 6, 2015
Tikrit: Smoke rising from an area in the city of Tikrit on Thursday.—AFP
Tikrit: Smoke rising from an area in the city of Tikrit on Thursday.—AFP

BAGHDAD: Fighters of the self-styled Islamic State (IS) group have set fire to oil wells northeast of the city of Tikrit to obstruct an assault by Shia militiamen and Iraqi soldiers trying to drive them from the city and surrounding towns, a witness said.

The witness and a military source said IS fighters ignited the fire at the Ajil oil field to shield themselves from attack by Iraqi military helicopters.

The offensive is the biggest Iraqi forces have yet mounted against IS, which has declared a ‘caliphate’ on captured territory in Iraq and Syria and spread fear across the region by slaughtering Arab and Western hostages and killing or kidnapping members of religious minorities like Yazidis and Christians.

Black smoke could be seen rising from the oil field since Wednesday afternoon, said the witness, who accompanied Iraqi militia and soldiers as they advanced on Tikrit from the east.

Control of oil fields has played an important part in funding IS, even if it lacks the technical expertise to run them at full capacity.

Before IS took over Ajil last June, the field produced 25,000 barrels per day of crude that were shipped to the Kirkuk refinery to the north-east, as well as 150 million cubic feet of gas per day piped to the government- controlled Kirkuk power station.

An engineer at the site, about 35km northeast of Tikrit, said last July that IS fighters were pumping lower volumes of oil from Ajil, fearing that their primitive extraction techniques could ignite the gas.

Bombing in August damaged the Ajil field’s control room, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

The outcome of the battle for Tikrit, best known as the hometown of executed president Saddam Hussein, will determine whether and how fast the Iraqi forces can advance further north and attempt to win back Mosul, the biggest city under IS control.

The army, backed by Shia militia and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, has yet to re-conquer and secure any city held by IS, despite seven months of air strikes by a US-led coalition, as well as weapons supplies and strategic support from neighbouring Iran.

Tehran, not Washington, has been the key player in the current offensive, with Iranian Revolutionary Guard general Qassem Soleimani seen directing operations on the eastern flank, and Iranian-backed militia leading much of the operation.

Iran’s regional rival Saudi Arabia expressed alarm on Thursday. “The situation in Tikrit is a prime example of what we are worried about. Iran is taking over the country,” Prince Saud al-Faisal, foreign minister of the kingdom, said after talks with US Secretary of State John Kerry.

A spokesman for the local Salahuddin tribal council said 4,000 Sunnis were also taking part in the Tikrit campaign, part of an overall force of more than 20,000 troops and militiamen.

Soldiers and militia are also advancing along the Tigris river from the north and south of Tikrit, preparing for a joint offensive expected in coming days. They are likely to attack first the towns of al-Dour and al-Alam to the south and north of Tikrit.

Their approach has been slowed by roadside bombs, snipers and suicide attacks.

An IS suicide bomber drove an explosives-laden tanker on Wednesday night into a camp on the eastern edge of al-Dour, killing a leader of the Iranian-backed Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia, Madi al-Kinani, and four others, a military source said.

Al-Ahd, the militia’s television channel, confirmed Kinani’s death on Thursday, when he was buried in the holy city of Najaf, south of the capital Baghdad.

A Salahuddin police source said an eight-vehicle convoy of IS insurgents attacked Iraqi forces at dawn on Thursday in al-Muaibidi, east of al-Alam. The source said the army returned fire, killing four militants and burning two of their cars.

Published in Dawn, March 6th, 2015

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