Wednesday, 15 October 2014
American fighter joins Kurds in battle against Islamic State
QAMISHLI Syria
(Reuters) - After months in which the United States and European
countries issued warnings about their citizens traveling to Syria fight
on behalf of Islamic State, there are new reports of Westerners going to
fight on the other side, against the militants.
A man who said he is a U.S. citizen and former soldier
from Ohio said in a video interview inside Syria that he had come to
join Kurdish fighters to battle Islamic State.
Other Americans were also fighting there on behalf of a
Syrian Kurdish group, said the man, who identified himself as Brian
Wilson and spoke to a freelance photographer working for Reuters in
Syria.
"Most
people in America are against Daesh of course, Islamic State," Wilson
said, sitting with four Kurdish fighters and dressed in green camouflage
clothes in the northeast Syrian Kurdish city of Qamishli. Daesh is the
Arabic acronym for Islamic State.
"There are a few Americans who wanted to come here and
help the YPG in any way we can," he said, referring to the main Kurdish
group fighting against Islamist militants in Syria.
Wilson is the second American known to have joined the YPG
forces. Jordan Matson, a 28-year-old from Wisconsin, is also fighting
with the YPG, a spokesman for the armed group said last week. He has
given an interview to a Kurdish TV station.
Islamic State tightened its siege of the YPG-held Syrian
Kurdish town of Kobani on Tuesday despite U.S.-led air strikes meant to
weaken the group. The fighting has sent more than 180,000 refugees into
Turkey since last month.
The United States has been striking Islamic State targets in
Iraq since August and extended the campaign to Syria in September.
Washington is supplying weapons to Kurdish fighters in
Iraq to help them battle Islamic State, but does not have an official
policy of helping Kurdish groups in Syria.
Wilson, who looked middle aged and had his head shaved,
said he met YPG fighters through "Kurdish contacts". He said he had not
yet engaged in combat.
"Everything has been fine. They're very nice, very
accommodating, hospitable. Very good people," he said of his hosts.
Western countries say scores of their citizens have
traveled to Syria to fight on behalf of Islamic State, a phenomenon
hammered home in videos showing the beheadings of hostages apparently by
a fighter with a British accent.
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