Below, the link to a progress report on the battle of Kobani by the Turkish 
journalist Cengiz Çandar who visited the front a few days ago. Çandar  believes 
the "Stalingrad of the Kurds" - stubbornly defended for the past two months by 
the YPG/J militia, composed equally of young Kurdish women and men -  probably 
marks "the beginning of the end of IS in military terms." 

Since the YPG/J recaptured a strategic hill overlooking Kobani and cut the main 
IS supply route, "the military balance has decidedly turned", Çandar says. The 
feeling now is that if the IS is expelled from the city, it won't be able to 
withstand American-led air strikes in the exposed rural terrain and will be be 
quickly rolled back across northern Syria. 

Çandar watched the air strikes in and around Kobani from the Turkish side of 
the border opposite, together with the city's Kurdish refugees. Outside of 
America's black communities, Obama is probably nowhere more popular than in the 
refugee camps. Both the refugees and the Turkish troops stationed on the border 
credit the US intervention with having saved the city from falling and its 
defenders massacred.

A major issue is what will become of the refugees when Kobani and the wider 
self-governing Kurdish commune of Rojava is liberated. Their homes and services 
have been destroyed and it is presently unclear whether the city will be 
rebuilt and where the reconstruction aid will come from. The same is true on a 
larger scale of the greater number of other Syrians who have been displaced by 
the brutal and many-sided civil war.

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/11/turkey-syria-isis-kobani-kurds-pyd-pkk.html?utm_source=Al-Monitor+Newsletter+%5BEnglish%5D&utm_campaign=95305be367-November_19_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_28264b27a0-95305be367-102408969


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