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Gone Berserk: Norwegians Fight Daesh Alongside Peshmerga

© Sputnik / Ari JalalMembers of the Kurdish peshmerga forces gather in the town of Sinjar, Iraq. File photo
Members of the Kurdish peshmerga forces gather in the town of Sinjar, Iraq. File photo - Sputnik International
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Last week, Norway announced plans to enhance its support for the US-led international operation against Daesh, which previously came under fire for being passive, single-sided and aimed at ousting President Bashar Assad rather that actually combatting terrorism. However, a number of Norwegians have decided to take matters into their own hands.

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According to the newspaper Dagbladet, a number of Norwegians (both ethnic Norwegians and Norwegians with Kurdish backgrounds) have joined the Kurdish Peshmerga militia so far.

One of them is "Mike", who was trained to be an elite soldier at the Telemark Battalion in Norway. Now, "Mike" is fighting in northern Iraq alongside several other fellow Norwegians, facing desperate Daesh terrorists in suicide bombings and sneak attacks.

"Mike" is stationed in Duhok north of the Daesh-occupied Iraqi metropolis of Mosul (which in 2008 had a population of 1.8 million people and was Iraq's second largest city). "Mike" is part of the Duhok Anti-Terror Unit, where local volunteers fight under the leadership of the Kurdish general Wahid Kolve.

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By his own admission, "Mike" took part in Peshmerga's liberation of the Yezidi town of Sinjar last year, which formerly terrorized by Daesh. "Mike" also told Dagbladet that the terrorists make frequent use of chemical weapons against both US Navy SEALs and Peshmerga Forces.

Commander Per Christian Gundersen of the National Defense College's Media Group, is not surprised that the hard-pressed Daesh are trying to fight back.

"Daesh is on the wane. In this case, attempts at a counter-attack are not unnatural," Commander Gundersen said.

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According to him, Daesh is on the defense in both Syria and Iraq. The terrorist organization is struggling both financially and militarily, noted Gundersen.

"It is only a matter of time before Daesh relinquishes control of its two major cities, Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq," he said, citing the loss Daesh was inflicted at Kobani by the Kurdish forces.

The Kurdish Peshmerga, headquartered in Erbil and numbering up to 200,000 members, are considered to be the most effective ground-based force fighting against Daesh, and they have managed to win back significant swathes of territory in northern Iraq which were once controlled by the terrorists.

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