British and
American forces landed Wednesday Aug 13,20144 on Iraq's Mount Sinjar, but plans to
airlift as many as 30,000 starving and dying Yazidi refugees thought to
be stranded there are not likely moving forward.
That's because most of the people are no longer there.
Pentagon
spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said in a statement that 'there are
far fewer Yazidis on Mt. Sinjar than previously feared, in part because
of humanitarian air drops [and] air strikes on [ISIS] targets.'
Also
helpful, he said, were 'the efforts of the Peshmerga and the ability of
thousands of Yazidis to evacuate from the mountain.'
U.S. officials said Marines and special
forces flew in on black hawk helicopters, and departed after spending 24
hours assessing the military situation and the potential for a
civilian evacuation route.
Displaced Iraqi families from the Yazidi community in Sanjir cross the Iraqi-Syrian border at Fishkhabur
Displaced Iraqi families from the Yazidi community in Sanjir cross the Iraqi-Syrian border at Fishkhabur
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