Siniyah surrounded, cleared, walled off
Siniya is the main town near Iraq's largest oil refinery
WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 (UPI) -- U.S. and Iraqi troops have cleared a small city in Iraq of residents and erected a 12-foot high dirt wall.
The eight-mile berm wraps around the town Siniyah of Salah ah Din province like a horseshoe, according to U.S. Central Command. It is topped by razor wire and surveillance posts.
The clear-hold-berm approach has been used successfully in places like Fallujah and Tall Afar to limit physical access to the towns, forcing traffic -- both vehicular and foot -- to move through controlled access points. There is now just one route in and out of Siniyah.
Siniyah is a small town near Bayji where there is a critical oil refinery that services northern Iraq and exports to Turkey and other locations. It suffered a spike in roadside bombs and attacks on coalition and Iraqi forces in late 2005. Locals insisted the problem was coming from outsiders - people moving in from the Syrian desert to disrupt Iraq. The entire local police force of more than 100 in Siniyah quit on Oct. 24, citing terrorist attacks and threats against their family. Two weeks later, the police station was destroyed by attacks. The city council quit and so did the mayor, according to a news release issued by U.S. Central Command.
Read the rest at UPI
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