Yorkshire soldiers are in Iraq close to the front line in the fight between the Islamic State terrorists and Kurdish fighters.

A “small specialist team” from the 2nd Battalion the Yorkshire Regiment, which recruits heavily from Huddersfield, Kirklees and Calderdale, is based near the Kurdish capital of Erbil in northern Iraq.

They are in the war-torn region training Peshmerga forces in the use of heavy machine guns the UK supplied to them in September.

A Sunday newspaper reported that the soldiers were from the Yorkshire Regiment, which is based in Cyprus.

British soldiers are in Iraq and working close to the front line of the fight between the Islamic State (IS) and Kurdish fighters, the MoD said.
British soldiers are in Iraq and working close to the front line of the fight between the Islamic State (IS) and Kurdish fighters, the MoD said.

An Ministry of Defence spokeswoman said: “The Government has previously made clear its intention to provide training to the Peshmerga as part of the continued effort to assist in the fight against Isil (IS).

“The Defence Secretary has approved the deployment of a small specialist team of non-combat Army trainers which is now in the Erbil area providing instruction on operating, employing and maintaining the heavy machine guns that were gifted by the UK last month.”

British troops invaded Iraq in March 2003 to overthrow Saddam Hussein. The last combat troops with Operation Telic, as it was called, left in April 2009, with a small number staying on to train Iraqi forces until 2011.

RAF Tornado fighter-bombers have been taking part in US-led bombing raids on IS, also known as Isil or Isis, for a fortnight. But there is strong resistance among politicians to any ground troop involvement in fighting against the Islamist group, which controls a vast swathe of Iraq and neighbouring Syria.