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ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

A place to post daily news of Kurdistan from valid sources .

Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 9:22 am

اكدت تقارير معلوماتية سحب مليارات الدولارات من خزينة البنك المركزي العراقي حيث جرى نقلها بسيارات مصفحة من البنك المركزي في بغداد إلى المنطقة الخضراء حيث مقر اقامة رئيس الوزراء نوري وبقية قادة السلطة.
وقالت قناة التغيير ان لجنة إيرانية – عراقية تتسلم المبالغ التي تم سحبها من الاحتياطيات العراقية باشراف المالكي حيث سيتم نقلها إلى طهران اليوم الجمعة أوغدا السبت .. وتساءلت عن دور محافظ البنك المركزي وكالة عبد الباسط التركي والمسؤولين الكبار في الدولة وقادة البلد إزاء عملية السرقة هذه.
ولفتت انظار الأمم المتحدة والمجتمع الدولي لتحايل إيران على العقوبات الدولية المفروضة عليها وطالبت العالم أجمع بتحمل مسؤولياته إزاء محاولة النظام الإيراني الاستيلاء على مليارات الدولارات من أموال الشعب العراقي.
وترابط طائرة خاصة حاليا في احد زوايا مطار بغداد الدولي تمهيدا للاقلاع نحو طهران خلال الساعات المقبلة وهي تنقل مليارات الدوولارات هي ثروة العراقيين ومصدر قوتهم

Informational reports confirmed the withdrawal of billions of dollars from the Iraqi Central Bank coffers have been moved armored vehicles from the Central Bank in Baghdad's green zone, where the residence of the Prime Minister and other leaders.

Channel change that Iranian-Iraqi Committee will receive the amounts that are withdrawn from Iraq under Maliki's reserves will be transferred to Tehran Friday unopposed Saturday. She asked about the role of the Central Bank Governor said Abdel Basset Turki and senior officials in the State and the country about the theft.

She drew the attention of the United Nations and the international community for Iran to circumvent UN sanctions and called on the world to assume its responsibilities towards the Iranian regime's attempt to grab billions of dollars from the funds of the Iraqi people.

And coherence of a private jet in one of the corners of Baghdad international airport for departure to Tehran in the coming hours they convey billion aldoolarat is wealth and the source of strength (Translated by Bing)

If this is true it seriously looks as though the Iraqi government is preparing to RUN :shock:
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 9:27 am

خطير جدا || مصادر خاصة : 8 طائرات خاصة تخرج من مطار بغداد خلال ساعة واحدة ..!
كشف مصدر مطلع رفض الكشف عن اسمه في مطار بغداد الدولي، اليوم الجمعة، انه اكد خروج 8 طائرات خاصة تقل مسوؤلين رفيعي المستوى من مطار بغداد خلال ساعة واحدة.
وقال المصدر ان :”عصر اليوم الجمعة وخلال ساعة واحدة، شوهدت إقلاع 8 طائرات خاصة من مطار بغداد، وهي تقل مسوؤلين عراقيين لم يعرف هويتهم بسبب الحمايات المشددة لمنع وسائل الاعلام من معرفة الاشخاص”.

Very dangerous || Private sources: 8 private planes out of Baghdad airport within one hour.
An informed source revealed on condition of anonymity at Baghdad international airport, on Friday, he stressed exit 8 special planes carrying senior told the airport within one hour.

He said: "Friday afternoon during one hour, take 8 special planes to Baghdad airport, carrying Iraqi identity did not know told because of strict protections to prevent the media from knowing people." (Translated by Bing)

Perhaps some of the Iraqi government have already run away X(

(This is an unconfirmed report but reasonably believable given the current circumstances in the Baghdad region)
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 9:54 am

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Iraq crisis: Iran and US join fight against Sunni jihadis of Isis

The United States and Iran are moving rapidly to defend Iraq from rampaging Sunni Islamist insurgents, with Washington urgently considering air strikes on the jihadi militants and Tehran dispatching its foremost powerbroker to help arrange the defence of Baghdad.

Senior US officials told the Guardian that an air campaign was under serious discussion, possibly targeting fighters not just in Iraq but in Syria, where they have seized swaths of territory in the past two years. President Barack Obama said that decisions would be taken in the "days ahead".

Iran, meanwhile, moved to defend its own interests in its western neighbour, sending Major General Qassem Suleimani, an éminence grise of the Iranian revolutionary guards, to Baghdad to meet militia leaders and tribal chiefs in control of the Iraqi capital's vulnerable western approaches.

The scramble by two staunch adversaries to shore up the embattled Iraqi authorities underscored how seriously they take the situation in a country in danger of fragmentation as a result of this week's sudden advance by fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis).

Full Article:

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/j ... hadis-iraq
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 10:39 am

Will Arabs use the fighting as a reason to move into Kurdish areas - then try to claim those areas for themselves as they have done in the past
احداث الموصل كما يراها الوطنيون الاحرار

الاخوة الاعزاء تحياتي لكم ان احداث الموصل اليوم لا تختلف عن احداث الانبار من قبل وكلها مسرحيات عربية-تركية-ايرانية تهدف الى تهجير نسبة كبيرة من العرب الى المدن الكوردية لجعل نسبة العرب مساوية لنسبة الكورد وبالتالي لتصبح جميع المدن الكوردية مناطق متنازع عليها مثل كركوك وغيرها... فصدام حسين كان يسعى الى تهجير الكورد من كوردستان والنظام العراقي اليوم هو نفس نظام صدام حسين ولكنه يدعي بالديمقراطية لذا ليس له القدرة على تهجير الكورد فيعمل على زيادة نسبة العرب بدل تهجير الكورد... فالآن عدد العرب في مدينة السليمانية اكثر من نصف مليون عربي بينما في زمن صدام حسين لم يكن هناك عربي واحد في السليمانية... فالدول التي تحتل كوردستان تحيك المؤآمرات بذكاء... واحزابنا الكوردية تتقاتل فيما بينها... وتختلف فيما بينها وقد يصل الى حد الاقتتال فيما اذا دخل قاعة الاجتماع رئيس حزب قبل رئيس حزب آخر... والاعلام الكوردي يصور هروب العرب وجيشهم وكأن الكورد هم المنتصرون بينما الحقيقة ان الكورد وقعوا في الفخ ككل مرة وهم يرقصون على خيبتهم... ولا بد ان الذي يشرف على الاعلام الكوردي يعلم الحقيقة ولكنه يبدو انه ايضا من طينة صدام والمالكي... لكم مودتي وتقديري

Mosul events as seen by the Liberal National brothers, greetings to you the events of Mosul today does not differ from Anbar by the events and all plays Arabic-Turkish-Iranian aims to displace a large percentage of Arabs to Kurdish cities to make the Arab percentage equal to chord and thus become all Kurdish towns disputed areas like Kirkuk and other ...

Then Saddam Hussein was seeking to displace Kurds of Kurdistan and the Iraqi regime today is the same as the regime of Saddam Hussein, but called the democracy so has the ability to displace Kurds, serves to increase the proportion of Arabs rather than Kurds relocate ...

Now, the number of Arabs in the city of Sulaymaniyah, more than half a million Arabs, while in the time of Saddam Hussein, there was not one Arab in Sulaymaniyah. It states that occupy Kurdistan cleverly weave plots ...

And our Kurdish fighting among themselves. And differ among themselves to end fighting if he entered the meeting hall of the President's Party. And Kurdish flags depicting the flight of Arabs and their army and Kurdish victors, while the fact that the Kurds are caught in the trap as every time they are dancing to frustration over ... Must the Kurdish media knows the truth but it seems that also Tina Saddam and Al-Maliki. You the affection and appreciation (Translated by Bing)
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 11:07 am

From Piling:

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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 5:29 pm

Iraq Rebels Stall North of Baghdad as Residents Brace for a Siege

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BAGHDAD — A rebel juggernaut that captured Iraq’s second-largest city and raced nearly 200 miles south in three days, raising fears of the imminent assault on Baghdad, stalled for a second day on Saturday about 60 miles north of the capital, leaving residents bracing for a siege that so far has not happened.

While some Baghdad residents scrambled to leave, hoarded food or rushed to join auxiliary militias to defend the city, the militants of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria and their allies halted their advance within a two-hour drive to the north, and there was no indication that they were seeking to push into Baghdad proper.

The rebel leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who had boasted that he would soon take the capital and press on to the Shiite heartland in southern Iraq, fell silent as his followers worked to consolidate their gains in predominantly Sunni parts of the country, instead of trying to fight their way through more heavily defended, Shiite-dominated areas.

There were reports of fresh clashes in Dujail, Ishaki and Dhuluiya in Salahuddin Province, just north of Baghdad, as newly armed Shiite militias surged to confront the largely Sunni insurgents. However, there did not appear to be any decisive engagements between the insurgents and the Iraqi military, and there was no clear evidence to support a claim by an Iraqi general on Saturday that the Iraqi Army had rolled the militants back in those towns.

The Iraqi authorities exploited the breather to recruit citizens to reinforce the country’s beleaguered military, while worried Baghdad residents began to stockpile essentials, sending prices skyrocketing on Saturday, the end of the Iraqi weekend. Cooking gas quadrupled in price, from about $5 on Thursday to about $20 on Saturday for a 35-pound container. The dollar, normally stable here, spiked about 5 percent overnight. And the price of potatoes increased sixfold, to about $10 a kilogram.

A military spokesman, Gen. Qassim Atta, said government forces had reclaimed ground in the northern provinces of Salahuddin, Diyala and Nineveh, and insisted the capital was safe.

The security in Baghdad is 100 percent stable,” he said. “The majority of Salahuddin Province has been regained. The morale of the security forces is very high.”

But there were reports of continued skirmishing on Saturday in many of the places he said were back in government control.

The advance of the Sunni extremists brought under their influence a broad swath of territory beginning about 60 miles north of the capital, and extending 220 miles north to Mosul and 200 miles west to the deserts of Anbar Province, where the insurgents have controlled the city of Falluja for the past six months.

The territory essentially reconstitutes what the American military, during its war here, called the Sunni Triangle, an area where Sunnis predominated and which provided fertile ground for the rise of the Sunni insurgency and allies including expelled officials of Saddam Hussein’s Baath Party. It was also the area that cost the Americans by far the most casualties of the war.

The new Sunni Triangle’s apex extends farther north than before, reaching beyond Tikrit, Hussein’s hometown, another 140 miles north into Nineveh Province. Its base is not quite as far south as before. In 2008, it included a belt of Sunni communities south of Baghdad, leaving the city surrounded; now, the base remains north and just west of the capital, although as close as the western suburb of Abu Ghraib, where there have been reports of scattered insurgent violence.

The new Sunni Triangle does not encircle the capital the way the old one did, which made travel outside Baghdad a matter of braving a hostile gauntlet. But this time the militants have managed to imperil all three of the major highways to the north and Kurdistan, effectively cutting Kurdistan off from the rest of Iraq and worsening the risk that the country could be dismembered. During the American war, all roads to the north remained open, if dangerous, and those to Kurdistan were safe once travelers left the capital.

Also, the Sunni Triangle during the American war never posed an existential threat to the country, and the possibility that militants might overrun Baghdad. American military might, heavy air support, and intense intelligence efforts made that scenario implausible.

None of that exists now. The Iraqis have said they would welcome outside aid, and officials have warned they might have to ask for Iranian assistance if American is not forthcoming, particularly in air support. They have denied reports that Iran’s Revolutionary Brigades foreign force, the Al Quds Brigade, is already in the country.

On Saturday, Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, said that Iran would not rule out working together with the United States to battle Sunni extremist fighters in Iraq, but was waiting for the United States to make a move. “We have said that all countries must unite in combating terrorism,” he said. “But right now regarding Iraq we have not seen the Americans taking a decision yet.”

While not directly denying that Iran has sent troops to help Iraq already, as some news media have reported, Mr. Rouhani said the Iraqi government has so far not asked for Iranian help. “If the Iraqi government asks us for help, we may provide any assistance the Iraqi nation would like us to provide in the fight against terrorism,” he said. “However, the engagement of Iranian forces has not been discussed.”

Iraqi officials have been particularly hopeful that the Americans could provide air support, as their capabilities are limited. That became evident on Saturday, when one of the Iraqi military’s few helicopters was shot down in Tikrit, according to security sources; another was reportedly shot down on Thursday, and two were captured by the militants in Mosul.

Image

Full Article:

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/15/world ... world&_r=0

A military spokesman, Gen. Qassim Atta, said..."The security in Baghdad is 100 percent stable.” Famous last words :ymsigh:
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 8:30 pm

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British fanatics heading to Iraq to join ISIS militants in their HUNDREDS amid fears 'they could bring terror to UK'

British Muslims are heading to Syria to fight with extremist rebel group, ISIS
Now hundreds of them are feared to be crossing the border to fight in Iraq
Security services looking at suggestion Brits fighting with insurgents there
Ultra-violent ISIS has already taken Mosul, Iraq's second city, and Tikrit
Pictures emerge today of more bloodshed as they head towards Baghdad
Meanwhile, experts fear ISIS-trained Brits may bring terror tactics home
PM David Cameron has spoken to head of Nato about situation in Iraq


Hundreds of British Muslims have travelled to Iraq to fight for the extreme jihadist group ISIS, terror experts have said.

The Government believes more than 500 British citizens have left the UK and gone to join rebel fighters in Syria, with many of them feared to have crossed the border to join the uprising in Iraq.

The ruthless ISIS (Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) extremists control large areas of land in Syria and are now turning their attention to Iraq and particularly Baghdad, having already taken the cities of Mosul and Tikrit.

Meanwhile, British security experts are also looking at the possibility that home-grown extremists trained by the ultra-violent group may bring terror back to the UK.

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Britons are leaving the UK to fight with the ultra-violent ISIS group in Syria and Iraq, it was claimed today

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Bloodshed in Iraq: This video grab shows violence on the road to Baghdad as ISIS marched south today

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Carnage: Isis fighters, who took Mosul, pictured, earlier this week, are known for their violence and ruthlessness

One terror expert told MailOnline today: 'There is a fairly high chance that someone will attempt it.'

More than 500 British Muslims are believed to have already travelled to Syria to fight against President Assad, and it is feared many more will join them. Many of them are now feared to have crossed the barely-existent border into Iraq with the ultra-violent ISIS militia.

Charlie Cooper, researcher at the anti-extremist think tank, Quilliam Foundation, said: 'People are going from Britain and the EU to fight for ISIS - the estimate is more than 500 and that number will probably rise.

'If you want to go and fight jihad, ISIS, which holds a particularly extreme view of Islam and wants to create an extreme Islamic utopia, is a very attractive group to fight for.'

He added: 'Britons are going from Syria into Iraq because of this utopian promise. It is the only group in the world that has come close to establishing its version of an Islamic state, which is a big thing for people - including the British - who feel drawn to this kind of Islamic extremism.

'People who are starting to go out to Syria from Britain will see the huge gains that ISIS has made in Iraq in the last few days and they will be keen to join them because they see the potential.'

ISIS is cash rich, having looted hundreds of millions of dollars from the Mosul Central Bank when it took Iraq's second city earlier this week, and is helped as a force by its terrifying reputation.

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Attractive to extremists: ISIS fighters preach an extreme form of Islam and want to create an Islamic utopia

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Terror: Footage reportedly taken by ISIS shows Islamist fighters randomly shooting pedestrians and motorists

Mr Cooper said: 'They took Mosul with 800 soldiers - against a reported 30,000 Iraqi soldiers. Their reputation precedes them.'

He said he believed the next week was crucial in establishing what ISIS' aims were, with the possibility that the group may try to secure its position in Iraq and stage a tactical retreat from Syria, or vice versa.

Today ISIS continued its march south towards Baghdad, shooting civilians alongside Iraqi soldiers, according to the UN. A video purportedly taken by ISIS militants emerged this morning showing gunmen carrying out indiscriminate drive-by shootings.

A spokesman for the Foreign Office said it was 'very concerned' with the escalating violence and was 'not going to take its eye off the ball'.

Mr Cooper warned that once the ISIS position was secure, there was a danger they may look to the west, with the possibility of British-grown, ISIS-trained extremists bringing their terror tactics back home.

He said: 'It's estimated that one in nine jihadists return home from jihad wanting to try to commit terror offences at home, and I would argue that they would look to the west.

'In ISIS they fight in battalions organised by nationality, the French together, the Belgians together, and so on, which is a clever tactic as it means when they return home they have an organised network of people to coordinate.

'I think what's happening out there is really, really worrying.'

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Territory so far : The map shows the areas of Iraq and Syria currently controlled by ruthless ISIS forces

David Cameron's official spokesman acknowledged fears British citizens could be among the ISIS fighters in Iraq, saying: 'Our security services and all the relevant agencies will be monitoring those types of risks very closely.

'Clearly there is a very porous border between parts of Syria and parts of Iraq.

'As the Prime Minister has said, the greatest extremist activity and jihadist threats to the international community are in Syria.

'We need to keep these things under very close watch.'

Immigration and Security Minister James Brokenshire said: 'The police and security services are working to detect and disrupt terrorist threats from Syria and will take the strongest possible action to protect our national security.

'The Serious Crime Bill would extend the reach of the Terrorism Act 2006 so that UK-linked individuals and those who seek to harm UK interests, who travel overseas to prepare or train more generally for terrorism, can be prosecuted as if their actions had taken place in the UK.

'Syria is a dangerous place and the UK advises against all travel to the country. Even people travelling for well-intentioned humanitarian reasons are exposing themselves to serious risk, including being targeted for recruitment by terrorist groups. The best way to help Syrian people is by donating to UK-registered charities.'

A Foreign Office spokesman said: 'Even people travelling for well-intentioned humanitarian reasons are exposing themselves to serious risk, including being targeted for recruitment by terrorist groups.

'The police and security services are actively working to detect and disrupt any terrorist threat from Syria and individuals who travel there.

'People who are thinking about travelling to Syria to engage in terrorist activity should be in no doubt that we will take the strongest possible action to protect our national security, including prosecuting those who break the law.'

Mr Cameron has spoken to the secretary general of Nato about the security situation in Iraq, Downing Street said today, stressing that Mr Cameron's conversation with Anders Fogh Rasmussen did not relate to any possible Nato deployment of military resources.

British ISIS fighter reported 'Killed in action in Syria' appears in court

A British Muslim reported to have been killed in Syria appeared in a London court today charged with training to be a terrorist with an extremist Islamic group linked to ISIS.

Imran Khawaja, 26, of Southall, west London, who is accused of spending up to six months training with ISIS, appeared in court alongside his cousin, Tahir Bhatti, 44.

Bespectacled Bhatti, of Watford, Hertfordshire, is accused of driving to Bulgaria to colleck Khawaja, helping him buy an AK47 assault rifle, and other offences relating to aiding or abetting the alleged terrorist.

Khawaja, who was thought to have been killed in action when the terrorist group Rayat al Tawheed announced his death last week, appeared before Westminster Magistrates' Court today.

He was accused of attending a Syrian terrorist training camp run by Rayat al Tawheed, and of buying return tickets to Kurdistan, from where he is believed to have entered the war zone, on a compromised credit card.

Khawaja, believed to be known by the ‘battle name’ Abu Daigham al-Britani, allegedly received firearms training at the base run by associates of ISIS.

He and his cousin, a father of seven who runs a taxi firm, were arrested earlier this month by specialist counter-terrorism officers, Westminster Magistrates Court heard.

Khawaja is also accused of buying return tickets to Kurdistan on a compromised credit card, and is believed to have used this route to enter the war-zone.

Both men were remanded in custody until a hearing at the Old Bailey on June 27.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... or-UK.html


If hundreds of people are leaving the UK to join ISIS just think how many of THOUSANDS are joining from other countries :shock:
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 12:06 am

آخر أخبار العراق

قامت الحكومة العراقية بتحويل اموالهم بمليارات الدولارات الى البنوك الايرانية كما ارسلت القيادات العراقية عوائلهم الى طهران لتأمين سلامتهم ...

Latest news from Iraq the Iraqi Government turn their billions to Iranian banks also sent Iraqi families to ensure their safety. (Translated by Bing)
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Confirmation on news I posted over 12 hours ago :-B

You will notice that the Iraqi government have made sure that THEIR money and THEIR families are safe while still expecting innocent citizens to remain in Baghdad and die for those greedy cowardly deleted expletives in government X(
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 12:58 am

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Iraq insurgent advance slows, U.S. sends carrier to Gulf

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(Reuters) - An offensive by insurgents that threatens to dismember Iraq seemed to slow on Saturday after days of lightning advances as government forces regained some territory in counter-attacks, easing pressure on the Shi'ite-led government in Baghdad.

As Iraqi officials spoke of wresting back the initiative against Sunni militants, neighbouring Shi'ite Iran held out the prospect of working with its longtime U.S. arch-enemy to help restore security in Iraq.

U.S. President Barack Obama said on Friday he was reviewing military options, short of sending troops, to combat the insurgency. The United States ordered an aircraft carrier moved into the Gulf on Saturday, readying it in case Washington decides to pursue a military option after insurgents overran areas in the north and advanced on Baghdad. (Full Story)

Ships like the USS George H.W. Bush, which are equipped with sophisticated anti-ship and anti-aircraft missiles, are often used to launch airstrikes, conduct surveillance flights, do search, rescue, humanitarian and evacuation missions, and conduct seaborne security operations, a U.S. defence official said.

Thousands of Iraqis responded to a call by the country's most influential Shi'ite cleric to take up arms and defend the country against the insurgency, led by the Sunni militant Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL.

In a visit to the city of Samarra, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki vowed to rout the insurgents, whose onslaught has put the future of Iraq as a unitary state in question and raised the spectre of sectarian conflict.

The militant gains have alarmed Maliki's Shi'ite supporters in both Iran and the United States, which helped bring him to power after invading the country and toppling former Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Oil prices have jumped over fears of ISIL disrupting exports from OPEC member Iraq.

But having encountered little resistance in majority Sunni areas, the militants have now come up against the army, which clawed back some towns and territory around Samarra on Saturday with the help of Shi'ite militia.

"We have regained the initiative and will not stop at liberating Mosul from ISIL terrorists, but all other parts," said Major-General Qassim al-Moussawi, spokesman for the Iraqi military's commander-in-chief, pointing out areas the army had retaken on a map with a laser pen.

In the northeastern province of Diyala, at least seven members of the Kurdish security forces were killed in an airstrike, police said.

The secretary general of the Kurdish security forces said, however, that only two people had died near the town of Jalawla in what he described as shelling, and that it was not yet clear whether Iraqi forces or militants were responsible.

The incident and divergent accounts show the potential for security in Iraq to deteriorate further, given the deployment of several heavily armed factions and shifting areas of control.

Militants in control of Tikrit, 45 km (27 miles) north of Samarra, planted landmines and roadside bombs at the city's entrances, apparently anticipating a counter-attack by government forces. Residents said the militants deployed across the city and moved anti-aircraft guns and heavy artillery into position. Families began to flee north in the direction of Kirkuk, an oil-rich city that Kurdish forces occupied on Thursday after the Iraqi army fled.

IRAQI ARMY COUNTER-ATTACKS

Security sources said Iraqi troops attacked an ISIL formation in the town of al-Mutasim, 22 km (14 miles) southeast of Samarra, driving militants into the surrounding desert on Saturday.

The army also reasserted control over the small town of Ishaqi, southeast of Samarra, to secure a road that links the city to Baghdad and the cities of Tikrit and Mosul farther north.

Troops backed by the Shi'ite Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia helped retake the town of Muqdadiya northeast of Baghdad, and ISIL was dislodged from Dhuluiya after three hours of fighting with tribesmen, local police and residents, a tribal leader said.

In Udhaim, 90 km (60 miles) north of Baghdad, Asaib and police fought militants who earlier occupied the local municipal building, an official there told Reuters, and they directed mortar fire at the government protection force of the Baiji oil refinery, Iraq's largest.

Masked jihadists under the black flag of ISIL aim to revive a medieval caliphate that would span a fragmenting Iraq and Syria, redrawing borders set by European colonial powers a century ago and menacing neighbours like Iran and Turkey.

Obama cautioned on Friday that any U.S. intervention must be accompanied by an Iraqi government effort to bridge divisions between Shi'ite and Sunni communities.

The White House said on Saturday that Obama had called national security adviser Susan Rice on Friday night and on Saturday morning to receive updates on the situation in Iraq.

"The president directed her to continue to keep him appraised of the latest developments, as his national security team continues to meet through the weekend to review potential options," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari on Saturday and expressed support for Iraq in its fight against insurgents, the Iraqi Foreign Ministry said in a statement. Kerry pledged $12 million and stressed that Iraq should assure its neighbours that the war is not sectarian, but against the insurgents, the statement said.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, asked at a televised news conference whether Tehran could work with the United States to tackle ISIL, said: "We can think about it if we see America starts confronting the terrorist groups in Iraq or elsewhere.

"We all should practically and verbally confront terrorist groups," added Rouhani, a relative moderate who has presided over a thaw in Iran's long antagonistic relations with the West.

A senior Iranian official told Reuters earlier this week that Tehran, which has strong leverage in Shi'ite-majority Iraq, may be ready to cooperate with Washington against ISIL rebels.

The official said the idea of cooperating with the Americans was being mooted within the Tehran leadership. For now, according to Iranian media, Iran will send advisers and weaponry, although probably not troops, to boost Baghdad.

U.S. officials said on Friday there had been no contact with Iran over the crisis in Iraq. Asked about Rouhani's comments on Saturday, a White House spokesman said he would have no further comment.

Any initiative would follow a clear pattern of Iranian overtures since the 2001 al Qaeda attacks on U.S. targets, which led to quiet U.S.-Iranian collaboration in the overthrow of the Taliban in Afghanistan and formation of a successor government.

The United States and Iran, adversaries since Iran's 1979 revolution toppled the U.S.-backed Shah, have long accused each other of meddling in the Gulf and beyond, and have not cooperated on regional security issues for more than a decade.

MALIKI: BEGINNING OF END FOR MILITANTS

Militants attacked the convoy of the custodian of the holy shrine in Samarra, while he was en route to Baghdad. Sheikh Haider al-Yaqoobi was not harmed, but 10 of his guards were killed, a source in Samarra hospital said.

Maliki travelled on Friday to Samarra, one of the cities targeted - although not seized - by ISIL fighters who now prevail in a string of Sunni cities and towns running south from Mosul.

"Samarra will not be the last line of defence, but a gathering point and launchpad," he told military officers after Iraq's most influential Shi'ite cleric urged people to take up arms and defend the country against the insurgents.

"Within the coming hours, all the volunteers will arrive to support the security forces in their war against the gangs of ISIL. This is the beginning of the end of them," Maliki, a Shi'ite Muslim, said in comments broadcast on Iraqi television.

Maliki said the Cabinet had granted him unlimited powers to confront insurgents. Last week, parliament failed to convene for a vote on declaring a state of emergency due to a boycott by most Sunni and Kurdish lawmakers.

In Basra, Iraq's main city in the mainly Shi'ite far south, hundreds volunteered to join the battle against ISIL, heeding a call to arms by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who commands unswerving loyalty from most Iraqi Shi'ites.

The volunteers, of all ages, were due to be given weapons and sent to a security centre in Basra later on Saturday ready to be transferred farther north. "We the people of Basra obeyed our instructions to defend our country from south to north," said 63-year-old Kadhem Jassim.

Iran's Rouhani said he would review any request for help submitted by Maliki, although none had been received yet. "We are ready to help in the framework of international regulations and laws," he said.

(Additional reporting by Isabel Coles in Arbil, Parisa Hafezi in Ankara and William Maclean in Dubai; Ahmed Rasheed and Isabel Coles in Baghdad; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Mark Heinrich, Stephen Powell and Peter Cooney)

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/06/1 ... LF20140615
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 1:10 am

The Telegraph

Iraq crisis: the bare faced ISIS executioner who spreads terror with his open killing

Shakir Wahiyib is a feared enforcer for the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham who does not cover up his face in videos of his killings

Image

In an army full of masked, black-clad figures, he is the one man who is never shy to show his face. But for those unlucky enough to cross him, the face of Shakir Wahiyib, a feared enforcer for the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, is often the last they will ever see.

The star of a series of grisly jihadist videos, including one in which three men are executed after failing his "Quranic quiz", Wahiyib is one of the few publicly-identified leaders of the shadowy jihadist group that has swept through northern Iraq.

Image

The movement, otherwise known as ISIS, generally instructs its followers to keep their faces masked to minimise the chances of them being tracked down by the Iraqi government. But while its commander-in-chief, Abu-Bakr al-Baghdadi, is even said to disguise himself while meeting fellow commanders, Wahiyib has no such reservations. Showing considerable relish for his work, he grins for the lenses of jihadi cameramen he goes on the rampage with his masked underlings.

However, the endless photo ops of him posing with machine guns and interrogating terrified prisoners is not just a matter of personal vanity. Instead, it seems to be an attempt by an otherwise anonymous organisation to graft a menacing human face onto its campaign of terror – a sergeant-at-arms who is all too real, and very clearly active on the ground.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... lling.html
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 1:17 am

22.55 The secretary general of the Kurdish security forces is now saying however that only two people had died near the town of Jalawla in what he described as shelling. Police maintain they carried out an airstrike in the area.

22.10 The latest report coming out of Iraq is that an air strike from the Iraqi air force has killed seven Kurdish security personnel in the Diyala province.The attack reportedly took place near the town of Jalawla in the east of the country. More when we have it.


Why are the Iraqi air force attacking Kurds?

I thought that the Kurds had offered to help the government destroy ISIS?

The way the Shia government has treated the Sunnis in the past - and the way they have treated the Kurds - I am not sure that the government deserve any help :shock:
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 12:13 pm

The Telegraph

Despite decapitations and deaths thousands return willingly to city held by ISIS terrorists

Many residents of Mosul say they prefer life under ISIS to that under Iraqi army control

An elderly man is ripped from his bed in the dead of night. Blindfolded, the last thing he feels is the blade slitting his throat. A taxi driver, made to kneel on the side of the road, trembling as a gun is put to his head and the trigger is pulled. In one summary execution, the bodies of five men are shown convulsing under the force of the bullets being fired into their backs.

The men of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, the jihadists now rampaging across northern Iraq are proud of their murders. The real footage, posted online as propaganda videos for the group, reveals the cruel psychopathy of men whose humanity has been lost to its extremist cause.

Less than one week ago the jihadists seized control of Iraq’s second city, Mosul, where they have set to work imposing the hardline rules and summary justice of their “Islamic State”.

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A man walks past remains of burnt vehicles belonging to Iraqi security forces in Mosul, yesterday

As many as 500,000 Iraqis escaped Mosul as the city fell and the Iraqi army melted away.

But now, tens of thousands have decided to return.

In the Sunni dominated city, the removal of the Iraqi army by ISIS has been interpreted as a local victory; as a means of empowering Mosul residents against Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and the Shia dominated national government who they feel has kept their people “oppressed”.

“For seven years we lived in a prison. The people who have come now [ISIS], are better than the Maliki army,” Maher, 36, told the Telegraph. He wouldn’t reveal his name for fear putting his family in danger. “All of Mosul feels this way.”

An English teacher, with a soft manner and kind eyes, Maher bore no similarity to the masked men in the ISIS adverts proffering holy slaughter.

But the sympathy he felt for his new occupiers sharply illustrates the threat that is now being posed to Baghdad, and the challenges that Mr Maliki will face to regain control of northern Iraq.

As jihadist insurgents have swept victoriously south, conquering village after village and pushing the front line to only 60 miles from the capital, they have met little resistance from Sunni residents.

On Friday William Hague, the foreign secretary, implied the British government may send special forces such as the SAS to advise Iraqi army units in how to fight the “terrorists”.

But the crises in northern Iraq is now less one of a single jihadist group to be rooted out and destroyed, than of a sectarian pushback by the Sunni population against the Iraqi government.

With the rest of his family crammed into his battered silver Sedan car, ready to drive to Mosul, Maher, the teacher, described the city, which he had been to the day before.

“The situation is quiet and normal now in Mosul. Schools and hospitals have opened,” he said. “There is no pressure from ISIS. Yesterday there was a parade by them in the streets to show off the weapons that they took from the Iraqi army. People came out to watch; they feel safe.”

Video footage from inside the city shows masked gunmen acting as traffic police, calmly waving cars through at a crossroads. Other images show the jihadists studiously repairing broken electricity lines.

One female resident, who asked not to be named, spoke to the Telegraph from her home inside the city.

“The armed men organise even the municipal services. Rubbish is being cleaned off the streets. Electricity is very fine: we now have it more than nine hours per day, which is even better than during Saddam [Hussein]’s rule,” she said.

“Now, in these days of being in the grip of the armed men, we only feel the wonderful peace, which we have missed for more than a decade now, since 2003.”

All the residents in Mosul who the Telegraph spoke with automatically referred to the Iraqi army as the “Maliki militia”.

After the 2003 invasion Maliki appointed mostly Shia commanders from southern Iraq to lead the troops in Mosul. Feeling no allegiance to the city, the soldiers’ behaviour toward the locals ranged from demeaning to violent, residents said.

Troops were known for running sweeping arrests of any Sunni men who happened, even by accident, to be in the vicinity of an incident. The city was fragmented by army checkpoints that were difficult for locals to cross. And then there were the smaller humiliations of troops swaggering with entitlement taking petrol and goods without paying.

Twenty-two year old Refat said he spent six months in prison after a suicide bomb exploded close to the sweet shop where he worked: “The soldiers rounded all the workers in the area up and put us in jail. They told us we are all terrorists,” he said. “Under Maliki it was a religious right to kill or mistreat Sunnis.”

“We will live under al-Qaeda if they give people their rights. We have no problem with living under Shariah law, even if woman have to cover their face,” he added.

But some residents of Mosul have already felt the brutal, crazed, streak in the jihadists who for now, are playing nice.

Ahmed, 24, is an Iraqi police men from Mosul who fled the city after witnessing ISIS beheading four soldiers at a checkpoint.

“I was hiding in my home. I could see the ISIS checkpoint outside. They took the ID cards of the men and checked their names against a database.”

“Then they pulled them out of the car. They put them in a line, and, grabbing their faces swiped their swords. They beheaded all four people.”

In the first few days after taking control, the jihadist went on a rampage of revenge. In storming the military headquarters they gained access to the database of military personnel, Ahmed said. Since then, they have been seeking out members of the special forces who had in the past put members of ISIS in jail, and exacted their vendetta.

In addition they have begun to impose their ideology on the people of Mosul.

At public gatherings, and using the tannoys of the minarets of mosques, the jihadists espoused the “ten commandments” of their rule.

“People, you tried secular rulings and they gave you pain. Now is time for the Islamic state,” they shouted at one night rally, the lights of the mobile phones of residents shining in the dark as they recorded the new rules.

The new dictates are typical of the ISIS movement, reflecting almost exactly the regulations it imposed in Raqqa, the northern Syrian city under it’s control: Smoking, drinking alcohol, tattoos, and grave sites are banned. Women should be covered in public, but preferably should remain at home.

Breaking these rules is punishable by public flogging. Thieving can result in limbs being chopped. Committing adultery merits being stoned to death.

It is unclear how long the honeymoon between the jihadists and the people of Mosul can last.

The occupation of the city may repeat patterns already established in Syria, where initially the population welcomed the jihadists as a force for moral good after years of suffering under a brutal and corrupt leadership. But then, the strict regulations imposed by ISIS debilitate the freedoms they used to have. They grate and inspire rejection.

“We know that radicalism won’t survive in our society and we will take care of that,” said the woman speaking from Mosul.

Additional reporting: Lauren Williams

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... rists.html
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 12:35 pm

Smoking, drinking alcohol, tattoos, and grave sites are banned. Women should be covered in public, but preferably should remain at home.


I understand the banning of smoking - drinking alcohol - tattoos - because they are all anti-Islamic as they are considered to damage ones body

I do NOT however - understand the banning of grave sites - what happens to jihadist's bodies when they die - are they just left where they are or are they thrown to the local wildlife?

As for women being covered in public - fair enough if the men also have to remain covered :ymapplause:
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 12:41 pm

Latest

13.30 Iraqi security forces have killed 279 "terrorists" within the last 24 hours as the government's counter-offensive against Isis militants gathers pace, the prime minister's security spokesman has claimed.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's security spokesman, Lieutenant General Qassem Atta, made the announcement during a televised news conference.

The development comes as Maliki's security forces and allied militias regained some territory on Saturday and early Sunday, easing part of the pressure on his Shi'ite-led government, and officials said they were regaining the initiative. Maliki has vowed to rout the insurgents.

But in less positive news for the Iraqi government, Sunni militants launched a dawn raid on Tal Afar, a town close to the Syrian border in the country's previously less-affected northwest, clashing with police and government forces.

"The situation is disastrous in Tal Afar. There is crazy fighting and most families are trapped inside houses, they can't leave town," a local official said. "If the fighting continues, a mass killing among civilians could result."

12.45 Lakhdar Brahimi, the former peace envoy who resigned in May as the UN-Arab League mediator for Syria, has lent his support to Tony Blair's claim this morning (see 10.55) that the unrest sweeping Iraq is a direct result of the world's indifference to the conflict in neighbouring Syria.

"It is a well known rule: a conflict of this kind [in Syria] cannot stay confined within the borders of one country," Brahimi said.

The international community "unfortunately neglected the Syrian problem and did not help to resolve it. This is the result," he said.

Mr Brahimi briefly served as UN special envoy for Iraq in 2004, following the US-led invasion that toppled the regime of dictator Saddam Hussein.

12.38 Reports are emerging of a suicide bomb blast in central Baghdad which killed at least nine people and injured 20.

According to police and medical sources the suicide blast was carried out by an attacker wearing an explosive vest near Tahrir Square in the centre of the city.

12.34 Here is our lunchtime wrap of events in Iraq so far today, where the Iraqi army appears to have halted the Isis advance outside the holy town of Samarra, about 60 miles north-west of Baghdad.

12.13 As at 11.15, Isis has posted photos online that appear to show its fighters shooting dead dozens of captured Iraqi soldiers in a province north of the capital Baghdad.

The pictures on a militant website, which have yet to be conclusively verified, appear to show masked fighters loading captives onto flatbed trucks before forcing them to lie face-down in a shallow ditch with their arms tied behind their backs.

Live updates:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... -live.html
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jun 15, 2014 4:52 pm

Fierce fighting has been reported today in the town of Tal Afar, which lies 40 miles west of Mosul, close to the Syrian border.

Tal Afar is a majority Turkomen town, home to both Shi'ites and Sunnis, showing how volatile the deepening sectarian divisions have become.

Government forces are using helicopter gunships against Isis on the outskirts of the town, a member of Maliki's security committee told Reuters.

Meanwhile over Mosul, an Iraqi military jet came under anti-aircraft fire from Isis fighters, witnesses said. It was not immediately clear whether it was preparing to attack Isis positions or was carrying out reconnaissance.

Iraq's top military spokesman, Lt. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, confirmed that fighting was raging at Tal Afar, but indicated that the militants were suffering heavy casualties. On all fronts north of the capital, he said, a total of 297 militants have been killed in the past 24 hours.

There was no way to independently confirm his claims.
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