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ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Feb 22, 2015 5:51 pm

Telegraph

Islamic State releases a new video from Kirkuk parading Peshmerga forces in cages

The video appears to show caged Kurdish fighters interviewed in the moments before their deaths

Image

Islamic State militants have released a new video which appears to show caged Kurdish fighters being interviewed in the moments before their deaths.

With a microphone pushed through the bars of their cage, each man quietly repeats talking points about the righteousness of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s (Isil) brutal campaign through the Middle East and North Africa.

At one point, the nine-minute propaganda film shows more than a dozen prisoners being paraded through crowded streets of northern Iraqi province of Kirkuk, with black-clad militants hanging to the cages and pumping their fists.

Image

It carries subtitled warnings to the thousands of Kurdish Peshmerga fighters who have helped a US-backed military campaign against Isil militants in Iraq and Syria.

“Peshmerga, stop what you are doing or you will have the same fate as those here – in the cage, or under the ground,” reads one.

Iraq’s Kurdish population have sought for years to carve out a semi-autonomous homeland in northern Iraq.

They have been battling the Sunni extremists from Isil to keep hold of Kirkuk since last summer.

Those featured in Isil’s latest propaganda missive appear to have been captured during battle – one man is identified as a brigadier general in the Peshmerga.

The film fades to black before showing the men’s fate, but their deaths are foreshadowed by video clips from previous Isil executions.

In the year since Isil occupied large swathes of Iraq and Syria, the group has established a slick multimedia operation which it uses to project images of its flamboyant violence onto a world stage.

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

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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Feb 25, 2015 11:04 pm

The Independent

Isis burns thousands of rare books and manuscripts from Mosul's libraries

Isis militants have reportedly ransacked Mosul library, burning over a hundred thousand rare manuscripts and documents spanning centuries of human learning.

Initial reports said approximately 8,000 books were destroyed by the extremist group.

However, AL RAI’s chief international correspondent Elijah J. Magnier told The Independent that a Mosul library official believes as many as 112, 709 manuscripts and books, some of which were registered on a UNESCO rarities list, are among those lost. Mosul Public Library’s director Ghanim al-Ta’an said Isis militants then demolished the building using explosive devices.

“People tried to prevent the terrorist group elements from burning the library, but failed,” a local source told IraqiNews.com.

Other reports indicated that Isis militants later broke into the library and constructed a huge pyre of scientific and cultural texts as university students watched in horror.

Among the documents believed lost are a collection of Iraqi newspapers from the beginning of the 20 century, maps, books and collections from the Ottoman period.

Mosul resident Rayan al-Hadidi said a mood of sorrow and anger had overtaken the capital. "I cry today over our situation," the activist and a blogger told The Fiscal Times. Today the library's official website was down.

A University of Mosul history professor told the Associated Press extremists began destroying the library – established in 1921 and symbolic of the birth of modern Iraq – earlier this month.

He claimed Isis members had inflicted particularly severe damage to the Sunni Muslim library, the library of the 265-year-old Latin Church and Monastery of the Dominican Fathers and the Mosul Museum Library.

Reports also indicate the militants may have not destroyed all the books, with some Mosul residents telling local news outlets they had seen trucks with Syrian licence plates loaded with documents driving off in the middle of the night.

A local report cited by AP claims that residents saw approximately 2,000 books – including children’s tales, poetry, philosophy, sports, health, culture and science – loaded onto six pick-up trucks.

In 2003, during the second US invasion, Mosul library was destroyed. Many of the precious volumes disappeared, but the efforts of locals – who saved many precious manuscripts by hiding them in their homes – and the money of wealthy families, who bought back the stolen books, saved the library.

Mosul, in northern Iraq, is the biggest city currently held by the Islamic extremists, who took it in June last year.

Earlier this week US Central Command claimed an Iraqi and Kurdish force of approximately 20,000 was being prepared to retake the city in May. The Iraqi government has criticised the decision to announce their intentions, claiming US commanders have revealed their hand to Isis.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world ... 68408.html
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Mar 06, 2015 11:37 pm

Reuters

Islamic State militants bulldoze ancient Nimrud city
By Dominic Evans and Saif Hameed

Islamic State fighters have looted and bulldozed the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud, the Iraqi government said, in their latest assault on some of the world's greatest archaeological and cultural treasures.

A tribal source from the nearby city of Mosul told Reuters the radical Sunni Islamists, who dismiss Iraq's pre-Islamic heritage as idolatrous, had pillaged the 3,000-year-old site on the banks of the Tigris River.

The assault against Nimrud came just a week after the release of a video showing Islamic State forces smashing museum statues and carvings in Mosul, the city they seized along with much of northern Iraq last June.

"Daesh terrorist gangs continue to defy the will of the world and the feelings of humanity," Iraq's tourism and antiquities ministry said, referring to Islamic State by its Arabic acronym.

"In a new crime in their series of reckless offences they assaulted the ancient city of Nimrud and bulldozed it with heavy machinery, appropriating the archaeological attractions dating back 13 centuries BC," it said.

Nimrud, about 20 miles (30 km) south of Mosul, was built around 1250 BC. Four centuries later it became capital of the neo-Assyrian empire - at the time the most powerful state on Earth, extending to modern-day Egypt, Turkey and Iran.

Many of its most famous surviving monuments were removed years ago by archaeologists, including colossal Winged Bulls which are now in London's British Museum and hundreds of precious stones and pieces of gold which were moved to Baghdad.

But ruins of the ancient city remain at the northern Iraqi site, which has been excavated by a series of experts since the 19th century. British archaeologist Max Mallowan and his wife, crime writer Agatha Christie, worked at Nimrud in the 1950s.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said he was deeply disturbed by the destruction at Nimrud.

"This crude attempt to erase the heritage of an ancient civilization will ultimately fail. No terrorist can rewrite history," he said in a statement.

LOOTED AND LEVELED

A local tribal source confirmed the attack had taken place.

"Islamic State members came to the Nimrud archaeological city and looted the valuables in it and then they proceeded to level the site to the ground," the source told Reuters.

"There used to be statues and walls as well as a castle that Islamic State has destroyed completely."

Archaeologists have compared the assault on Iraq's cultural history to the Taliban's destruction of the Bamyan Buddhas in 2001. But the damage wreaked by Islamic State, not just on ancient monuments but also on rival Muslim places of worship, has been swift, relentless and more wide-ranging.

Last week's video showed them toppling statues and carvings from plinths in the Mosul museum and smashing them with sledgehammers and drills. It also showed damage to a huge statue of a bull at the Nergal Gate into the city of Nineveh.

Archaeologists said it was hard to quantify the damage, because some items appeared to be replicas, but many priceless articles had been destroyed including artifacts from Hatra, a stunning pillared city in northern Iraq dating back 2,000 years.

Islamic State, which rules a self-declared caliphate in parts of Iraq and Syria, promotes a fiercely purist interpretation of Sunni Islam which seeks its inspiration from early Islamic history. It rejects religious shrines of any sort and condemns Iraq's majority Shi'ite Muslims as heretics.

In July it destroyed the tomb of the prophet Jonah in Mosul. It has also attacked Shi'ite places of worship and last year gave Mosul's Christians an ultimatum to convert to Islam, pay a religious levy or face death by the sword. It has also targeted the Yazidi minority in the Sinjar mountains west of Mosul.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/ ... GZ20150306
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Mar 07, 2015 1:10 pm

BBC News

IS 'destroying yet another ancient Iraq site'

Image

Islamic State militants have begun destroying the ruins of the ancient city of Hatra, Kurdish sources in northern Iraq say.

Hatra was founded in the days of the Parthian Empire over 2,000 years ago and is a Unesco world heritage site.

Earlier this week, IS militants began bulldozing the nearby ruins of the Assyrian city of Nimrud.

IS, which controls large areas of Iraq and Syria, says shrines and statues are "false idols" that have to be smashed.

It not yet clear how extensive any damage might have been.

Hatra, located about 110km (68 miles) south-west of Mosul, was a fortified city that withstood invasions by the Romans thanks to its thick walls reinforced by towers.

'War crime'

Said Mamuzini, a Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) local official, told Kurdish media that IS militants had started destroying the site.

"The city of Hatra is very big and many artefacts of that era were protected inside the site," he said, adding that the militants had already taken away gold and silver.

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Link to Full Article Photos & Video:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-31779484
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Mar 15, 2015 5:07 pm

Reuters

Iraqi Kurds say Islamic State used chlorine gas against them

Iraqi Kurdish authorities said on Saturday they had evidence that Islamic State had used chlorine gas as a chemical weapon against their peshmerga fighters in northern Iraq in January.

The Security Council of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region said in a statement to Reuters that the peshmerga had taken soil and clothing samples after an Islamic State car bombing attempt on Jan. 23.

It said laboratory analysis showed "the samples contained levels of chlorine that suggested the substance was used in weaponized form." The Kurdish allegation could not be independently confirmed.

Chlorine is a choking agent whose use as a chemical weapon dates back to World War One. It is banned under the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention, which prohibits all use of toxic agents on the battlefield.

Peter Sawczak, spokesman for the Dutch-based Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, said: “We have not had a request from Iraq to investigate claims of use of chemical weapons in Iraq, and the OPCW cannot immediately verify the claims.”

Chlorine has been used “systematically” in the civil war in neighboring Syria, an OPCW fact-finding mission found last year. The OPCW would have to get its own samples to confirm the use of chemical weapons in a member state.

The Kurdish statement said the car bombing attempt happened on a highway between Mosul and the Syrian border. A Kurdish security source said that the peshmerga fired a rocket at the car carrying the bomb so there were no casualties, except for the suicide bomber.

About a dozen peshmerga fighters experienced symptoms of nausea, vomiting, dizziness or weakness, the source said.

The statement said the analysis was carried out in a European Union-certified laboratory after the soil and samples were sent by the Kurdish Regional Government to a "partner nation" in the U.S.-led coalition that is fighting Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria.

The source described the samples as "leftovers from the suicide bomber", but declined to identify the laboratory.

The White House said in a statement it could not confirm the allegations but found them "deeply disturbing" and was monitoring the situation "very closely."

A U.S. defense official said the use of chlorine as a weapon was a possible sign of "growing desperation due to the pressure being applied by coalition air power and Iraqi ground forces."

Iraq's Kurds were the victims of the deadliest chemical attack of modern times when Saddam Hussein's air force bombed the town of Halabja in 1988, gassing at least 5,000 people to death.

WEAPONS EXPERT KILLED

The U.S. Central Command said on Jan. 30 that an Islamic State chemical weapons expert had been killed in a coalition air strike six days earlier near Mosul - the day after the car bombing cited in Saturday's statement.

The expert, Abu Malik, had been a chemical weapons engineer during the rule of Saddam Hussein and then affiliated himself with al Qaeda in Iraq in 2005, Central Command said at the time. When he joined Islamic State, it gave the insurgent force a chemical weapons capability, it added.

Malcolm Dando, professor of international security at the University of Bradford, and an expert on biological and chemical warfare, said chlorine was an easy gas to obtain. "It's extensively used, you only need to google industrial uses of chlorine, it's extensively used industrially," he told Reuters.

Western diplomats in The Hague, where the OPCW is based, have long feared IS fighters would get their hands on chemical weapons. It is not easy to make such weapons and IS tried to recruit experts when it took over Mosul last year, diplomatic sources told Reuters. They were not believed to have been successful.

Kurdish forces, backed by U.S.-led air strikes, have taken a prominent role in fighting the Islamic State jihadists who last year declared a cross-border caliphate after seizing land in eastern Syria and northern Iraq.

No international organization has documented the use of chemical weapons on Iraqi territory in the war with Islamic State.

The Kurdish authorities said in their statement they had "long suspected that (IS) fighters have been using chemical agents" and cited video footage from recent battles around the city of Tikrit between the militants and Iraqi troops and allied Shi'ite militias where "plumes of orange smoke" were visible.

Reuters was also e-mailed video footage and photos of what the Kurdish Security Council identified as images from the Jan. 23 attack. Among the photos were several canisters lying on the ground that the council says were found at the site and contained chlorine.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/ ... OT20150314
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Mar 18, 2015 11:43 pm

Iraqi News

URGENT: ISIS builds “Caliphate Wall” around Mosul

Image

An informed source in Nineveh province stated Wednesday, that elements of the ISIS group have dug a number of trenches around the city of Mosul, named the “Caliphate Wall,” to counter any sudden attacks by the Iraqi Army forces and the Volunteer Fighters (al-Hashd al-Sha’bi).

The source informed IraqiNews.com, “A few months ago, ISIS elements started digging trenches around Mosul for the purpose of countering any military operations to liberate the city from their grip,” noting that, “The elements are still digging trenches around the city to be connected with each other and call them ‘The Caliphate Wall’.”

The source added, “ISIS is using Mosul’s young men to build the wall, granting them financial rewards of up to 600.000 dinars, while imposing punishments against those who refuse to participate.”

On Wednesday, the Iraqi Air Force planes dropped leaflets on the city of Mosul to alert citizens that the zero hour is very close.

http://www.iraqinews.com/sports/urgent- ... und-mosul/
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Mar 20, 2015 10:26 am

Reuters

Islamic State video purports to show Kurdish peshmerga beheadings

Islamic State has published a video purporting to show the beheading of three Kurdish peshmerga fighters in northern Iraq by militants who threatened to kill "dozens" more of those being held captive.

The six-minute clip, which appeared timed to coincide with celebrations for the Kurdish New Year, showed the peshmerga wearing orange jumpsuits being decapitated by three black-clad militants, all of whom spoke Kurdish.

The footage could not be independently verified.

The peshmerga have emerged as a key partner for the U.S.-led coalition in its campaign to "degrade and destroy" the extremist group, which they have driven back in northern Iraq with the help of airstrikes.

"To the Muslim Kurdish people: know that our war is not with you, rather it is with those who ventured into an alliance with the Safavids and crusaders to wage war on the Muslims," said one of the militants, using derogatory terms to refer to Iran and the coalition respectively. Tehran has also provided assistance to the peshmerga.

Another of the militants then directly addressed Kurdish leader Masoud Barzani: "We warned you before that for every rocket you fire on those under the care of the Islamic State, you will kill one of your prisoners with your own hands."

Kurdish forces shelled inside Mosul several days ago in what the peshmerga ministry said was retaliation for an Islamic State missile that landed in a vegetable market outside the regional capital of Erbil on Monday.

Earlier this year, a peshmerga was beheaded by a Kurdish militant in Mosul after Grad rockets were fired into the city by the Kurds.

Last month, another video was published showing captive peshmerga in cages being interviewed by a Kurdish militant.

Islamic State has previously beheaded Western aid workers and journalists as well as domestic opponents in Syria and Iraq.

More than 1,000 peshmerga have been killed in combat with Islamic State militants since they overran a third of Iraq last summer, but several hundred Kurds have joined the other side and are fighting against their ethnic kin.

Kurdish authorities last week said they had evidence the militants had used chlorine as a chemical weapon against the peshmerga on at least one occasion.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2015/03/2 ... VB20150320
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Mar 20, 2015 10:46 pm

Operation to retake Tikrit from Islamic State stalled by heavy casualties

The much ballyhooed Iraqi government operation to capture the central city of Tikrit from the Islamic State has stalled three weeks after it began, amid widespread reports that Shiite Muslim militias and the government are badly divided over tactics and roiled by claims that the militias have engaged in war crimes against the local Sunni Muslim population.

A two-day pause supposedly intended to give the Iraqi government time to bring up reinforcements has stretched into a week, as reports circulate that Iraqi government troops and the militias took heavier than anticipated casualties in their first efforts to dislodge Islamic State fighters. At least 1,000 militiamen died in the early days of fighting, according to some reports, roughly 5 percent of the 20,000 men the militias have committed to the operation.

Even during the pause, pro-government casualties remain high. A witness in the main government hospital at the nearby city of Samarra said that at least 100 dead or wounded fighters had been brought in over the last four days and that “bodies are everywhere” at the facility. The witness asked to remain anonymous for security reasons.

Difficulties with the Tikrit operation underscore how unlikely it is that the Iraqi military will be in any position soon to launch an assault to recapture Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, which fell to the Islamic State last June. A U.S. military officer in February created a stir when he told reporters at the Pentagon that such an assault might come as soon as April. Pentagon officials later acknowledged that Iraqi troops might not be in such a position before the fall.

How to proceed in Tikrit has left the government and the militias split. Iraqi officials say a full frontal assault against the Islamic State forces might succeed but would come at a heavy cost. Commanders of Iraq’s special operation forces, which would lead such a charge, are opposed to it.

The Shiite militias come to the battle with a sectarian zeal and are said to be untroubled by the prospect of casualties. Tikrit is the hometown of the late Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, whom most Shiites detest for his repression of their sect. It is also the scene last summer of a notorious massacre of 1,000 Shiite air force recruits, whose video-recorded deaths at the hands of the Islamic State were widely distributed on the Internet. Hadi al Ameri, the leader of one of the militias, the Badr Organization, openly referred to the retaking of Tikrit as “revenge for Speicher,” the military camp where the recruits were murdered.

The militias’ Iranian advisers, against whom Saddam fought an eight-year war and who have also battled the Islamic State in Syria, also are said to favor an advance, whatever the cost.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi, however, has asked for a better plan, apparently hesitant to unleash the militias for fear of an American backlash after reports that Shiite militias have terrorized the local Sunni population, pillaging houses and raping women. The United States, whose commanders apparently opposed the Tikrit operation, so far has declined to commit American air power to it.

An Iraqi military commander on the scene who asked not be identified discussing sensitive national security matters described a difficult task ahead for any troops sent in to dislodge the Islamic State forces, whose numbers have been described as a few hundred. The Islamic State portions of the town are heavily fortified with booby-traps and defended by snipers and suicide bombers scattered among civilians unable to leave, he said.

The presence of massive fortifications, hundreds of roadside bombs and the effective use of suicide bombers, a tactic the Islamic State – also known as ISIL or ISIS – has employed in both Iraq and Syria, would lead to enormous destruction and the likely loss of hundreds of civilian lives, the officer said.

That has led the military command of Salahuddin province, of which Tikrit is the capital, the Iraqi army’s so-called Golden Brigade of special operators, and the Iraqi Interior Ministry to clash with the militias, the officer said.

“The militia leadership insists on completing the attack with massive air cover, artillery and the heavy bombing on Daash elements,” the officer said, using an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State.

The officer’s comments were later endorsed by an Iraqi political leader, who also asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the subject.

Such seemingly indiscriminate bombardment of a populated area would kill many civilians and likely would inflame both the international community and U.S. officials, who’ve openly warned that they are watching the operation for such problems.

The American sensitivity is heightened by videos posted on social media that purport to document a wide range of abuses, from executions to kidnappings, some involving troops U.S. advisers had trained. One shows two men being interrogated by Iraqi special forces before being machine-gunned to death.

ABC News compiled a string of such videos earlier this month and presented them to U.S. and Iraqi authorities. In a statement, the United States expressed anger. “As the ISF (Iraqi Security Forces) and militias reclaim territory, their behavior must be above reproach or they risk being painted with the same brush as ISIL fighters,” the statement said, according to the network.

A statement from Human Rights Watch earlier this month said it had documented atrocities by government forces and militias in areas of Diyala province north of Baghdad, where they had recaptured territory from the Islamic State.

The military and the militias also are reportedly split over whether to ask the United States to provide air cover to the effort to retake Tikrit. The military has said precision airstrikes are needed to root out the Islamic State forces. But the militias and their Iranian advisers reportedly have rejected such a request, saying that want to prove that the militias can conquer Islamic State forces without Western help.

For now, the officer and the political official both said, the Iraqi military has decided to push up heavy earth-moving equipment to clear booby-traps while tightening the cordon on the city center to deny the militants resupply. The plan will be to wait them out, the officer and official said.

A spokesman for the largest of the Shiite militias, The League of Righteousness, disagreed, however, that that is the plan. Speaking to McClatchy by phone from Tikrit, Abu Zahra Zergawi said the popular movement, a common euphemism for the militias, would resume operations “in one or two days as more men and equipment are brought to the area.”

The trajectory of the Tirkit operation also might easily have been foreseen, given the difficulties Iraqi government forces have had retaking the central Iraqi town of Baiji, another Sunni stronghold that, like Tikrit, was captured last summer in the Islamic State’s initial push across the country.

The Iraqi government announced an offensive to retake Baiji with great fanfare in early November, but in the ensuing days it was forced to break off the attack after encountering roadside bombs, suicide bombers and snipers that prevented army troops and militias from getting closer than six miles from the city.

Finally in December, the government announced that it had reached Baiji and had broken an Islamic State siege on the town’s oil refinery, Iraq’s largest. But a fierce Islamic State counterattack a few days later recaptured most of the town and surrounding areas.

The oil refinery remained in government hands, as it had since the Islamic State onslaught last summer, but to date the Iraqi government has been unable to restart its operations, and the troops occupying it have only a precarious resupply line, residents report.

The course of such operations augur poorly for government operations of a more ambitious nature such as the recapture of Mosul, said a former U.S. military non-commissioned officer who served in Iraq and now trains foreign militaries in the region. He suggested it meant the operation to retake Mosul might need to be shelved indefinitely.

“If the Iraqis can’t retake two square miles of a town they’ve had surrounded for weeks, how can anyone expect they’ll be better off fighting house to house in a place the size of Mosul, with almost 2 million residents?” he said, asking that he not be identified because he hoped still to win a contract to help train Iraqis. “I’m not sure they will ever be capable of doing it without a bloodbath. It would be an enormously complex operation for the American military, and these guys aren’t even close to ready.”

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2015/03/20/2 ... -from.html
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Mar 24, 2015 12:18 pm

BBC News

Iraq: On the front line in the battle for Tikrit

In Iraq, coalition aircraft have joined the effort to regain control of Tikrit from Islamic State (IS) forces.

The BBC understands that reconnaissance flights were requested by the Iraqi government last week.

Iraqi forces, backed by Iran, are preparing a large-scale operation to retake Tikrit - but so far they have been unable to advance on the city centre because of fierce resistance from IS fighters.

Jonathan Beale reports from the front line.

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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Apr 01, 2015 7:17 pm

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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Apr 01, 2015 7:20 pm

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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Apr 02, 2015 6:41 pm

Rudaw

EXCLUSIVE: Kurdish soldiers in Tikrit vow to take Mosul

As Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi arrived in the city of Tikrit to proclaim victory over the forces of the Islamic State, a Rudaw reporter gained exclusive interviews with Kurdish forces involved in the liberation.

Members of the Iraqi Army unit known as the Golden Force told Rudaw that Kurdish soldiers played a vital role in the battle for the city. The Golden Force has many Kurdish soldiers and is under the command of Fazil Barwari, a Kurdish commander.

During the interview, Kurdish soldiers vowed to liberate the ISIS-held city of Mosul.

http://rudaw.net/english/middleeast/iraq/020420154
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Apr 02, 2015 6:46 pm

CNN

ISIS' legacy in Tikrit: booby traps, IEDs and fear

By Hamdi Alkhshali, Jomana Karadsheh and Don Melvin

Tikrit, Iraq (CNN)ISIS is gone, but the fear remains.

As Iraqi forces, aided by Shiite militiamen, took control Wednesday of the northern city of Tikrit, they found vehicles laden with explosives and buildings that might be booby-trapped.

CNN senior international correspondent Arwa Damon, who was in Tikrit on Tuesday, saw a large mechanical digger packed with explosives that Iraqi forces had to disarm. The troops, she said, were cautious when they entered buildings in case they were wired to explode. Plumes of smoke rose from burning buildings in the background.

Near former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's presidential palaces compound -- Tikrit is Hussein's birthplace -- the CNN team also saw a destroyed truck with a large machine gun mounted on the back. Iraqi forces said they had fired an RPG at the truck, killing three ISIS fighters. ISIS was ejected from the palaces compound in fierce fighting, they said, adding that there may still be booby traps.

Federal police said they dismantled hundreds of IEDs (improvised explosive devices) Wednesday. CNN heard at least 16 explosions, some very loud, which police said were controlled.

The potential booby traps were political as well as physical. Officials are concerned about the behavior of the conquerors, particularly the Iranian-backed Shiite militiamen who helped Iraqi troops. Officials fear the militiamen might take "scorched earth" reprisals for the reported massacre of Shiite air force cadets by ISIS fighters in Tikrit last year.

Much of the population of Tikrit is, like ISIS, Sunni Muslim. And officials fear that reprisals by Shiite militias against the Sunni population could stoke local anger, jeopardizing the government's ability to hold onto Tikrit and pull the country together. Sectarian resentment helped fuel the rise of ISIS in the first place.

A significant victory

Still, the liberation of Tikrit from the terrorist group, which is also known as ISIL and calls itself the Islamic State, represented a significant victory for the Iraqi government, which had tried -- and failed -- to retake the city many times before.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi arrived Wednesday to claim the victory, which took place a year after the city was first attacked by ISIS. Al-Abadi, who is also Iraq's top military commander, had announced the previous evening on Iraqiya TV that the city was under the control of Iraqi forces.

Iraqi forces continued to clean out pockets of resistance Wednesday, said Interior Minister Mohammed al-Ghabban, who was also in the city. But he said the Iraqi government would be in full control shortly.

"The enemy has been defeated, and it has lost all its capabilities," al-Ghabban said. "In the coming hours, the battle will end."

Iraqi security said that the few ISIS militants left in the city are hiding inside houses hoping to escape in the dark.

ISIS' nine-month dominion over Tikrit was marked by brutality. In addition to the reported massacre of the 1,500-plus air force cadets at Camp Speicher in June, ISIS is believed to have buried victims in mass graves and to have destroyed an Assyrian church that had graced Tikrit since the eighth century.

Tactics to be replicated in other cities

The push into Tikrit came days after U.S.-led airstrikes targeted ISIS bases around the city. Al-Abadi said those tactics would now be replicated in other areas.

Brett McGurk, the U.S. deputy special presidential envoy to the Global Coalition to Counter ISIL, tweeted that the coalition's airstrikes had destroyed numerous ISIS shelters.

"We will continue to support courageous Iraqi forces operating under Iraqi command as they work to reclaim their territory from #ISIL," McGurk tweeted.

The key to victory in Tikrit this time, the Prime Minister said, was surprise. But help from the coalition of Shiite militiamen and volunteers also played a part.

The militia members, estimated to number around 20,000, are backed by Iran. The offensive marked the first open participation of Iranian advisers on the front lines in Iraq.

The victory in Tikrit sets the stage for Iraqi forces to take back an even bigger prize -- Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city. A U.S. official said in February that up to 25,000 Iraqi troops plan to return to Mosul in April or May in an effort to retake the city.

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http://edition.cnn.com/2015/04/01/middl ... index.html
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Apr 02, 2015 7:21 pm

Thomson Reuters Foundation

From brides to battlefield, women taking up new roles with Islamic State
By Benedetta Argentieri

Image

Women travelling to join Islamic State militants are no longer just seeking to become "jihadi brides" but are taking on new roles, on the frontline in logistics and intelligence and as medics, according to military and expert sources.

Female presence in Islamic State's battles to establish a medieval-style caliphate across the Middle East has been unusual with the radical Sunni Islamists imposing strict restrictions on women's dress and behaviour and deeming their role as domestic.

But as more foreigners, both male and female, go to join or fight Islamic State, the traditional role of women is being challenged, with reports of women working at hospitals controlled by Islamic State and aiding in logistics.

Colonel Rafat Salim Raykoni, head of a military intelligence unit in the Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga forces battling Islamic State militants, said women fighters had emerged around the town of Sinjar, a frontline in the fight in northern Iraq.

"They are not many but they are starting to arrive on the frontline. Here in Sinjar they are very active," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in the peshmerga headquarters in the outskirts of Sinjar city.

Raykoni is not the only one to have spotted the trend with high ranking commanders in different areas of Iraq and Syria reporting Islamic State women around the battlefield although so far no female militants have been reported killed.

Pareen Sevgeen, the commander of a Kurdish women militia in Iraq, YJA Star, who is also known by her nom de guerre Beritan, was fighting north of Sinjar earlier this year when her brigade intercepted communications of the jihadis.

"We heard a woman giving order to men. She was saying move there or here, go left or right. She was obviously a commander," said Beritan while sitting in her compound outside Sinjar dressed in a dark green military uniform.

WOMEN IN A NEW ROLE

YJA Star, which also campaigns for gender equality in the region, was able to re-take the area within hours and they never heard from the woman again despite making inquiries.

"We looked for her because we wanted to know more. We know she is a foreigner by the way she was talking on the radio. Arabic is not her first language. Our sources on the other side told us she is from India."

The Canadian counterterror research group iBRABO, late last year said they had identified one woman who travelled from Canada to Islamic State frontlines, giving away her locations on Twitter as she visited besieged cities in Syria and Iraq.

Tracking her mobile phone's geo-tagging function on Twitter, the group concluded her movement "reflects a broader trend of women becoming more active in supporting male jihadists, such as intelligence collection, implementation and adherence to Sharia Law, and even reported execution of punishments to women judged to be in transgression of Sharia Law".

Jayne Huckerby, director of the International Human Rights Clinic at Duke University's School of Law, North Carolina, was not surprised about women appearing on the frontline as thousands of foreign recruits join the fight.

The London-based International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR) estimates at least 20,000 foreigners have joined the Syria/Iraq conflict of which about 4,000 are Western citizens. The Institute for Strategic Dialogue estimates about 550 of these are women.

ICSR director Peter Neumann has said about 80 percent of foreign fighters from Western nations are joining Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, drawn by its ideological appeal and savvy outreach in foreign languages and over the Internet.

Islamic State seized large sections of north and west Iraq and much of eastern Syria last year and the Iraqi government, with its Western and Iranian allies, is now trying to recapture the nearly one-third of Iraq under the jihadists' control.

BRIDES AND BATTLES

So far most attention about the role of women in the conflict has focused on those joining as "jihadi brides".

In one of the most high-profile recent cases, three British schoolgirls are thought to have travelled through Turkey to Syria in February to join the militant group. Their families and British authorities have made repeated appeals for them to return home.

But four of nine British medical students who were believed to have crossed into Islamic State-held areas this month were also reported to be female with their parents are trying to convince them to come home.

"We are providing consular assistance to families of British nationals who are believed to be missing after travelling to Turkey," a Foreign Office spokesman said without giving any further details of the students who were studying in Sudan.

The Home Office has said the medics would not automatically face prosecution under anti-terror laws if they returned to Britain as long as they could prove they had not been fighting for Islamic State.

Huckerby said the evidence challenged the Western stereotype of women just wanting to be "jihadi brides" and was an important evolution in the group's view on the women in the caliphate.

"A number of Western women who travelled to (Islamic State)have expressed their willingness to fight and to be in combat. They want to become Jihad Jane types," said Huckerby.

She said this shift was flagged in a recent manifesto by Islamic State's all-female Al-Khansaa Brigade whose mission is to pursue and arrest women who break the group's strict rules on Islamist morality.

This manifesto, translated by the London-based think-tank the Quilliam Foundation, maintained that women are permitted to abandon their domestic roles for jihad "if the enemy is attacking her country and the men are not enough to protect it and the imams give a fatwa for it".

There are precedents of women fighting in the Islamic world, said David Romano, a political science professor at Missouri University and expert on women fighters.

He pointed to the Moscow theatre hostage crisis of October 2002 when at least 170 people were killed including 40 male and female attackers claiming allegiance to an Islamist militant separatist movement in Chechnya.

About 140 kms (87 miles) northeast of Sinjar, on the battlefield around Teleskuf, peshmerga general Wahid Koveli, head of a Special Forces First Division, has also heard Islamic State female fighters on the radio at least twice.

"Female fighters have started to arrive on the frontline. It might means that (Islamic State) are in difficulties and they are starting to use everybody to help them fight," he said. (Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)

http://www.trust.org/item/2015040200013 ... ?source=jt
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Re: ISIS – IRAQ - KURDISTAN : NEWS THREAD

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Apr 03, 2015 9:47 am

International Business Times

Iraq Isis news: Send Kurds more guns to help defeat Islamic State, says foreign minister Falah Mustafa
By Orlando Crowcroft (Executive Editor)

Kurdish forces fighting the Islamic State (formerly known as Isis) need more guns, tanks and heavy artillery to push the radical Islamist group out of Iraq, a senior Kurdish minister has told IBTimes UK.

Speaking from his office in Erbil, Falah Mustafa, foreign minister of Iraqi Kurdistan, said that 1,000 Kurdish soldiers had so far been killed in the fight against IS with a further 5,000 wounded.

He said that the Kurdish army - known as the peshmerga - was on the offensive and had successfully captured 20,000 square kilometres of previously IS-held territory in northern Iraq, but that the Kurds needed more weapons.

"We are thankful for the support that has been provided so far but we need more. More weapons, more ammunition, more training and coordination," he said.

An international coalition led by the US, Canada and European nations have been involved in backing the Kurdish campaign against IS, which began in June 2014 when the Islamist group conquered Mosul. A third of Mosul residents are Kurds, and as IS spread out from the city into both Kurdish and Arab areas the peshmerga have pushed back.

More recently, US air strikes have targeted IS positions in the southern city of Tikrit, backing the Iraq army and Iranian-backed Shia militias. The Iraqi army and militia fighters are pushing north towards IS-held Mosul.

Kurdish fighters are already on the borders of Mosul but are reluctant to enter the Sunni Arab-majority city without a "coordinated effort" from the southern Iraqi forces, local Sunni communities and the international coalition, said Mustafa.

"Mosul is key to defeating IS in Iraq as a whole, which is why the front line is there. There have been clashes – they have attacked, we have attacked. The issue is that [...] it has to be an Iraqi attempt that has to be coordinated with the Iraqi army, the Sunni community, peshmerga support and the US and the coalition," he said.

Mustafa said that the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) had given a list to its international partners of the weapons it needed, which included tanks, heavy artillery, Humvees, mortars and APCs. The Kurds were currently fighting with poor quality weapons, and did not have either the equipment or training to deal with the threat of IEDs, which have killed 70% of Kurdish soldiers so far.

The minister said that while IS presented an existential threat to Iraqi Kurdistan, pushing on its borders, the peshmerga were fighting the militants on the behalf of the world. The foreign fighters that have flooded in to Syria and Iraq – many of them from Europe – meant that the war was an international responsibility, he said.

"It is our joint responsibility to be able to deal with this. IS is a common threat, it affects everyone. It is true that we are fighting for our people, our land and our values but [...] we do not feel that we are fighting only for ourselves, we fight on behalf of the free world," he said.

Mustafa was reluctant to put a date on either the operation to take Mosul or the defeat of IS in the long term, but he said that even when the fighting was over, the war would not be won.

It will be critical, he said, to re-build relations between the Shia-dominated government in Baghdad and the Sunni tribes of Western Iraq, where radical elements had been able to exploit anger in cities such as Fallujah and Ramadi that Sunni Iraqis were being discriminated against.

"The federal government has to make sure that the Sunni community in the west of Iraq feels that they are respected, that they are a partner and are treated properly. It is not only a military fight, there is a political aspect – for the Sunni community to feel that they are [part] of the process," he said.

The KRG has run Iraqi Kurdistan since the end of US-led war in 2003 and was looking increasingly likely to split from Iraq prior to 2014, when IS took Mosul. Iraqi Kurdistan has its own government, military and borders, and has had a degree of autonomy since the 1990s, when a no-fly zone was imposed over the northern Kurdish area of Iraq.

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/iraq-isis-news ... fa-1494700
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