The Islamic State Thread

POPE SENDING CARDINAL TO IRAQ TO SUPPORT FLEEING CHRISTIANS

Pope Francis is sending a cardinal to Iraq to help thousands of Christians fleeing the rapid advance of jihadis from the Islamic State (IS), the Vatican said Friday.

Cardinal Fernando Filoni, a former papal nuncio to the country, is being sent to Iraqi Kurdistan to show the pope's "spiritual support and the church's solidarity with the people who are suffering", papal spokesman Federico Lombardi said.

He said Filoni would be departing soon but gave no date.

The Vatican has come in for criticism from Eastern Christians not doing more to help the persecuted minority, who are fleeing into the mountains alongside thousands of members of the minority Yazidi community in the face of a rapid advance north by Sunni extremists.

Francis had appealed on Thursday for the international community to mobilise to protect and ensure aid for the fleeing populations, thousands of whom have been stranded on mountain tops with little food or water.

The Vatican's own representative for Christians in the Middle East, Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, said humanitarian intervention of a completely different order was needed to stop "the painful and unjust exodus of Christians" from Iraq.


Source : Sapa-AFP /lk
Date : 08 Aug 2014 14:55
 
Guarantee that the cardinal will get nowhere near the danger zones.....
 
IRAQ ARMY CHIEF EXPECTS 'HUGE CHANGES' AFTER US STRIKES

Iraq's army chief of staff said he expects federal troops and Kurdish peshmerga forces to reclaim large swathes of land after the US began air strikes Friday against jihadist positions.

"There will be huge changes on the ground in the coming hours," Lieutenant General Babaker Zebari told AFP, moments after the Pentagon confirmed its first air raids against the Islamic State.

"The US airforce is targeting Daash (Islamic State) bases in Makhmur and in the Sinjar area," he said.

"The operation is due to continue in Iraqi towns controlled by Daash," he said, without specifying which ones.

Makhmur is southeast of Arbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan, while Sinjar is a region east of the main jihadist hub of Mosul where thousands of displaced civilians are awaiting assistance.

"Iraqi army officers, the peshmerga and US experts are working together to select the targets," Zebari said.


Source : Sapa-AFP /lk
Date : 08 Aug 2014 15:55
 
FRANCE PLEDGES SUPPORT TO HELP CIVILIANS IN IRAQ

President Francois Hollande on Friday pledged France's support to the United States and its allies in its bid to end unrest in Iraq.

"France will examine with the United States and all its partners what actions can be taken to jointly offer the necessary support to end the suffering of the civilian population," Hollande said in a statement.

France is "ready to play a full part" in this support, added Hollande, without offering further details about what this support could entail.

Hollande welcomed what he called the "important decision" taken by US President Barack Obama to authorise air strikes against Islamist fighters in Iraq.

He also called for an "intensification" of international efforts and appealed to the European Union to play an "active role" and to quickly come to the aid of the civilian population.

Earlier Friday, American aircraft bombed positions held by Islamic State insurgents in northern Iraq.

Hollande's statement did not directly refer to the bombing.

Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 08 Aug 2014 17:09
 
TURKISH AIRLINES HALTS FLIGHTS TO ARBIL OVER SECURITY CONCERNS

Turkish Airlines, one of the key foreign carriers flying to Iraq, on Friday said it had halted flights to the main city of Iraqi Kurdistan for security reasons amid an offensive by Islamist jihadists.

"Our flights to Arbil are being cancelled for security reasons until further notice," the airline said in a statement.

Abu Dhabi's Etihad Airways on Thursday announced a suspension of flights to Arbil while Britain has urged citizens living in parts of Kurdistan to leave.

American aircraft earlier bombed positions held by Islamic State insurgents who have advanced to take swathes of northern Iraq.

Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 08 Aug 2014 17:09
 
UK TO DROP AID OVER IRAQ, BUT WILL NOT JOIN AIR STRIKES

The British air force will drop food aid to Iraqi refugees fleeing extremists in "the next couple of days", the defence secretary said Friday, although London has ruled out taking military action with the United States.

The announcement came after the Foreign Office urged Britons in the Arbil, Sulaimaniyah and Dohuk provinces of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region to "leave now" as fighting spreads north.

Prime Minister David Cameron said he was "extremely concerned by the appalling situation in Iraq and the desperate situation facing hundreds of thousands of Iraqis".

"And I utterly condemn the barbaric attacks being waged by ISIL (now Islamic State) terrorists across the region," he said in a statement.

The government's emergency committee, COBRA, met on Friday morning and agreed to help US humanitarian operations in northern Iraq and send the Royal Air Force (RAF) to drop food for stranded civilians.

The drops will be targeted at members of the minority Yazidi community who have fled from the extremists to the Sinjar mountains in northern Iraq.

"What we have decided today is to assist the United States in the humanitarian operations that started yesterday. We are offering technical assistance in that in terms of refuelling and surveillance," said Defence Secretary Michael Fallon.

"We are offering aid of our own which we hope to drop over the next couple of days in support of the American relief effort, particularly to help the plight of those who are trapped on the mountain."

A Ministry of Defence source confirmed this would involve RAF planes.

US President Barack Obama on Thursday authorised US warplanes to drop food and water to refugees and also agreed to targeted airstrikes, which began Friday.

A spokeswoman for Cameron's Downing Street office said however that Britain, which joined the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, was "not planning a military intervention".

In a statement, Cameron said: "I welcome President Obama's decision to accept the Iraqi government's request for help and to conduct targeted US airstrikes, if necessary."

And he urged international help for the Yazidis.

"They fear slaughter if they descend back down the slopes but face starvation and dehydration if they remain on the mountain," the prime minister said.

"The world must help them in their hour of desperate need."

In updated travel advice, issued before the US attacks began, the Foreign Office advised "against all travel to those areas of the Kurdistan region -- Arbil, Sulaimaniyah and Dohuk provinces -- affected by recent fighting".

"This follows attacks by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) on towns to the south west of Arbil on 6-7 August. If you're currently in these areas you should leave now," it said.

Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 08 Aug 2014 17:14
 
BRITISH AIRWAYS SUSPENDS FLIGHTS OVER IRAQ

British Airways (BA) suspended flights over Iraq on Friday as the US launched air strikes against Islamic militants fighting in the north of the country.

A spokesman for Britain's flagship carrier said it was "temporarily suspending our flights over Iraq".

But BA said services that use the route, mainly to Doha and Dubai, would not be cancelled or disrupted because alternative routes would be found.

Willie Walsh, chief executive of BA parent group International Airlines Group, last week pledged to keep flying over Iraq despite mounting concerns over commercial flight paths in the wake of the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 in eastern Ukraine.

The airline said then it did not believe the conflict in Iraq between government forces and jihadist group Islamic State (IS) posed the same threat to commercial airliners.

But it took its decision to suspend flights after the Federal Aviation Administration banned all US civilian flights over Iraq on Friday, just hours after Washington ordered air strikes on fighters in Kurdistan.

The FAA cited "the potentially hazardous situation created by the armed conflict" between IS militants and Iraqi security forces "and their allies" as the reason for the indefinite ban.

Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 08 Aug 2014 19:59
 
US-IRAQ RELATIONS SINCE 2003

Below are key dates in the relationship between Iraq and the United States, which on Friday carried out its first air strikes on insurgents in the country since the end of its occupation.

- March 20, 2003: Washington, accusing Iraq of harboring weapons of mass destruction, launches its operation "Iraqi Freedom", a US-British operation to take control of the capital Baghdad.

- April 9, 2003: US forces symbolically topple a statue of dictator Saddam Hussein, signalling the end of the regime. On December 13 Saddam is captured, and is executed in late 2006.

- May 1, 2003: President George W. Bush announces the end of "major combat operations" but the "war against terrorism" continues.

- May 16, 2003: the new US administrator in Iraq, Paul Bremer, says he and Iraqi political leaders agreed to rid the country of the remnants of the ousted Baath party.

- October 2, 2003: Washington admits no weapons of mass destruction were found.

- April 28, 2004: Photographs emerge of US forces humiliating inmates at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, prompting global outrage.

- June 28, 2004: The US-led administration transfers power to the Iraqi government.

- November 8, 2004: More than 10,000 US and 2,000 Iraqi troops launch "Phantom Fury", a battle to retake the Sunni rebel stronghold of Fallujah, 50 kilometers (31 miles) to the west of Baghdad.

- February 22, 2006: A revered Shiite shrine in Samarra is blown up by suspected Sunni insurgents, starting a bloody sectarian war that kills tens of thousands between 2006 and 2007.

- June 7, 2006: Al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi dies in a US air strike north of Baghdad.

- January 10, 2007: Bush announces a "surge" of 30,000 extra troops, bringing the total troop presence in Iraq to 165,000, a bid to stem the bloodletting.

- April 7, 2009: Newly elected US president Barack Obama, who had opposed the war in Iraq, visits Baghdad. He urges the Shiite-led government to integrate Sunnis in the political process.

- December 18, 2011: US troops complete their withdrawal, ending nearly nine years of occupation that cost the lives of more than 100,000 Iraqis and nearly 4,500 American soldiers.

- November 1, 2013: Iraqi leader Nuri al-Maliki visits Obama in Washington to discuss how to "push back" against Al-Qaeda after the deadliest surge of violence in the country in five years.

- August 8, 2014: Obama orders US jets strike jihadist positions in northern Iraq.

Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 08 Aug 2014 21:09
 
US JETS STRIKE JIHADISTS IN IRAQ

by Abdelhamid Zebari

US jets struck jihadist positions in northern Iraq on Friday, a potential turning point in a two-month crisis Washington said was threatening to result in genocide and to expose US assets.

President Barack Obama's order for the first air strikes on Iraq since he put an end to US occupation in 2011 came after Islamic State (IS) militants made massive gains on the ground, seizing a dam and forcing a mass exodus of religious minorities.

Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said on Twitter that US forces bombed the jihadists after artillery fire against Kurdish regional government forces defending their capital Arbil.

Two US jets hit a mobile artillery piece, he said. A Kurdish official said the strikes targeted the towns of Gwer and Makhmur, southeast of the autonomous Kurdish region.

The US operation began with air drops of food and water for thousands of people hiding from the Sunni extremist militants in a barren northern mountain range.

Many people who have been cowering in the Sinjar mountains for five days in searing heat and with no supplies are Yazidis, a minority that follows a 4,000-year-old faith.

Obama accused the IS, which calls Yazidis "devil-worshippers", of attempting "the systematic destruction of the entire people, which would constitute genocide".

The UN said it was "urgently preparing a humanitarian corridor."

Panic had begun to grip Arbil after IS thrust into the Nineveh plains separating the city from the main jihadist of Mosul and Obama's decision was welcomed there.

"We were very nervous these past few days. Daash (Islamic State) is powerful and well-equipped," said Karwan Ahmed, 27, a taxi driver. "This is good news."

The Kurdish peshmerga, short of ammunition and stretched thin along a huge front, have been forced to retreat in the face of brazen assaults by the jihadists.

Their withdrawal from the Christian heartland on Wednesday and Thursday sparked a mass exodus -- 100,000 people according to Iraq's Chaldean patriarch -- and spurred Western powers into action.

Obama's announcement came after an emergency UN Security Council meeting called by France, which also offered to support the emergency effort.

The capture of Mosul dam was another setback for the peshmerga who had been defending it and gave jihadists a power of life and death over a huge swathe of land.

A Kurdish and a local official said jihadists took it over on Thursday and warned that any "unscientific manipulation" could have disastrous consequences.

A 2007 letter to the Iraqi government based on a US assessment had warned that "catastrophic failure of Mosul dam would result in flooding along the Tigris river all the way to Baghdad."

While IS has weaponised dams before, Mosul dam provides water and electricity to its main stronghold and is crucial to its own state-building efforts.

In Mosul, the country's second city, identical sermons were delivered in all mosques Friday, residents said, with worshippers asked to swear obedience to the "caliph", Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

Obama suggested the strikes would be "limited" in scope. But he "has not laid a specific end date," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters, while insisting a "prolonged military conflict that includes US involvement is not on the table."

Iraq's military chief of staff told AFP he expected to see his forces and the peshmerga reclaim large tracts of land "in the coming hours".

He said he thought the US air strikes would extend to other towns controlled by IS but he did not say which ones. The jihadists control towns west, south and north of Baghdad.

There has been daily fighting on several fronts for two months and as the conflict escalated Friday, the US banned its civilian airliners from overflying Iraq, Britain asked its nationals in parts of Kurdistan to leave and global stock markets were shaky.

Obama came to office determined to end US military involvement in Iraq, and in his first term oversaw the withdrawal of the huge ground force deployed there since the 2003 American-led invasion.

But the capture of huge swathes of land by jihadists, who in late June proclaimed a "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq, has brought a country already rife with sectarian tension closer to collapse.

Many people in Baghdad were sceptical of Obama's motives.

"He did nothing for three years but something happened to the Kurds and the Christians and he started talking about terrorism," said Rashaad Khodhr Abbas, a retired civil servant.

"Where were you all this time, Obama?"

IS has enjoyed a spectacular run of military successes in Iraq, but the group also scored a key victory in Syria, with the capture overnight of a key army base in Raqa province.

Observers say one of the main obstacles to coordinated action by all of IS's Iraqi foes is Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, accused by many of having institutionalised sectarianism in recent years.

The United States, the Shiite religious leadership, powerful neighbour Iran and even much of his own party have all pulled their support but Maliki has dug his heels in.

Source : Sapa-AFP /lp
Date : 08 Aug 2014 21:31
 
IRAQIS FLEE MILITANTS AS US WARPLANES STRIKE

By BRAM JANSSEN and DIAA HADID
Associated Press

Thousands of displaced Iraqis fled their camp in the face of advancing fighters of the Islamic State group, deepening the humanitarian crisis in the north of the country as the United States carried out its first airstrikes against the militants to blunt their assault.

The Khazer Camp stood empty Friday, located near the front lines of battles between the militants and Kurdish fighters. The camp had been populated by Iraqis who fled their cities and towns as they were taken over by Islamic State fighters in past weeks, and in the past few days they have been forced to flee again.

The militants have been making a push from their strongholds in northwest Iraq toward Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish autonomous zone. For days the two sides have been battling each other over a river at a destroyed bridge on the main road 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Irbil.

U.S. fighter jets dropped 400-pound bombs on an artillery piece and truck towing it after it fired near U.S. personnel outside Irbil, the Pentagon said.

An Associated Press reporter at Khazer saw at least six more explosions in the area Friday, apparently from airstrikes, though it was not known who was carrying them out, since the Iraqi air force has also been hitting positions of Islamic State group.

The U.S. airstrikes and humanitarian air drops reflect the deepest American engagement in Iraq since U.S. troops withdrew in late 2011, after nearly a decade of war. The move pointed to the growing crisis sparked by the Sunni radical group's advances.

Expanding from their stronghold of Mosul, Iraq's second largest city, the militants have captured a string of surrounding towns and even the country's largest hydroelectric dam and reservoir in recent weeks, solidifying their hold.

Ethnic and religious minorities in particular have fled in fear as their towns fall.

U.S. cargo planes on Thursday dropped relief supplies to tens of thousands of Yazidis - half of them children, according to the U.N. - who have been trapped on a remote desert mountain for days without food and water after militants took their town of Sinjar near the Syrian border, according to witnesses in Sinjar, who asked not to be identified for security reasons.

Kamil Amin, spokesman for Iraq's Human Rights Ministry, said hundreds of Yazidi woman under the age of 35 have been taken captive by the militants and that many of them were being held in Mosul.

Yazidis belong to ancient religion seen by the Islamic State group as heretical. The group also sees Shiite Muslims as apostates, and has demanded Christians either convert to Islam or pay a special tax.

Many of the Iraqis who fled Khazer Camp in recent days made their way by car or by foot to Irbil. Others are unaccounted for amid the vast sea of refugees and internally displaced people now roaming Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdish region.

The rush of people expelled from their homes or fleeing violence has exacerbated Iraq's already-dire humanitarian crisis, with some 200,000 Iraqis joining the 1.5 million people already displaced from violence this year.

In Irbil, hundreds of displaced Iraqi men crowded the streets of a Christian-dominated neighborhood Friday, expressing relief at the news of U.S. airstrikes.

Nazar, one of the men lingering outside a bare-bones building-turned-shelter, fled his mainly Christian town of Hamdaniya on Wednesday, when their home began to shutter from the blast of nearby mortar fire.

"We want a solution," said Nazar, who spoke on condition he be identified only by his first name, fearing his family's safety. "We don't to flee our homes and jobs like this - what is our future?"

In contrast to Washington's decision to invade Iraq more than a decade ago, both the airdrop and the authorization of military action against the Islamic State group were widely welcomed by Iraqi and Kurdish officials fearful of the militants' lightning advance.

"We thank Barack Obama," said Khalid Jamal Alber, from the Religious Affairs Ministry in the semi-autonomous Kurdish government in northern Iraq.

The Iraqi Ministry of Immigration and the Displaced also welcomed the aid drops. Ministry spokesman Satar Nawrouz said the drops came "just in time."

About 50,000 Yazidis are believed to have fled into the mountains outside Sinjar. An Iraqi military handout video posted online showed Iraqi troops in helicopters also delivering aid to the area. The footage corresponds to AP reporting of events.

The Islamic State group captured Mosul in June, and then launched a blitz toward the south, sweeping over Sunni-majority towns nearly down to the capital, Baghdad. It already holds large parts of western Iraq, as well as large swaths of the north and east in neighboring Syria.

Iraqi government forces crumbled in the face of the assault, but have since been able to prevent the militants from advancing into Shiite-majority areas. In the north, the Kurds have been the main line of defense against the radicals, but their fighters are now stretched over a long front trying to fend them off.

Now it is expanding in the north. On Thursday the group said it has seized 17 Iraqi cities, towns and targets - including the dam and a military base - over the past five days, including Qaraqoush, the largest Christian village in Iraq. The group also claimed responsibility for a deadly attack in Baghdad that killed 17 people late Thursday. In a statement posted Friday on a militant website frequently used by the group, it said that the attack was a double suicide bombing.

Iraqi Kurdish lawmaker, Ala Talabani said that a real U.S. military help is badly needed now.

"What the Iraqi people need from the United States is strong and aggressive airstrikes instead of limited ones because the situation is very delicate and cannot be solved with limited actions," he said.

Traveling in India, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said earlier Friday that if Islamic militants threaten U.S. interests in Iraq or the thousands of refugees in the mountains, the U.S. military has enough intelligence to clearly single out the attackers and launch effective airstrikes.

He also told reporters that more than 60 of the 72 bundles of food and water airdropped onto the mountain reached the people stranded there.

A representative of Iraq's most influential Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, called for a more comprehensive international intervention to support the Iraqi government.

"The statements of condemnation or consolation in support of the affected people or just sending humanitarian aid are not enough. Rather, solid plans, in cooperation with the Iraqi government, should be put in place to confront and eliminate the terrorists," said al-Sistani's spokesman Abdul-Mahdi al-Karbalaie in his Friday sermon in the holy city of Karbala.

------
Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Vivian Salama in Baghdad, Qassim Abdul-Zahra in Boston and Lolita Baldor in New Delhi contributed to this report.

Source : Sapa-AP /lp
Date : 08 Aug 2014 21:46
 
OBAMA THE UNHAPPY WARRIOR PLUNGES BACK INTO IRAQ

by Jérôme CARTILLIER

He was elected on a promise to end America's "dumb war" in Iraq.

Now, in launching US air strikes to counter a "barbaric" offensive by jihadist militants, a reluctant Barack Obama has reopened a chapter of recent American history he had once dared hope was finished.

In 2012, he was proud to run for re-election as the man who a year previously had finally withdrawn US troops from a "stable, sovereign Iraq," eight long years after his predecessor had sent them in.

Now he becomes the fourth US president in a row to take military action there, after George Bush drove Iraqi troops from Kuwait, Bill Clinton bombed its air defenses and George W. Bush invaded.

On Thursday, Obama outlined his reasons for what he hopes will be a limited engagement: Extremist insurgents were massacring Yazidi and Christian refugees and threatening to march on Arbil.

The northern city is the capital of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, one of the few reliably pro-American parts of the country, and base to a large number of US advisers and officials.

Obama said he could not stand by if Iraq's religious minorities are slaughtered by Sunni Muslim extremists, nor if American personnel are at risk, but insisted this was not the start of a new conflict.

"As commander-in-chief, I will not allow the United States to be dragged into fighting another war in Iraq," he insisted. "American combat troops will not be returning to fight in Iraq."

But, as many recent conflicts have shown, and as Obama must know full well, once US jets were in the air and strikes had begun, it was impossible to know for sure where the conflict would lead.

"The pressure will always increase for the US to do more because they have already admitted that there is a problem there," said Julian Zelizer, Princeton University professor of history and public affairs.

"At this point, we don't know but it is clearly foreseeable that his promise that this will be limited won't hold true."

The White House's definition of the mission -- feed and protect besieged refugees, protect Arbil and US lives -- leaves enough leeway for commanders to take wide-ranging action.

The first strike confirmed Friday by the Pentagon targeted an artillery piece that Islamic State insurgents had turned on Kurdish forces defending Arbil "where US personnel are located."

But defending Arbil will not destroy the so-called Islamic State, which now rampages across much of northern Iraq and eastern Syria on a bloody quest to establish an Islamic caliphate.

Obama's enemies in Washington are demanding tougher action.

"We need to get beyond a policy of half-measures," declared Republican hawks John McCain and Lindsey Graham in a joint statement released after Obama announced military action.

"We need a strategic approach, not just a humanitarian one," they said, calling for air strikes on IS forces, bases and leaders in both Iraq and Syria, and arms shipments to the group's local opponents.

"If ever there were a time to reevaluate our disastrous policy in the Middle East, this is it," McCain and Graham declared.

"Because of the president's hands-off approach, the threats in the region have grown and now directly threaten the United States."

Obama's critics see the chaos in Iraq as the logical conclusion to his failure to insist on a continued US military presence in Iraq after 2011 -- despite the opposition of the Baghdad government.

US troops, they feel, could have stiffened the resolve of Iraqi forces and dissuaded Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shiite-led government from alienating Sunni tribes that once fought Al-Qaeda.

Washington hardliners like McCain have also pushed for the United States to arm "moderate" rebel factions in Syria, in order to prevent extreme groups like the Islamic State from dominating the battlefield.

Obama's White House disputes these arguments, saying that a residual US presence -- even if Maliki had agreed to host it under reasonable terms -- would not have held back the jihadist tide.

"The argument that those individuals are making is that the situation might be different if there were still tens of thousands of American troops in a combat role in Iraq," said Obama spokesman Josh Earnest.

"The consequence of that sort of military posture is that right now American servicemen and women would be on the front lines fighting ISIL in cities and towns all across Iraq."

And the administration can point to a wealth of polling data showing that Americans are loathe to be dragged into yet more wars in the Muslim world, 13 years after the September 11 attacks.

Nevertheless, with images arriving of Christian villages emptied and Yazidi families starving exposed on a mountainside, Obama felt he had to sell his people on at least one more mission.

"I know that many of you are rightly concerned about any American military action in Iraq, even limited strikes like these," he said.

"But when the lives of American citizens are at risk, we will take action," he added. "And when many thousands of innocent civilians are faced with the danger of being wiped out... we will take action.

"That is our responsibility as Americans. That's a hallmark of American leadership. That's who we are," his words determined, even if his grim demeanor betrayed a reluctance to roll the dice.

Zelizer summed up the view of other observers watching Obama's performance: "He is going in this hesitantly, people read it that way, and he has not done a very good job hiding it."

Source : Sapa-AFP /lp
Date : 08 Aug 2014 22:18
 
US STRIKES IS TARGETS IN IRAQ WITH DRONES AND JETS

US forces launched a second wave of air strikes against Islamic extremists near Arbil in northern Iraq on Friday, destroying a militant convoy and killing a mortar team, the Pentagon said.

Shortly after 1400 GMT, US drones destroyed a mortar position and killed a group of militants. Just over an hour later four F/A-18 jets hit a seven-vehicle Islamic State convoy with eight laser-guided bombs.

"The US military continued to attack ISIL targets near Arbil today conducting two additional air strikes to help defend the city where US personnel are assisting the government of Iraq," Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said.

President Barack Obama announced Thursday that he had authorized US air strikes to prevent fighters from the so-called Islamic State from attacking the capital of the Iraqi Kurdish region.

The strikes are also designed to break the siege of Mount Sinjar, where IS forces have cornered and reportedly threatened to kill thousands of civilian refugees from the Yazidi religious minority.

Overnight, a first strike saw an F/A-18 hit an IS artillery position with a 500lb bomb. Shortly beforehand US military planes had dropped food and water to the beleaguered Yazidis.

Friday's second wave saw unmanned drones brought into action.

"Remotely piloted aircraft struck a terrorist mortar position. When ISIL fighters returned to the site moments later, the terrorists were attacked again and successfully eliminated," Kirby said.

"At approximately 11:20 a.m. EDT, four F/A-18 aircraft successfully struck a stationary ISIL convoy of seven vehicles and a mortar position near Arbil," his statement continued.

"The aircraft executed two planned passes. On both runs, each aircraft dropped one laser guided bomb making a total of eight bombs dropped on target neutralizing the mortar and convoy."

Source : Sapa-AFP /lp
Date : 08 Aug 2014 22:24
 
FEMALE KURDISH REPORTER KILLED IN IRAQ CONFLICT

A reporter working with Kurdish news agency Firat was killed Friday when jihadist fighters attacked a camp in Iraq, one of her employers said on their website.

Deniz Firat was hit in the heart by shrapnel during an attack by Islamic State fighters on a camp in the town of Makhmur where families of Turkey's PKK Kurdish rebels have been living.

Makhmur, about 280 kilometres (175 miles) north of Baghdad, is one of the areas that had been attacked by jihadist fighters in recent days.

According to Kurdish officials, it was also one of those targeted in the first US air strikes launched Friday against Sunni extremist militants in northern Iraq.

The journalist worked for a number of outlets, including Firat, a news agency with ties to the PKK, many of whose fighters have been hosted by Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region.

A PKK security official told AFP she died at around 5:00 pm (1400 GMT) during clashes between jihadist and PKK fighters.

Source : Sapa-AFP /mjs
Date : 09 Aug 2014 01:07
 
US JETS STRIKE JIHADISTS IN IRAQ

by Abdelhamid Zebari

US warplanes bombarded jihadist positions in northern Iraq on Friday, in what the federal and Kurdish governments vowed would allow them to start clawing back areas lost in two months of conflict.

President Barack Obama's order for the first air strikes on Iraq since he put an end to US occupation in 2011 came after Islamic State (IS) militants made massive gains on the ground, seizing a dam and forcing a mass exodus of religious minorities.

The Pentagon said US forces bombed an artillery position after fire against Kurdish regional government forces defending their capital Arbil.

In a second wave hours later, a drone destroyed a mortar position and jets hit a seven-vehicle IS convoy with eight laser-guided bombs.

The US operation began with air drops of food and water for thousands of people hiding from the Sunni extremist militants in a barren northern mountain range.

Many people who have been cowering in the Sinjar mountains for five days in searing heat and with no supplies are Yazidis, a minority that follows a 4,000-year-old faith.

Obama accused the IS, which calls Yazidis "devil-worshippers", of attempting "the systematic destruction of the entire people, which would constitute genocide".

The UN said it was "urgently preparing a humanitarian corridor".

Panic had begun to grip Arbil after IS thrust into the Nineveh plains separating it from the jihadist-held city of Mosul and Obama's decision was welcomed there.

"We were very nervous these past few days. Daash (Islamic State) is powerful and well-equipped," said Karwan Ahmed, 27, a taxi driver. "This is good news."

The Kurdish peshmerga, short of ammunition and stretched thin along a huge front, have been forced to retreat in the face of brazen assaults by the jihadists.

Their withdrawal from the Christian heartland on Wednesday and Thursday sparked a mass exodus -- 100,000 people according to Iraq's Chaldean patriarch -- and spurred Western powers into action.

Obama suggested the strikes would be "limited" in scope. But he "has not laid a specific end date," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters, while insisting a "prolonged military conflict that includes US involvement is not on the table."

Iraq's military chief of staff told AFP he expected to see his forces and the peshmerga reclaim large tracts of land "in the coming hours".

He said he thought the US air strikes would extend to other towns controlled by IS, but he did not say which ones. The jihadists control towns west, south and north of Baghdad.

The Kurdish presidency's chief of staff, Fuad Hussein, said at a news conference in Arbil late Friday that 150 peshmerga had been killed in two months of fighting a long a front stretching more than 1,000 kilometres.

He said the US strikes would allow routed Kurdish forces to retake the initiative and carry out a three-phase plan: regroup, redeploy in lost areas and assist the return of displaced populations.

Obama's announcement came after an emergency UN Security Council meeting called by France, which also offered to support the emergency effort.

The capture of Mosul dam, which according to a Kurdish official happened on Thursday, was another setback for the peshmerga who had been defending it and gave jihadists a power of life and death over a huge region.

While IS has weaponised dams before, Mosul dam provides water and electricity to its main stronghold and is crucial to its own state-building efforts.

A 2007 letter to the Iraqi government based on a US assessment had warned that "catastrophic failure of Mosul dam would result in flooding along the Tigris river all the way to Baghdad."

There has been daily fighting on several fronts for two months, and, as the conflict escalated Friday, the US banned its civilian airliners from overflying Iraq, while Britain asked its nationals in parts of Kurdistan to leave.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) decision to bar US planes from Iraqi airspace was mirrored by British Airways and Lufthansa. Several European carriers had quietly stopped flights over Iraq weeks ago.

Obama came to office determined to end US military involvement in Iraq, and in his first term oversaw the withdrawal of the huge ground force deployed there since the 2003 American-led invasion.

But the capture of huge swathes of land by jihadists, who in late June proclaimed a "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq, has brought a country already rife with sectarian tension closer to collapse.

IS has enjoyed a spectacular run of military successes in Iraq, but the group also scored a key victory in Syria, with the capture overnight of a key army base in Raqa province.

Observers say one of the main obstacles to coordinated action by all of IS's Iraqi foes is Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, accused by many of having institutionalised sectarianism in recent years.

Source : Sapa-AFP /mjs
Date : 09 Aug 2014 03:29
 
US BOMBS MILITANTS IN IRAQ AS CRISIS WORSENS

By DIAA HADID and BRAM JANSSEN
Associated Press

The U.S. unleashed its first airstrikes in northern Iraq against militants of the Islamic State group Friday amid a worsening humanitarian crisis. The extremists took captive hundreds of women from a religious minority, according to an Iraqi official, while thousands of other civilians fled in fear.

Many of America's allies backed the U.S. intervention, pledging urgent steps to assist the legions of refugees and displaced people. Those in jeopardy included thousands of members of the Yazidi religious minority whose plight - trapped on a mountaintop by the militants - prompted the U.S. to airdrop crates of food and water to them.

American planes conducted a second airdrop of food and water early Saturday for those trapped in the Sinjar mountains, said Pentagon chief spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby. Escorted by two Navy fighter jets, three planes dropped 72 bundles of supplies for the refugees, including more than 28,000 meals and more than 1,500 gallons of water, said Kirby, who spoke from New Delhi during a trip with U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

The extremists' "campaign of terror against the innocent, including the Yazidi and Christian minorities, and its grotesque and targeted acts of violence bear all the warning signs and hallmarks of genocide," said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry. "For anyone who needed a wake-up call, this is it."

Underscoring the sense of alarm, a spokesman for Iraq's human rights ministry said hundreds of Yazidi women had been seized by the militants. Kamil Amin, citing reports from the victims' families, said some of the women were being held in schools in Iraq's second-largest city, Mosul.

"We think that the terrorists by now consider them slaves and they have vicious plans for them," Amin told The Associated Press. "We think that these women are going to be used in demeaning ways by those terrorists to satisfy their animalistic urges in a way that contradicts all the human and Islamic values."

For the U.S. military, which withdrew its forces from Iraq in late 2011 after more than eight years of war, the re-engagement began when two F/A-18 jets dropped 500-pound bombs on a piece of artillery and the truck towing it. The Pentagon said the militants were using the artillery to shell Kurdish forces defending Irbil, the capital of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, and home to a U.S. consulate and about three dozen U.S. military trainers.

Later Friday, the U.S. launched a second round of airstrikes near Irbil, U.S. officials said. The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss the strikes publicly, said unmanned aircraft hit a mortar and four Navy F/A-18 fighter jets destroyed a seven-vehicle convoy.

The U.S. State Department warned U.S. citizens against all but essential travel to Iraq and said those in the country were at high risk for kidnapping and terrorist violence.

Expanding from their stronghold of Mosul, the militants have captured a string of towns and Iraq's largest hydroelectric dam and reservoir in recent weeks. Ethnic and religious minorities, fearing persecution and slaughter, have fled as their towns fell.

Many had taken refuge in the Khazer Camp, set up near Irbil, but it was empty Friday as nearby fighting prompted families to flee once again.

Some made their way by car or on foot to Irbil; others were unaccounted for amid the sea of fleeing people. According to the U.N., more than 500,000 people have been displaced by the violence in Iraq since June, bringing the total this year to well over 1 million.

In Irbil, hundreds of uprooted men crowded the streets of a Christian-dominated neighborhood, expressing relief at the news of U.S. airstrikes.

Nazar, one man lingering outside a bare-bones building-turned-shelter, fled his mainly Christian town of Hamdaniya on Wednesday, when their home began to shudder from the blast of nearby mortar fire.

"We want a solution," said Nazar, who spoke on condition he be identified only by his first name, fearing his family's safety. "We don't to flee our homes and jobs like this. What is our future?"

In contrast to Washington's decision to invade Iraq more than a decade ago, both the airdrop and the authorization of military action against the Islamic State group were widely welcomed by Iraqi and Kurdish officials fearful of the militants' advance.

"We thank Barack Obama," said Khalid Jamal Alber, from the Religious Affairs Ministry in the Kurdish government.

In his announcement Thursday night, Obama had identified protecting the Yazidis and defending Americans as the two objectives for the airstrikes.

But on Friday, his spokesman, Josh Earnest, said the U.S. was also prepared to use military force to assist Iraqi forces and the Kurds' peshmerga militia.

While Iraq's military has proven unable in many cases to thwart the Islamic State force's capture of key cities, Earnest called the peshmerga a "capable fighting force" that had shown an ability to regroup effectively.

At a checkpoint about 23 miles (38 kilometers) from Irbil, Kurdish militiamen vowed fierce resistance to any further Islamic State advances, but they also remarked on the ferocity of their foe.

Capt. Ziyran Mahmoud, 28, said Islamic State fighters wore suicide belts as they advanced in armored vehicles and would detonate them - killing soldiers from both sides - if Kurdish fighters came too close.

"They are ready to blow themselves up and die," Mahmoud said. "But the peshmerga aren't afraid. We are also ready to die for our homeland."

The Islamic State group captured Mosul in June, and then launched a blitz toward the south, sweeping over Sunni-majority towns almost to the capital, Baghdad. It already holds large parts of western Iraq, as well as swaths of neighboring Syria.

Iraqi government forces crumbled in the face of the assault but have since been able to prevent the militants from advancing into Shiite-majority areas. In the north, the Kurds have been the main line of defense against the radicals, but their fighters are stretched over a long front trying to fend them off.

Hagel, traveling in India, said if Islamic militants threaten U.S. interests in Iraq or the thousands of refugees in the mountains, the U.S. military has enough intelligence to clearly single out the attackers and launch effective airstrikes.

At the White House, Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes met with members of the Iraqi Yazidi community and "noted that the United States will act, carefully and responsibly, to prevent a potential act of genocide," said Deputy NSC spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan. Rhodes "emphasized that the United States will continue to pursue a strategy that empowers Iraqis to confront this crisis, including by providing urgent assistance to Iraqi government and Kurdish forces," Meehan said.

The International Rescue Committee said it was providing emergency medical care for up to 4,000 dehydrated Yazidis, mostly women and children, who survived without food or water for up to six days hiding in the Sinjar mountains before fleeing to a refugee camp in Syria, where a civil war is raging.

Officials in Britain, Germany and elsewhere pledged financial aid to support humanitarian efforts in Iraq, and several top European officials supported Obama's decision to intervene with airstrikes.

British Prime Minister David Cameron expressed special concern for the Yazidis trapped on Mount Sinjar.

"They fear slaughter if they descend back down the slopes but face starvation and dehydration if they remain on the mountain," Cameron said. The world must help them in their hour of desperate need."

One Yazidi man, who identified himself as Mikey Hassan, said he, his two brothers and their families fled into the Sinjar mountains and then escaped to the Kurdish city of Dohuk after two days by shooting their way past the militants. Hassan, in a telephone interview with the AP, said he and his family went about 17 hours with no food before getting some bread. Details of his account could not be independently corroborated.

Yazidis belong to ancient religion seen by the Islamic State group as heretical. The group also sees Shiite Muslims as apostates, and has demanded Christians either convert to Islam or pay a special tax.

Pope Francis also was engaged, sending an envoy to Iraq to show solidarity with Christians who have been forced from their homes. There also was a papal plea on Twitter: "Please take a moment to pray for all those who have been forced from their homes in Iraq."

In response to the fighting, Lufthansa, Turkish Airlines and other carriers canceled flights to and from Irbil.

In the U.S., the FAA banned American carriers from flying over Iraq, saying hostilities there could threaten safety. British Airways also said it was temporarily suspending flights over Iraq

---
Associated Press writers Robert Burns and Josh Lederman in Washington, Danica Kirka in London, Caleb Jones in New York, Nicole Winfield in Rome, Sameer N. Yacoub and Vivian Salama in Baghdad, and Lolita C. Baldor in New Delhi contributed to this report.

Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 09 Aug 2014 05:04
 
Last edited:
US DROPS MORE FOOD AND WATER FOR IRAQI REFUGEES

By LOLITA C. BALDOR
Associated Press

U.S. defense officials say American planes have conducted a second airdrop of food and water for thousands of refugees trapped in Iraq's Sinjar mountains.

The chief spokesman for the Pentagon, Rear Adm. John Kirby, says that three planes dropped 72 bundles of supplies for the refugees. Included in the aid were more than 28,000 meals and more than 1,500 gallons of water.

Members of the Yazidi religious minority have been trapped for days by Islamic State militants and fear they will be slaughtered if they leave the mountains.

Two Navy fighter jets escorted the supply planes. The airdrop was the second by the U.S. in two days.

Kirby spoke from New Delhi during a round-the-world trip by U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 09 Aug 2014 04:50
 
Def good work by the US. This situation will get considerably worse for the civilians in the areas before it gets better though... but hopefully they can get this IS problem under control.
 
Having glossed over some of the articles,
seems this is the real first time the majority of air strikes are Drone attacks?
(In a major rapid deployment response)

I guess this could be the precedent for the future of intervention?
Minimal risk with a serious consequences on the ground for those targeted?

If so an interesting change in warfare/risk taking by the US.
 
I guess this could be the precedent for the future of intervention?
Minimal risk with a serious consequences on the ground for those targeted?

It's not a precedent for intervention, it's the future of war. The main reason why the US interventions overseas are unpopular, is due to the personnel they lose. Take the troops out of the firing line and suddenly opposition to war is pretty much gone.

The US has pretty much already got the aerial warfare aspect sewn up (expect to see drone strike fighters within this decade), the ground part will take longer. But with the ability to put long-loitering spotter drones in the air, the threat to human ground troops can be reduced significantly.
 
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