The Islamic State Thread

'FAR FEWER' STRANDED ON IRAQ MOUNTAIN THAN THOUGHT: US

The United States said Wednesday its troops found "far fewer" Yazidi refugees marooned on a northern Iraqi mountain than expected, making an evacuation mission less likely, after air strikes pummeled besieging Islamic militants.

The UN refugee agency has said tens of thousands of civilians, many of them members of the Yazidi religious minority, remain trapped on Mount Sinjar by jihadists from the so-called Islamic State (IS), which has overrun large swathes of Iraq and Syria in a lightning and brutal offensive.

But the Pentagon said that -- based on a firsthand assessment by a small party of US troops -- the plight of those on the mountain was better than feared, and an evacuation mission "is far less likely".

A US military official said the special forces soldiers had returned safely to base at Arbil, the capital of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region.

Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said that the troops, which consisted of less than 20 personnel, did not engage in any combat.

"The team has assessed that there are far fewer Yazidis on Mount Sinjar than previously feared, in part because of the success of humanitarian air drops, air strikes on ISIL targets, the efforts of the [Kurdish] Peshmerga and the ability of thousands of Yazidis to evacuate from the mountain each night over the last several days.

"The Yazidis who remain are in better condition than previously believed and continue to have access to the food and water that we have dropped."

Iraqi helicopters and Kurdish troops have been trying to come to the aid of the Yazidi religious minority, and Washington and its allies have been studying ways to airlift them off Sinjar or open a humanitarian corridor.

Various countries are ramping up their efforts to aid the trapped civilians and Kurdish forces battling the militants, and the US has launched a series of air strikes since Friday.

But a US military deployment on the mountain itself would take American involvement to another level.

Thousands of people have poured across a border bridge into camps in Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region after trekking through neighbouring Syria to find refuge, most with nothing but the clothes on their backs.

Some women carried exhausted children, weeping as they reached the relative safety of Iraqi Kurdistan.

But large numbers of people, including the most vulnerable, remain trapped on Mount Sinjar, said Mahmud Bakr, 45.

"My father Khalaf is 70 years old -- he cannot make this journey," he told AFP as he crossed back into Iraq.

UN minority rights expert Rita Izsak has warned the civilians face "a mass atrocity and potential genocide within days or hours".

For those who managed to escape the siege, the relief of reaching relative safety was tempered by the spartan conditions of the camps hurriedly erected by the Iraqi Kurdish authorities to accommodate them.

"We were besieged for 10 days in the mountain. The whole world is talking about us but we did not get any real help," said Khodr Hussein. "We went from hunger in Sinjar to hunger in this camp."

As the international outcry over the plight of the Yazidis mounted, Western governments pledged to step up help for those still trapped, and the United Nations declared a Level 3 emergency in Iraq, allowing it to speed up its response.

The US said Wednesday it had conducted a seventh airdrop of food and water for those remaining on the mountain, bringing the total aid delivered to the stranded Yazidis in coordination with the Iraqi government to more than 114,000 meals and 35,000 gallons of drinking water.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said Wednesday an international plan was under way to rescue trapped civilians.

He declined to give details of the operation, but said Britain would play a role.

Washington has already said it will ship weapons to the Kurds to help them fight back against the jihadists, and France has followed suit.

Washington meanwhile urged Iraqi prime minister designate Haidar al-Abadi to move swiftly to form a broad-based government able to unite Iraqis in the fight against the IS insurgents who have overrun large parts of the country.

Abadi, whose nomination was accepted by President Fuad Masum on Monday, has 30 days to build a team that will face the daunting task of defusing sectarian tensions and, in the words of US President Barack Obama, convincing the Sunni Arab minority that IS "is not the only game in town".

The office of top Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani released Wednesday a July letter in which he called for incumbent premier Nuri al-Maliki to be replaced.

Maliki has defied growing international pressure to step aside and insisted it would take a federal court ruling for him to quit.

Sistani is revered by millions and has enormous influence among Iraq's Shiite Arab majority.

But even before the release of the Sistani letter, analysts said Maliki had lost too much backing to stay in power.

International support has poured in for Abadi, most importantly from Tehran and Washington, the two main foreign powerbrokers in Iraq.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 14 Aug 2014 05:09
 
US EVACUATION OF IRAQ MOUNTAIN 'LESS LIKELY': PENTAGON

There are "far fewer" Yazidi refugees marooned on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq than previously thought and they are in better condition than expected, the Pentagon said Wednesday.

"Based on this assessment, the interagency has determined that an evacuation mission is far less likely," Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said in a statement after US troops were flown onto the mountain to see the refugees' plight firsthand.

The UN refugee agency has said tens of thousands of civilians, many of them members of the Yazidi minority, remain trapped on the mountain by jihadists from the so-called Islamic State (ISIL), which has overrun large swaths of Iraq and Syria in a lightning and brutal offensive.

Kirby stressed that the US troops who saw for themselves the civilians stranded on the mountain did not engage in any combat.

Last week, President Barack Obama authorized air strikes to protect Yazidi refugees and US personnel in Arbil, the capital of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, but he too has insisted that US "combat troops" will not return to war in the unstable nation.

"The team, which consisted of less than 20 personnel, did not engage in combat operations, and all personnel have returned safely to Arbil by military air," Kirby said of Wednesday's assessment.

"The team has assessed that there are far fewer Yazidis on Mount Sinjar than previously feared, in part because of the success of humanitarian air drops, air strikes on ISIL targets, the efforts of the Peshmerga and the ability of thousands of Yazidis to evacuate from the mountain each night over the last several days.

"The Yazidis who remain are in better condition than previously believed and continue to have access to the food and water that we have dropped."


Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 14 Aug 2014 02:10
 
YEMEN QAEDA CHIEF PRAISES IRAQ JIHADISTS

An influential Al-Qaeda leader in Yemen has praised Islamic State jihadists for their "victories in Iraq" but without pledging allegiance to their self-proclaimed "caliph" or leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

"I congratulate all the mujahedeen on different fronts and all Muslims for the victories won by our brothers in Iraq against the puppets (of Shiite Iran)," ideological leader Ibrahim al-Rubaish says in a video posted online.

Rubaish is considered to be the religious affairs chief of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the Yemen-based franchise of the jihadist network, formed in a 2009 merger of its Saudi and Yemeni branches.

"Who does not welcome the victories of Sunnis and the defeat of (Nuri al-) Maliki's gangs that have mistreated the Sunnis?" he asks of Iraq's controversial Shiite premier who continues to defy the president and international pressure to quit.

Maliki's policies in Iraq were widely blamed for widening sectarian divisions, causing a lack of confidence in the government and contributing to the rise of the Islamic State jihadists.

However, Rubaish held back from giving his support to Baghdadi, who at the end of June proclaimed the establishment of a caliphate straddling Iraq and Syria, with himself as "leader for Muslims everywhere".

The AQAP chief instead urged "an end to infighting between (Sunni) mujahedeen", and called for "a common front to battle the enemies of our community, the puppets of (Shiite) Iran".

The Al-Qaeda branch in Yemen is considered by the United States to be the deadliest franchise of the extremist network.

AQAP remains faithful to Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Egypt-born successor to Al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), another franchise in the network, last month rejected the declaration of an Islamist caliphate in Iraq and Syria, saying it had "defects" that jihadist leaders should rectify.

AQIM also reiterated its allegiance to Zawahiri.


Source : Sapa-AFP /aa
Date : 14 Aug 2014 10:41
 
IRAQI ARMY, MILITANTS CLASH WEST OF BAGHDAD
Associated Press

Clashes between Iraqi troops and Sunni militants west of Baghdad killed at least four children on Thursday as the United Nations announced its highest level of emergency for the Arab country's humanitarian crisis in the wake of the onslaught by the extremist Islamic State group.

Since their blitz offensive in June, the al-Qaida-breakaway group has overrun much of Iraq's north and west and driven out hundreds of thousands from their homes. The push has displaced members of the minority Christian and Yazidi religious communities and threatened Iraqi Kurds in the Kurdish autonomous region in the north.

The U.N. on Wednesday declared the situation in Iraq a "Level 3 Emergency" - a development that will trigger additional goods, funds and assets to respond to the needs of the displaced, said U.N. special representative Nickolay Mladenov, pointing to the "scale and complexity of the current humanitarian catastrophe."

The Security Council also said it was backing a newly nominated premier-designate in the hope that he can swiftly form an "inclusive government" that could counter the insurgent threat, which has plunged Iraq into its worst crisis since the U.S. troop withdrawal in 2011.

Tens of thousands of Yazidis fled the Islamic State group's advance to take refuge in the remote desert Sinjar mountain range.

The U.S. and Iraqi military have dropped food and water supplies, and in recent days Kurds from neighboring Syria battled to open a corridor to the mountain, allowing some 45,000 to escape.

The U.N. said it would provide increased support to those who have escaped Sinjar and to 400,000 other Iraqis who have fled since June to the Kurdish province of Dahuk. Others have fled to other parts of the Kurdish region or further south.

A total of 1.5 million have been displaced by the fighting since the insurgents captured Iraq's second-largest city, Mosul, in June and quickly swept over other parts of the country.

The United States has been carrying out airstrikes in recent days against Islamic State fighters, helping fend back their advance on Kurdish regions.

Fighting erupted early on Thursday in the militant-held city of Fallujah, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) west of Baghdad. The clashes on the city's northern outskirts killed four children, along with a woman and at least 10 militants, said Fallujah hospital director Ahmed Shami. He had no further details on clashes, beyond saying that four other children and another woman were wounded in the violence.

It was difficult to gauge the situation in Fallujah, which has been in the hands of the Islamic State since early January, when the militants seized much of the Western Anbar province along with parts of the provincial capital of Ramadi.

Meanwhile, Iraq's central government in Baghdad continued to be mired in political turmoil, after the president nominated a Shiite politician, Haider al-Abadi, to form the next government, putting him on track to replace embattled Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Al-Maliki on Wednesday said he will not relinquish power until a federal court rules on what he called a "constitutional violation" by President Fouad Massoum.

Al-Maliki insists he should have a third term in office but he is appearing increasingly isolated as the international community lines up behind al-Abadi, who has 30 days to come up with a proposal for a Cabinet.

The U.N. Security Council urged al-Abadi to work swiftly to form "an inclusive government that represents all segments of the Iraqi population and that contributes to finding a viable and sustainable solution to the country's current challenges."


Source : Sapa-AP /aa
Date : 14 Aug 2014 11:13
 
MOROCCO DISMANTLES RECRUITMENT CELL FOR IRAQ

Moroccan police say they have dismantled a nine-person cell recruiting volunteers to fight with the radical Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq.

The Interior Ministry statement Thursday said the investigation into the network, based in the cities of Tetouan, Fez and Fnideq, was carried out in cooperation with Spanish authorities.

While Morocco has been largely spared the terrorist attacks striking elsewhere in North Africa, police frequently report dismantling recruitment cells.

The statement warned that many of the fighters hope to return after being trained, to carry out attacks in Morocco.

Police say 900 Moroccans are fighting in Syria and 100 have been arrested upon their return.

Other recruitment cells were dismantled last May and June, both in Fez.


Source : Sapa-AP /kd
Date : 14 Aug 2014 13:42
 
ONLY 1,000 YEZIDIS STILL TRAPPED ON MOUNT SINJAR, UN SAYS

Only 1,000 Yezidi refugees remain on Mount Sinjar, in northern Iraq, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq tells dpa.

The UNHCR tells dpa that 80,000 Yezidis have escaped from the mountain in the last five days.


Source : Sapa-dpa /kd
Date : 14 Aug 2014 14:10
 
ONLY 1,000 YEZIDIS STILL TRAPPED ON MOUNT SINJAR, UN SAYS

Only 1,000 Yezidi refugees remain on Mount Sinjar, in northern Iraq, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq tells dpa.

The UNHCR tells dpa that 80,000 Yezidis have escaped from the mountain in the last five days.


Source : Sapa-dpa /kd
Date : 14 Aug 2014 14:10

That's fantastic news.
 
ONLY 1,000 YEZIDIS STILL TRAPPED ON MOUNT SINJAR, UN SAYS

Only 1,000 Yezidi refugees remain on Mount Sinjar, in northern Iraq, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq tells dpa.

The UNHCR tells dpa that 80,000 Yezidis have escaped from the mountain in the last five days.


Source : Sapa-dpa /kd
Date : 14 Aug 2014 14:10

Finally I can chime in :)

Great news :D
 
IRAQ'S MALIKI CONCEDES DEFEAT, BACKS PM DESIGNATE

Iraq's divisive premier Nuri al-Maliki dropped his bid to stay in power Thursday, bowing to huge domestic and international pressure as a jihadist-led offensive threatens to tear the country apart.

The two-term premier threw in the towel after an acrimonious political battle and backed his designated successor Haidar al-Abadi, a fellow member of the Shiite party Dawa.

"I announce before you today... the withdrawal of my candidacy in favour of the brother Doctor Haidar al-Abadi," he said in a televised address, with Abadi standing next to him.

His decision was swiftly welcomed by the US and the UN.

"Today, Iraqis took another major step forward in uniting their country," US National Security Advisor Susan Rice said in a statement.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Maliki's withdrawal "will allow the crucial process to form a new government to proceed swiftly and within the time frame provided for in the constitution."

He urged the formation of "an inclusive, broad-based government ready to immediately tackle these pressing issues."

Maliki, 64, turned the page on eight years that saw him rise from the relative anonymity of a former exile who returned in the wake of the 2003 US-led invasion to become a feared and powerful ruler.

Quelling fears a desperate bid to cling to power could worsen what is already Iraq's worst crisis in years, Maliki said he was stepping aside to "facilitate the progress of the political process and the formation of the new government."

He defended his record at the helm but critics say his sectarian policies have alienated and radicalised the Sunni minority, most of whose heartland was overrun by extremist Islamic State fighters facing little or no popular resistance two months ago.

The jihadist group has since declared a "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq, hunted down religious minorities, destroyed holy sites, seized the country's largest dam and several oil fields.

The devastating militant advance has also displaced hundreds of thousands of people and posed an immediate existential threat to the world's seventh oil producer by de facto redrawing its borders along ethnic and sectarian lines.

Iraqi forces completely folded when IS forces moved in and while the Kurdish peshmerga initially fared better, the US arms that retreating federal troops left behind made the jihadists a formidable foe.

President Barack Obama said a week of US air strikes had broken the siege on a northern mountain where civilians had been hiding from jihadists for more than 10 days.

The ordeal of tens of thousands of people, mostly from the Yazidi minority, was one of the dramatic chapters of the devastating two-month conflict and one of the reasons Obama sent warplanes back over Iraq, three years after pulling his troops out.

"We helped save many innocent lives. Because of these efforts, we do not expect there to be an additional operation to evacuate people off the mountain and it's unlikely we're going to need to continue humanitarian air drops on the mountain," Obama said.

He had warned that a massacre on Mount Sinjar could lead to a genocide against the vulnerable Yazidi minority, whose members are now largely massing into camps in autonomous Kurdistan.

The Pentagon said 4,000 to 5,000 Yazidis remained on the mountain, which they hold to be the final resting place of Noah's Ark, but explained 2,000 "reside there and may not want to leave".

Obama added that the air strikes, first launched on August 8, would go on.

EU ministers were set to convene in Brussels on Friday to seek unanimous approval for the shipment of arms to Iraqi Kurds fighting the Islamic State jihadists.

The unscheduled gathering comes after days of forceful demands by France, whose Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius criticised EU colleagues for remaining on holiday while besieged civilians were being killed in Iraq.

Britain would "favourably consider" arming Kurdish forces in their battle against Islamic State (IS) militants in Iraq, a spokesman for the British prime minister's office said on Thursday.

Thousands of people have poured across a border bridge into camps in Iraq's Kurdish region after trekking through neighbouring Syria to find refuge, most with nothing but the clothes on their backs.

Some women carried exhausted children, weeping as they reached the relative safety of the camps.

The hundreds of thousands of Yazidis, Christians, Turkmen, Shabak and other people who have been displaced in recent weeks have little prospect of returning home any time soon.

Washington has ruled out boots on the ground and the fight-back is being led Kurdish forces who, despite Western arms deliveries, have so far contained IS fighters rather than reclaimed large tracts of territory.

The international community had for weeks stressed that no effective counter-offensive could take place without a cohesive government steering the country.

Obama, the United Nations, Iraq's most revered Shiite cleric and even much of his own parliamentary bloc had made it clear that government could not be headed by Maliki.

Observers had said Maliki had reasons to fear for his life or at least his freedom after relinquishing the premiership and could seek to stay in a position of power as a protection.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 15 Aug 2014 05:11
 
IRAQ'S MALIKI CONCEDES DEFEAT, BACKS PM DESIGNATE

Iraq's divisive premier Nuri al-Maliki dropped his bid to stay in power Thursday, bowing to huge domestic and international pressure as a jihadist-led offensive threatens to tear the country apart.

The two-term premier threw in the towel after an acrimonious political battle and backed his designated successor Haidar al-Abadi, a fellow member of the Shiite party Dawa.

"I announce before you today... the withdrawal of my candidacy in favour of the brother Doctor Haidar al-Abadi," he said in a televised address, with Abadi standing next to him.

His decision was swiftly welcomed by the US and the UN.

"Today, Iraqis took another major step forward in uniting their country," US National Security Advisor Susan Rice said in a statement.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Maliki's withdrawal "will allow the crucial process to form a new government to proceed swiftly and within the time frame provided for in the constitution."

He urged the formation of "an inclusive, broad-based government ready to immediately tackle these pressing issues."

Maliki, 64, turned the page on eight years that saw him rise from the relative anonymity of a former exile who returned in the wake of the 2003 US-led invasion to become a feared and powerful ruler.

Quelling fears a desperate bid to cling to power could worsen what is already Iraq's worst crisis in years, Maliki said he was stepping aside to "facilitate the progress of the political process and the formation of the new government."

He defended his record at the helm but critics say his sectarian policies have alienated and radicalised the Sunni minority, most of whose heartland was overrun by extremist Islamic State fighters facing little or no popular resistance two months ago.

The jihadist group has since declared a "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq, hunted down religious minorities, destroyed holy sites, seized the country's largest dam and several oil fields.

The devastating militant advance has also displaced hundreds of thousands of people and posed an immediate existential threat to the world's seventh oil producer by de facto redrawing its borders along ethnic and sectarian lines.

Iraqi forces completely folded when IS forces moved in and while the Kurdish peshmerga initially fared better, the US arms that retreating federal troops left behind made the jihadists a formidable foe.

President Barack Obama said a week of US air strikes had broken the siege on a northern mountain where civilians had been hiding from jihadists for more than 10 days.

The ordeal of tens of thousands of people, mostly from the Yazidi minority, was one of the dramatic chapters of the devastating two-month conflict and one of the reasons Obama sent warplanes back over Iraq, three years after pulling his troops out.

"We helped save many innocent lives. Because of these efforts, we do not expect there to be an additional operation to evacuate people off the mountain and it's unlikely we're going to need to continue humanitarian air drops on the mountain," Obama said.

He had warned that a massacre on Mount Sinjar could lead to a genocide against the vulnerable Yazidi minority, whose members are now largely massing into camps in autonomous Kurdistan.

The Pentagon said 4,000 to 5,000 Yazidis remained on the mountain, which they hold to be the final resting place of Noah's Ark, but explained 2,000 "reside there and may not want to leave".

Obama added that the air strikes, first launched on August 8, would go on.

EU ministers were set to convene in Brussels on Friday to seek unanimous approval for the shipment of arms to Iraqi Kurds fighting the Islamic State jihadists.

The unscheduled gathering comes after days of forceful demands by France, whose Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius criticised EU colleagues for remaining on holiday while besieged civilians were being killed in Iraq.

Britain would "favourably consider" arming Kurdish forces in their battle against Islamic State (IS) militants in Iraq, a spokesman for the British prime minister's office said on Thursday.

Thousands of people have poured across a border bridge into camps in Iraq's Kurdish region after trekking through neighbouring Syria to find refuge, most with nothing but the clothes on their backs.

Some women carried exhausted children, weeping as they reached the relative safety of the camps.

The hundreds of thousands of Yazidis, Christians, Turkmen, Shabak and other people who have been displaced in recent weeks have little prospect of returning home any time soon.

Washington has ruled out boots on the ground and the fight-back is being led Kurdish forces who, despite Western arms deliveries, have so far contained IS fighters rather than reclaimed large tracts of territory.

The international community had for weeks stressed that no effective counter-offensive could take place without a cohesive government steering the country.

Obama, the United Nations, Iraq's most revered Shiite cleric and even much of his own parliamentary bloc had made it clear that government could not be headed by Maliki.

Observers had said Maliki had reasons to fear for his life or at least his freedom after relinquishing the premiership and could seek to stay in a position of power as a protection.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 15 Aug 2014 05:11

Is it just me or is Obama a terribly weak Commander-in-Chef? Airstrikes are not enough to contain ISIS. I reckon Obama will not be avoiding sending US troops to Iraq for long. ISIS's getting more and more dangerous atm and a very serious threat to the world.
 
Is it just me or is Obama a terribly weak Commander-in-Chef? Airstrikes are not enough to contain ISIS. I reckon Obama will not be avoiding sending US troops to Iraq for long. ISIS's getting more and more dangerous atm and a very serious threat to the world.
I believe the US are planning to reduce their military personnel over the next 5 years with at least 100 000 soldiers
 
Is it just me or is Obama a terribly weak Commander-in-Chef? Airstrikes are not enough to contain ISIS. I reckon Obama will not be avoiding sending US troops to Iraq for long. ISIS's getting more and more dangerous atm and a very serious threat to the world.

Yes, he is... His new foreign policy mantra is "Don't do stupid stuff" :rolleyes:
 
Is it just me or is Obama a terribly weak Commander-in-Chef? Airstrikes are not enough to contain ISIS. I reckon Obama will not be avoiding sending US troops to Iraq for long. ISIS's getting more and more dangerous atm and a very serious threat to the world.

He can't 'send in troops' by his own volition. There's this thing called Congress.

Why would he anyway, given the massive backlash against the previous excursion into Iraq?

On point of interest: Were you pro the Iraq war?
 
He can't 'send in troops' by his own volition. There's this thing called Congress.

Why would he anyway, given the massive backlash against the previous excursion into Iraq?

On point of interest: Were you pro the Iraq war?

Haha, on this note, people still don't see the sarcasm that the USS George H.W. Bush is in the waters right next to Iraq.
 
Yes, he is... His new foreign policy mantra is "Don't do stupid stuff" :rolleyes:

ISIS is now all over Iraq like bacon-fearing, barbaric, vile and Allah dick sucking worms that they are. The opportunity to strike them down while they were being formed into one of the most dangerous terrorist groups came and went away like a fly. Good job, Obama. You will always be remembered for this. ISIS owes you a huge thank you card.

He can't 'send in troops' by his own volition. There's this thing called Congress.

Why would he anyway, given the massive backlash against the previous excursion into Iraq?

On point of interest: Were you pro the Iraq war?

The situation in Iraq is totally different now. No WMD bull**** this time. Like Islam, ISIS poses a very serious threat to world peace. They must be contained at all costs before it gets too late.
 
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