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NO, the US drones are purely there to protect US personnel (embassy staff) and a few others.
Their role is "force protection" of US assessment teams helping Iraqi security forces repel militants now running large parts of the country.
They are supporting other manned and unmanned aircraft making 30-40 surveillance missions each day.
...
"Some of those are armed. The reason they are is for force protection measures because we have advisors there. Primary reason is for force protection purposes".
The New York Times reported that they are Predator drones, equipped with Hellfire missiles, and they began flights over Baghdad on Thursday.
...
They are in a position to call in air strikes against the militants if it is deemed necessary.
The context was about the Iraquis having to wait a long time to buy US aircraft and the Russians and Belerussians will deliver them immediately. The drones are not there as a substitute.NO what? You want them to go out on the ground and do the shooting for the Iraqi soldiers also? So you can moan about that?
As they said:
As the bolded parts make clear, the USA is already helping. Active, advising and ready to react with armed drones, at any second that they need to. The Iraqis need to do the footwork themselves.
The context was about the Iraquis having to wait a long time to buy US aircraft and the Russians and Belerussians will deliver them immediately. The drones are not there as a substitute.
NO, the US drones are purely there to protect US personnel (embassy staff) and a few others.
NO what? You want them to go out on the ground and do the shooting for the Iraqi soldiers also? So you can moan about that?
As the bolded parts make clear, the USA is already helping. Active, advising and ready to react with armed drones, at any second that they need to. The Iraqis need to do the footwork themselves.
The context was about the Iraquis having to wait a long time to buy US aircraft and the Russians and Belerussians will deliver them immediately. The drones are not there as a substitute.
Can we call it another US-inspired civil war yet?
Which ones.I wouldn't call it that. The Iraqis also have themselves to blame. But the lesson is to be more careful with interventions.
The first ten Russian Sukhoi (Su-24) fighter jets arrived in Iraq on Saturday, the country’s Defense Ministry said. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is hoping the jets will make a key difference in the fight against ISIS.
“The fighter jets landed today in the morning on different military airfields,” MP Abbas al-Bayati told Iraqi media.
The official spokesperson for the Iraqi Ministry of Defense, Mohammed al-Askari, also confirmed the information, Al Iraqiya TV channel reported.
The fighter jets will be stationed at an airbase located in the southern part of the country, PressTV reported, citing military sources.
Earlier this week, Prime Minister Maliki revealed that Iraq purchased jets from Russia and Belarus in order to help its fight against Sunni militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS/ISIL).
At the same time, Maliki criticized the US for taking too long to deliver on its own contract after Iraq purchased F-16 jets from America.
On Friday, Iraqi Air Force Commander Hameed al-Maliki confirmed the shipment of MI-35 and MI-28 Russian helicopter fighters to "keep the momentum" in the attacks against ISIS, Ruptly reported.
The commander said that he signed three contracts with the Russians and stressed the importance of the choppers as "excellent anti-terrorism weapons."
The radical Sunni Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS or ISIL) has taken large parts of the country's north from the Shia government.
Hundreds of Iraqi soldiers have been killed by insurgents since the Sunni militants began their offensive on June 9, according to Iraqi forces.
The United Nations says more than 1,000 people – mainly civilians – have been killed during the surge thus far.
Yes, my thoughts exactly, and to answer the ever-argumentative Lightscribe. The US drones are not there to protect Iraqis.If these Russian jets are to be deployed against ISIS as quickly as the Iraqi's are implying, then they defiantly will not be flown by Iraqi's. Its not possible to train up a pilot to be effective in a modern jet within days. Unless of course they are going to use them as kamikaze or something. Most likely by Russian or other Eastern European mercenaries.
Yes, my thoughts exactly, and to answer the ever-argumentative Lightscribe. The US drones are not there to protect Iraqis.
Their role is "force protection" of US assessment teams helping Iraqi security forces repel militants now running large parts of the country.
They are supporting other manned and unmanned aircraft making 30-40 surveillance missions each day.
...
"Some of those are armed. The reason they are is for force protection measures because we have advisors there. Primary reason is for force protection purposes".
The New York Times reported that they are Predator drones, equipped with Hellfire missiles, and they began flights over Baghdad on Thursday.
...
They are in a position to call in air strikes against the militants if it is deemed necessary.
because we have advisors there
The evening's meal was taken care of. Suddenly giddy, she exclaimed, "God has blessed us!"
given the extent of suffering & misery, i would assume their god had abandoned them.
if their god was of any use whatsoever, he would put an end to what is happening to his flock - however . . . . .
The president of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan Region has told the BBC he intends to hold a referendum on independence within months.
Massoud Barzani said that Iraq was in effect already partitioned.
He said that while the Kurds would play a part in a political solution to the country's crisis, independence was what he described as their natural right.
Iraq's parliament meanwhile meets for the first time since April's elections and in the midst of a major insurgency.
It faces the task of creating a unified government to deal with the escalating political crisis.
Huge swathes of northern Iraq are now in the hands of Sunni insurgents, including Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) militants, who have declared an Islamic caliphate in their newly conquered territories.
'Tragic situation'
In the past month many Iraqi troops have fled northern cities in the face of sweeping advances by Isis rebels, allowing the Kurds to move into previously disputed areas, such as the oil-rich region of Kirkuk.
"Everything that's happened recently shows that it's the right of Kurdistan to achieve independence," Mr Barzani said.
"From now on, we won't hide that that's our goal. Iraq is effectively partitioned now. Are we supposed to stay in this tragic situation the country's living? It's not me who will decide on independence. It's the people. We'll hold a referendum and it's a matter of months."
The cause of Kurdish independence was supported by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the weekend who said that it was a necessary response to gains made by Isis.
The Kurds have long striven for an independent state but they remain divided between Syria and Turkey, Iran and Iraq.
The international community, including neighbouring Turkey and the US, remains opposed to the break-up of Iraq.
The BBC's Andrew Hosken in Baghdad says the first decision facing the majority Shia government when parliament reconvenes on Tuesday will be whether to replace Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, whom critics blame for stoking sectarian tensions during his eight years in power.
Fresh clashes have meanwhile been reported between jihadist-led Sunni rebels and government forces around the Iraqi city of Tikrit.
Witnesses said there had been a wave of air strikes and that former President Saddam Hussein's palace had been hit.
A local source told the BBC the rebels had meanwhile seized parts of a nearby military base in a counter-attack.
US President Barack Obama has announced he is sending about another 200 troops to protect the US embassy in Baghdad.
This means about 750 US troops are in and around Iraq, but President Obama has ruled out sending combat troops to fight alongside the Iraqi army.
You know, that's such a load of crock. You're sitting comfortably in a peaceful area while these people are suffering. Well guess what, GrantZa, if you knew real suffering, any reprieve would be a blessing. Real suffering puts things in context.
You know, that's such a load of crock. You're sitting comfortably in a peaceful area while these people are suffering. Well guess what, GrantZa, if you knew real suffering, any reprieve would be a blessing. Real suffering puts things in context.