Don't expect Washington to return to Iraq with 'boots on the ground', let alone do anything positive.
But they can do what they do best - bomb the shit out of the country.
Iraq
open to US airstrikes against jihadists – reports
Iraq has privately indicated to the Obama administration that it would welcome airstrikes with either drones or manned aircraft that target Al-Qaeda offshoot militants in Iraqi territory, US officials say.
11
June, 2014
Iraq
has privately indicated to the Obama administration that it would
welcome airstrikes with either drones or manned aircraft that target
Al-Qaeda offshoot militants in Iraqi territory, US officials say.
A
senior US official said the Obama administration is considering
options in aiding the Iraqi government’s fight against Islamist
militants, who have fought for and won major gains in the nation’s
Sunni-majority areas in recent days, the Wall Street Journal
reported.
Those
options include “kinetic
support” for
the Iraqi military in its fight against an Islamist group formerly
allied with Al-Qaeda – the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIS/ISIL). The group seized two major cities north of Baghdad this
week, handily defeating Iraqi security forces along the way,
according to reports.
No
decisions on action in Iraq have been made, according to the senior
official.
The
Wall Street Journal sources did not specify whether airstrikes would
come from unmanned drones or manned aircraft.
Bernadette
Meehan, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council, did not
comment on Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s requests for
military support, saying in a statement that “We
are not going to get into details of our diplomatic discussions, but
the government of Iraq has made clear that they welcome our support.”
Iraq
had previously asked the US for access to armed drones that could be
used against insurgent forces, many of which have been emboldened by
the fierce civil war in neighboring Syria. Washington has thus far
refused to supply those drones, officials said, but has supplied
Hellfire missiles and surveillance drones.
Last
year, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari suggested that armed
drones could be used to target militants, but American officials
balked, saying the request did not come from Maliki, The New York
Times reported.
Meanwhile,
Iraq is requesting the hastened delivery of major weapons orders,
including dozens of F-16 fighter jets contracted with Lockheed Martin
and dozens of Boeing’s Apache helicopters, to counter the insurgent
fighters.
"What
we are saying is that there needs to be a sense of urgency,"
Lukman Faily, Iraq's ambassador to the US, told The Wall Street
Journal. "We
now expect the US to appreciate this sense of urgency."
Faily
said “what
we need” is
the delivery of the jets and Apaches as soon as possible, not months
away as is planned.
"Ammunition,
Hellfire missiles, surveillance equipment...these are not
game-changers,"
he said. "We
need game-changers."
Already
this week, ISIL has taken control of Mosul and Tikrit, the nation’s
second-largest city and former president Saddam Hussein’s hometown,
respectively.
Meanwhile, in the city of Samarra, located
further south of Tikrit on the east bank of the Tigris River, clashes
reportedly broke out on Wednesday between Iraqi forces and militants
arriving in trucks with machine guns, according to AFP. Samarra, a
UNESCO World Heritage Site, is home to several holy sites for Shia
Muslims.
A military source told Al Arabiya news channel
that Kurdish forces are reportedly fighting ISIL militants in Kirkuk
to stop their offensive.
Earlier,
ISIL boasted the capture of Iraq’s biggest oil refinery north of
the city of Baiji, claiming it had “seized it without a shot.”
The oil refinery, located less than 180 kilometers (110 miles) from
Mosul, was one of the strategic objects secured by US-led forces in
the 2003 invasion of Iraq and was thoroughly searched for weapons of
mass destruction. No chemical agents were ever found there.
The
United Nations Security Council condemned ISIL’s latest offensives,
saying in a statement that "the
recent terrorist attacks ... are being perpetrated against the people
of Iraq in an attempt to destabilize the country and region."
"The
Security Council deplored in the strongest terms the recent events in
the city of Mosul in Iraq where elements of the terrorist
organization ... ISIL have taken over significant parts of the city,
including the Turkish Consulate and many government buildings, and
displaced hundreds of thousands of people," the
council said.
ISIL
has already established major footholds throughout north and west
Iraq, areas close to the Syrian border. Fallujah, a major city just
west of Baghdad and the site of major battles following the US-led
invasion in 2003, fell to ISIL months ago.
Failed, discredited, corrupt, sectarian Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki requests that Iraq become the 51st state of the United Slaves of Amerika and asks the Nobel peace prize winning recipient( where do you buy a ticket in this lottery???) to bomb the living bejeuzzzzzzzz out of his country people in exchange for some pieces as silver known as F16's which will have undoubtedly a built in self destruct device or a remote controlled Off switch that can be activated from Tel Aviv at a whim. Good deal.
ReplyDelete