June
18th IRAQ SITREP by Mindfriedo
18
June, 2014
I
would like to thank the Saker for permitting me to post these
updates. They are mostly open source. I just compile them. There were
a few commentators (appreciate all your support) who had asked about
Daash and the future of Iraq. I am no expert here. However, please
refer to this link:
http://m.policymic.com/articles/91127/to-understand-the-crisis-in-Iraq-follow-the-pipelines
It
shows how Daash is establishing control and earning revenue through
oil. This oil and Kurdish oil is flowing through Turkey. The
militants are attacking through Turkey; the injured are leaving
through Turkey. Turkey is playing both sides. Turkey, unlike Saudi
Arabia, is in it for the money. Turkey is the new Pakistan of the
Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan. Whoring itself unscrupulously. Turkey
should look at Pakistan now and shudder. For once the militants
loose, and they will lose, they will turn in frustration on their
masters. Blowback/karma is a bitch.
17th
June: The US embassy has been supplemented with 275 marines. An
additional force is being kept in reserve with Osprey V-22 aircraft
on stand by.
17th
June: Lakhtar Brahimi has very politely called Tony Blair a spent
force. One that nobody is interested to listen to anymore.
17th
June: America confirms that discussions were held with Iran regarding
Iraq on the sidelines of the Vienna summit. Iran at first denies any
talks concerning Iraq. They are then confirmed by Iran's foreign
minister Javed Zarif.
17th
June: Six terrorist bombings in Baghdad have left 17 dead and 34
injured.
17th
June: Police personnel have discovered the bodies of 18 men in the
west of Samarra. They were members of the security forces and were
shot through the head and chest.
17th:
Maliki sacks four senior military commanders. He recommends the court
martial of one of the four.
17th
June: The brother of the slain Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab
Al-Zarqawi in Sallahuddin province along with 10 other Daash
militants has been arrested by Security Forces.
17th
June: Reuters reports that Yuval Steinitz, the Israeli minister of
Strategic Affairs, has cautioned the US against working with Iran
stating "Iran should not be helped to expand its influence in
Iraq."
18th
June: Baiji refinery is now under heavy attack with militants using
mortar and machine gun fire and attacking from two sides. It is not
expected to hold on for long. The attack started at 4 am.
18th
June: Maliki appears on Iraqi television along with Kurdish and Sunni
leaders appealing to militants to lay down their arms.
18th
June: Rouhani says that Iran will do whatever it takes to protect
Shia shrines in Iraq.
18th
June: Nasrallah speech made on Tuesday the 17th of June: "We are
ready to sacrifice martyrs in Iraq five times more than what we
sacrificed in Syria, in order to protect shrines, because they are
much more important than [the holy sites in Syria],”
18th
June: The Shia militias are holding back the rebels in Baqouba.
18th
June: Baiji refinery is now mostly in rebel hands.
18th
June: Dr. John Andrew Morrow, an Islamic scholar terms Daash as not
belonging to the Sunni faith; Zaid Hamid a Sunni Pakistani defence
analyst has gone further and called them Kharajis, an anarchist,
heretic early Islamic sect.
18th
June: Heavy fighting has resumed in Tal Afar. The army has airlifted
troops and is attempting to wrest control of the city from Daash
18th
June: Shia militias have started returning from Syria. Their aim is
to join the fight in Iraq against Daash. This is expected to affect
the balance of power in Iraq and in Syria.
18th
June: German police have arrested an injured French national on his
return from Syria. The man was fighting against the Assad are gone
and was returning via, very interesting, Turkey. The man was arrested
on Sunday. French authorities deported a Tunisian who was recruiting
French nationals to fight for Daash. French authorities estimate that
800 of its nationals are currently in Syria.
18th
June: Daash has reportedly asked all other groups in Mosul to refrain
from claiming parts of Mosul in any other name. Daash has also
confiscated weapons from fighters in Hawija and forced them to swear
allegiance before being allowed to be armed.
18th
June: The town of Qaratapa in Diyala province, 110 km north of Baquba
is now completely under Peshmerga control
18th
June: Clashes between Peshmergas and Daash in Jalawla, a town 70 km
north of Baquba, has displaced 150 families from the outskirts of the
town.
18th
June: Saqlawiyah, a town north of Fallujah is in government hands.
Security forces claim to have killed 250 "terrorists." The
town was earlier under opposition control.
18th
June: The Iraqi airforce attacked a Daash military parade in
Fallujah. An estimated 400 militants tried to hide on seeing the
aircraft and hid an apartment building. The building was subsequently
bombed. The air strike has reportedly killed 270 militants and
destroyed seven vehicles.
18th
June: the Iraqi armed forces are claiming to have killed 56
terrorists in the past 24 hours in and around Baghdad.
18th
June: Maj Gen Qassim Atta, the spokesperson of the Iraqi Armed
forces, claims that the army has killed 279 militants in Salahuddin,
Diyala, and Nineveh. This claim was made on Sunday.
18th
June: Iraqi state television is reporting the deaths of 70 militants
in government airstrikes in Samarra and another 17 in Baqouba.
18th
June: The Iraqi national news agecncy is claiming the success of the
armed forces in Tal Afar. It has also claimed that the attack on
Baiji refinery has been repelled. Forty militants are reported killed
and vehicles destroyed.
18th
June: Al Manar is reporting the deaths of 21 Daash militants by the
army in Anbar.
18th
June: al Manar is also reporting the deaths of 19 Daash militants in
Edhaym. And government gains in Bala, Dhuluiya and Ishaqi.
18th
June: Atta's press conference, points put forward:
Rumours
of the fall of the Iraqi government, pro Daash tweet, are untrue
The
government is not running out of food; the BBC was reporting
yesterday of food shortages and hoarding
Confirms
that Attack on Baiji refinery was repulsed and resulted in 40
terrorists being killed
Most
of Tal Afar in government hands
Twenty
terrorist killed in Tikrit and vehicles destroyed
Twenty
one terrorist killed in Anbar province
Fifteen
terrorist killed in Baqouba
Most
of his assertions confirm earlier reported figures and are not in
addition.
18th
June: Sixty foreign workers have been kidnapped by Daash from Kirkuk.
They were from Pakistan, Turkey, Bangladesh, Turkmenistan, and Nepal.
The Turkish nationals were working on a hospital in the town of Dor.
It is situated between Kirkuk and Sallahuddin. A worker who managed
to evade capture has informed authorities of the abduction.
Forty
Indian workers have been kidnapped by Daash in Mosul on Tuesday.
Eighty
Turkish nationals were abducted by Daash when Mosul was captured.
Thirty one of these were truck drivers.
Abductions,
kidnappings and ransom are a lucrative means for Daash to fund its
activities.
18th
June: the United States has defended it's ally Saudi Arabia and
termed Maliki's comments as "inaccurate and unprofessional."
18th
June: the BBC is carrying a story on Gassem Soleimani and the power
he wields. It talks about how the US needed his help in the past and
how it might have to work with him again, of his helping Assad
survive, and his organising the fight against Daash.
18th
June: The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom has warned in
parliament that Daash plans attacks on the UK next.
18th
June: Sir Peter Tapsell, referred to as the father of the house in
the UK, has suggested that Tony Blair be impeached for misleading the
world prior to Iraq's invasion.
18th
June: the telegraph reports that Major General Mohammed Koraishi,
allegedly captured and to be executed by Daash, is alive and well and
is leading the assault against the militants in Tal Afar.
18th
June: Rouhani's advisor has stated that Iran would be willing to work
with America once the nuclear talks are successful
There
is a touchy subject that I would like to mention. This is because
everywhere I read in the western press it's always referred to as
sectarian violence and sectarian killings. I would request readers to
always read the detail in every report and not the headlines; the
devil is in the detail.
Nine
times out of ten in Iraq it's the Sunni takfiris that are targeting
Shias. Their modus operandi is suicide bombings, market bombings,
mosque and shrine bombings, hospital bombings and targeted killings;
mostly it is indiscriminate terror. This is true from Beirut to
Karachi and in the case of other communities being targeted, all the
way till Bali. The Shia response is ALWAYS a retaliation, and it has
always occurred after a tipping point has been reached. Killings by
Shias are equally bad (during the height of tit for tat killings,
some Shia militias used ambulances to drive to Sunni areas in
Baghdad, asked for blood for the resistance fighting against the
Americans in Fallujah, kidnapped Sunni young men volunteering to
donate blood, executed them, and dumped their bodies outside Sadr
City-No good deed goes unpunished), no doubt, but the targets are
never women, children, and civilians. Most targets were initially
ex-Baathist. Then it was almost always young men. The Shia clergy, be
they apolitical Sistani or the political mullahs of Iran, have always
condemned them and called for restraint.
This
article by Patrick Cockburn is a case in point (the New York Times
has printed a similar misleading story "As Sunnis Die in Iraq, a
Cycle is Restarting")
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/iraq-crisis-fears-grow-that-baghdad-could-be-engulfed-in-sectarian-violence-9544442.html
He
compares two events in Iraq. One the killing by Daash of 1700 Shia
airforce recruits and the killing of 44 or 63 Sunni prisoners in
Baquba. The Shias were recruits looking for a job, the prisoners were
almost all arrested under Iraq's anti terrorism laws, possibly
arbitrarily, but militants none the less. The Shias were killed in
cold blood, the Sunnis, most probably, either in panic or fear of
having to face them in the future. People can draw their own
conclusions. But if Shias were to come down to sectarian killings, I
doubt many Sunnis would remain in Iraq.
I
received a forwarded message today that was informing Shias that the
fight in Iraq is not a Shia Sunni one, that Shias should reach out to
Sunnis in their local communities, and that Daash are not Muslim. It
was from a Shia.
To
Understand the Crisis in Iraq, Follow the Pipelines
14
June, 2014
The
news: Terrorist
group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the world's richest
terrorist group,
now controls large portions of both Iraq and Syria. Even though
al-Qaida ended formal association with the Islamic extremists in
February, they've grown large enough to seize areas with particularly
lucrative oil resources.
By transporting and selling oil to and
throughout their regime, ISIS is becoming even wealthier
and expanding their
power.
The
faction's agenda includes money, armed forces, religion and, now
increasingly, oil. And it's that last one that poses the largest
threat in taking down the Syrian government and creating the proto
state they
want.
Aaron
Zelin, an analyst with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy,
recently discovered a 2006 map where ISIS projected their
potential control.
To
get a clearer understanding of the region, this current map
illustrates where attacks have occurred and shows the controlled
provinces in detail.
By
comparing the two, ISIS starts to look like a fine-tuned group with
the ability to achieve their ambitious goals. They plotted out
regions to control in Syria and northern Iraq with oil in mind.
The
New York Times reported that
so far ISIS has taken over oilfields in Syria and resumed pumping. On
Wednesday, forces gained control of Iraq's largest oil refinery and
power plant, Baiji. Even worse, the insurgents have "secured
revenue by selling electricity to the government from captured power
plants."
In
January the Telegraph reported that
ISIS was being financed "by selling oil and gas from wells under
their control to and through the regime," proving that they've
taken very deliberate steps in securing power.
What
will the money be used for?
Essentially,
power. But after robbing Mosul's central bank on Wednesday and
walking away with $425 million, you have to wonder why ISIS needs
more money.
The
insurgents want the money to pay their members. And the group is
attracting more members by paying higher salaries. This is in
addition to the group's already luring qualities such as extremist
ideology, highly skilled armed forces and an ability to consolidate
power.
So they are bringing in more man-power and paying them much better
than the Iraq and Syrian armies, who have seen high a number of
deserters recently.
What
does this all mean?
ISIS
has been carving out stringent parameters since the beginning of
the year. Their first set of new
rules impose
strict standards on the occupied territory: No guns, alcohol or
cigarettes will be allowed, women must dress modestly and all Muslims
are to pray on time.
In
a rough count, ISIS only has 7,000
troops,
far smaller than the Iraq army's 250,000 troops, not including armed
police forces. While the Islamic group does have U.S.-supplied
humvees and weaponry,
despite many commentators' fears, they don't have the manpower
likely needed to seize Baghdad. But even without Baghdad, the
group's premeditated tactics have already given them the huge
advantage of being able to maintain enough capital to sustain its
growing members.
It
is still unclear if ISIS will be able to operate and run all of the
Syrian and Iraqi oilfields down the line. Though their strategic
vision is telling enough about how they operate — enough to worry
the rest of the world anyway.
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