Syria-Iraq - U.S. Cuddles ISIS - Others Plan For The Final Fight
Moon of Alabama,
24 April, 2018
OIR Spokesman Verified account @OIRSpox - 15:02 UTC - 24 Apr 2018
#Iraq's strike on a known Daesh HQ in Syria was planned/conducted by the Iraqi Security Forces, w/ support from @CJTFOIR. This strike shows Iraq's willingness to do what's necessary to secure its citizens as well as their important role in the Global @Coalition to #defeatDaesh
The
above tweet by the spokesperson for the U.S. Operation Inherent
Resolve (OIR) against ISIS is extremely misleading if not false. The
U.S. is trying to take some credit for a strike which was done
without its consensus. The attack against ISIS was initiated by an
anti-U.S. alliance as a warning against further U.S. shenanigans with
ISIS.
The
U.S. military in Syria has refrained from fighting ISIS for months.
The map of the territory held by ISIS (grey) at the Syrian-Iraqi
border in the U.S. controlled zone north of the Euphrates (yellow)
has not changed since November 2017.
(The
yellow corridor going south east towards Iraq on the map is
misleading. The U.S. has no forces there and ISIS crossed it several
times to attack Syrian forces (red) across the river.)
The
British group Airwars documents the U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and
Syria. U.S. strikes on ISIS in Syria are down to one per day or less:
The
U.S. strikes hit, if anything, only very minor targets. From OIR's
weekly summary fromMarch
30 to April 5 (Syria only):
Between March 30 and April 5, Coalition military forces conducted nine strikes consisting of 11 engagements in Syria and Iraq.
There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 5, 2018.
There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 4, 2018.
There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria or Iraq on April 3, 2018.
There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 2, 2018.
On April 1 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.
On March 31 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.
• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.
On March 30 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.
• Near Shadaddi, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.
Two cars and three assumed militants (aka 'tactical units') targeted in one week is not a fight at all. The total number of ISIS fighters in the area is estimated between 5,000 and 12,000. The current U.S. strikes are not even pinpricks.
It is obvious that the U.S. wants to keep ISIS alive and well to again use it, if need be, against the Syrian and Iraqi government. Then Secretary of State Kerry as well as then President Obama admitted that they used ISIS to put pressure on the Syrian President Assad and then Prime Minister of Iraq Maliki:
The reason, the president added, “that we did not just start taking a bunch of airstrikes all across Iraq as soon as ISIL came in was because that would have taken the pressure off of [Prime Minister Nuri Kamal] al-Maliki.
We
now see a repeat of such 'games'. ISIS was given time to rest. It is
regaining capacities especially in Iraq's Anbar province where it
is moving
between villages and threatening the inhabitants.
It is issuing
new strategic instructions to
its followers and calls on them to attack or sabotage the upcoming
elections in Iraq.
As the U.S. is unwilling to fight ISIS, the governments of Iraq, Syria, Iran and Russia (+ Hizbullah) decided to again take the issue into their own hands. On April 19 the 4+1 met for coordinating their future campaigns.
Patch of the 4+1 op-room - via @IraqiSecurity
Military
officials from Iraq, Syria, Iran and Russia meet in their Baghdad
operations room to coordinate the further fight against ISIS. Note
the four flags on the head table.
The
Iranian Minister of Defense Brig. Gen. Amir Hatami attended the
op-room meeting and held additional
meetings with
leaders of the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) or Hashd
al-Shaabi. (IRGC commander Qassem Soleimani, a red rag for all
anti-Iranian forces, is now intentionally kept out of sight.)
The
high level operations room meeting agreed upon future operations and
strikes. Before the meeting military intelligence officials of the
4+1 had identified a potential target for a common operation. An
attack was planned and designed to give the new combat phase some
fresh impetus. It was also intended to be a warning to the U.S.
Shortly
after the meeting the Iraqi
air force hit an ISIS command and control center in
east-Syria near Abu Kamal within the nominally U.S. controlled zone:
According to an Iraqi military spokesperson, the operation was fully coordinated with the Syrian army.
The
Iraqi Ministry of Defense distributed video of
the successful strike on a three story villa. Iraq later
announced that
36 ISIS fighters, including high ranking ISIS commanders, were killed
in the strike.
After
the strike had happened the U.S. Operation Inherent Resolve tried to
take credit for the attack by claiming that
its was involved.
SOUTHWEST ASIA – The Iraqi air force conducted an air strike near Hajin, Syria, against Daesh terrorists operating near the Iraq-Syria border on April 19. The strike was approved by the Iraqi Prime Minister and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces Dr. Haider Al Abadi.
The strike demonstrates Iraq’s commitment to destroy Daesh remnants who continue to threaten their citizens. The operation was planned and executed by the Iraqi Joint Operations Command with intelligence support from the Coalition.
“This operation highlights the capabilities of Iraq’s armed forces to aggressively pursue Daesh and to maintain their country’s internal security,” said Brig. Gen. Robert B. Sofge, deputy commanding general of operations, Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve.
The Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve’s mission is to defeat Daesh in designated areas in Iraq and Syria, and sets conditions for follow-on operations to increase regional stability.
My
sources say that the U.S. claim is misleading if not completely
false. After the four commanders in the Baghdad op-room decided on
the strike, the Iraqi command initiated the pre-planned attack. The
Iraqis informed the U.S. OIR command that a strike would happen but
gave only a rough description of the target area. Said differently -
no time was given to the U.S. to warn ISIS. The U.S. "intelligence
support" for the operation consisted of keeping its planes out
of the way.
The
tweet by the OIR spox quoted above is a repeat of the statement the
OIR command issued on April 19. It is claiming credit where non
belongs.
While
the U.S. cuddles with ISIS in Syria to again use it for its own
purpose, the 4+1 plan for a larger common operation to finally
destroy the Takfiri menace. I expect that operation to begin only
after the Iraqi parliament election on May 12 is over and a new Iraqi
government is in place. Enough forces will have to be prepared on the
Syrian as well as the Iraqi side of the border. On the Syrian side a
military bridge to cross the Euphrates has recently been rebuild by
the Syrian military and new equipment is arriving in the area.
The meeting of the Iranian defense minister with the PMU hints at a
strong role for these units in the upcoming fight.
Will
the U.S. try to prevent or undermine the plan or will it stay out of
the way?
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