Saturday 14 June 2014

Iraq: a timeline - 06/13/2014

Unlike the Guardian, the Telegraph is doing some actual reporting.

Here is its timeline - I have weeded out all the blow-by-blow commentary of the western political class.

Iraq crisis: ISIS militants push towards Baghdad - live refuses to send troops to Iraq, but won’t rule out air strikes


RT,
13 June, 2014


The Iraqi official confirmed numerous eyewitness reports that the militants flew a captured helicopter

20.50
Interesting if true. It is not a one nutter show according to Mosul governor. Although he is perhaps not in the best position to speak freely.

Mosul governor points out not all fighters are ‪#ISIS , many anti American and anti Maliki Sunnis joining them ‪#skybreaking ‪#Iraq

20.05
A new New York Times article paints a picture of the Iraqi government in crisis, appealing for the US for help, threatening Iran will fill the gap if they refuse.

If you’re in an antique shop there’s a sign, ‘If you broke it, you bought it,'  ” the official, who is an adviser to Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, said. “I am not saying the Americans are responsible for everything, but they did not leave a well-trained army and they left us without any real air support, and the Obama administration really shares much of the blame.”

The Maliki adviser said that the Iraqi government wanted air support and intelligence sharing in particular from the United States. So far, the adviser said, he was not aware of any direct Iranian role in Iraq, nor the presence of any Iranian units on Iraqi territory. “What changes this is if the U.S. does not help, Iran will come in and this is really dangerous,” he said. “If they don’t help I don’t think Iran will let the Iraqi government collapse, they will fight and fight very hard.”

    1. ISIS fighters have surrounded the Baiji oil refinery — having captured the town on Wednesday — but have not yet moved into the complex. It should be noted that Obama said today that if ISIS seized control of major refineries the that other oil producers in the Middle East would need to help “pick up the slack”.
Long before the city's dramatic fall, ISIS, which formed in April 2013, and its precursor, al Qaeda in Iraq, were operating openly for years in Mosul, killing civilians like Bahnam with impunity, manipulating the justice system, and even collecting so-called "jihad taxes" from local businesses. And yet Iraq's extensive military and security apparatus did almost nothing.



18.21
ISIS have tweeted the decapitated head of what appears to be an Iraqi policeman with the sentence 'This is our football, it's made of skin #World Cup', followed by a boast of having slaughtered 1,700 soldiers.

18.04
Maliki has said Iraqi security forces have begun clearing cities of "terrorists". Security forces "began their work to clear all our dear cities from these terrorists," Maliki said in a statement, without giving details of where or when operations had started.

Maliki travelled to the embattled city of Samarra today, areas of which militants took last week and sought to advance into again on Wednesday

17.37
Iran has sent about 500 Revolutionary Guard troops to fight alongside Iraqi government security forces in Diyala province, a senior security official in Baghdad told CNN.

16.47
Bob Tait, our correspondent in Jerusalem, reports that several prayer leaders in Iran said today that the Islamic Republic is prepared to fight against ISIS forces in Iraq:

Prayer leaders delivering sermons throughout Iran delivered a unified message on Friday. Ayatollah Mohsen Mojtahed Shabestari, Friday prayer leader in the northern city of Tabriz, said Iran was ready drive the ISIS forces from Iraq, calling them a danger to holy Shia shrines in the country. "We will clear Iraq of terrorist and excommunicated groups if the supreme leader [Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's highest cleric and most powerful figures] allows us to do so," he told worshippers.

Iran's official IRNA news agency reported today that former members of the powerful Revolutionary Guard have also announced their readiness to join the battle against ISIS.

16.34
More on the social media blackout being reported by Iraqi internet users - technicians from two major service providers have confirmed that Iraq's communications ministry has ordered internet and mobile companies to block websites and apps including YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp and Viber.

The ministry has not commented but it is thought that officials believe ISIS militants are using social networks to coordinate attacks.

15.56
Iraq's foreign minister has drawn parallels between the retreat of the country's security forces in the face of the ISIS onslaught to the collapse of Saddam Hussein's army in 2003, in an interview published in Asharq al-Awsat newspaper today.

"It is the same collapse that happened in the ranks of the Iraqi armed forces when American forces entered Iraq," Hoshyar Zebari said.

They "took off military uniforms and put on civilian clothes and went to their houses, leaving weapons and equipment" behind, he said.

Security forces have resisted the militants in some areas but in others, such as the city of Mosul, abandoned their posts and vehicles, threw away their uniforms and fled.

Mr Zebari also noted that ISIS has collaborated with other militant groups in the offensive.

ISIS is coordinating "with the Naqshbandiya Order and some extremist Islamist factions and Ba'ath leaders from the former army," he said, referring to Saddam's forces.

Earlier, Saddam's daughter Raghad Saddam Hussein told a London-based Arabic newspaper that former aides, army officers and Ba'athists loyal to her toppled late father had played a key role in the capture of Mosul.

 Locals clean up after ISIS moves into Mosul, encountering little resistance

Children play with a Iraqi army helment left behind by fleeing forces in Mosul

15.22
Observers say the call to arms issued by the influential Shia cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, is of enormous significance and will reverberate throughout tjhe country as well as the wider world of Shia Islam. Conservative MP Rory Stewart comments on Twitter that "Sistani is the key player and has always been cautious. This call for Shia to take arms will have an immense impact in Iraq." Meanwhile Ali Riazi of NGO the International Rescue Committee, warns that the call "will foment further sectarian violence and jeopardise civilians".

Shia tribal leaders in Baghdad chant anti-ISIS slogans


15.03
It is impossible to confirm at present whether the ISIS claim on Twitter to have executed 1,700 Shia soldiers in Iraq is accurate, or an exaggeration intended to create fear among the Shia populace. But earlier, the UN high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, expressed "extreme alarm" at the situation and spoke of verified reports of "summary executions and extrajudicial killings". Some of the reports cited suggest that Iraqi security forces are being purged, though it is unclear whether there is an ethnic dimension to all of the killings.

According to the UN mission in Iraq, "the number of people killed in recent days may run into the hundreds and the number of wounded is said to be approaching one thousand," Rupert Colville, Ms Pillay's spokesman, said in Geneva.

He said UN had received reports of horrific abuses after the capture of Iraq's second city Mosul, one such case involving the "summary executions of Iraqi soldiers (and) of 17 civilians" thought to have been working for the police, in one particular street in Mosul on 11 June.

A court employee and 12 people believed to have been serving with Iraqi security services or police had been executed in the central Mosul neighbourhood of Dawasa, he added.

Mr Colville also pointed to reports that ISIS militants had freed and armed prisoners, who were now out searching for those they believed were responsible for their incarceration to exact revenge.

In one case, former prisoners reportedly "went to Tikrit and killed seven former police officers who had worked in the prison," he said.

"There are also reports that ISIL check points are specifically targeting former soldiers and police, especially one from one particular tribe - the Jarobi tribe - which is perceived as being close to the government," he added.

Mr Colville also reported the suicide of four women in Mosul who had reportedly either been raped or forced to marry ISIS militants.

Ms Pillay "will be warning parties to the conflict that they are obliged under international law to treat members of the armed forces who have laid down their arms or are hors de combat humanely," he said.

"Murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture constitute war crimes," he added.

14.52
There are widespread reports coming in via Twitter that the Iraqi government has blocked access to Facebook in parts of the country, in an apparent attempt to prevent it being used by ISIS to coordinate attacks. Users in several cities have reported being redirected to a page which says the site has been blocked by the Iraqi ministry of communications. Some say Twitter access is also down. The blocks do not appear to be countrywide, however.

14.47
BREAKING: Iraqi army helicopters have fired rockets at a mosque in Tikrit, according to local officials and witnesses cited by Reuters.

13.48
A Twitter account believed to belong to ISIS has claimed that the militants have executed 1,700 Shia soldiers in Iraq. Meanwhile the group has allegedly pardoned 2,500 Sunni soldiers. This cannot be independently confirmed, but the UN says it has received reports of summary executions. We will report more on this claim as we have it. Charles Lister of the US think-tank the Brookings Institution tweets:

Charles_Lister Charles ListerWow. Official ISIS account in Salah ad Din claims execution of 1,700 Shia soldiers (likely from COB Speicher). #Iraqhttp://t.co/n3C3IJ6oD2 About 11 hours ago via TweetDeck  Favorite  Retweet  Reply

12.18
We have more now from on the call to arms from the influential Shia cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani during Friday prayers in the city of Karbala.

"Citizens who are able to bear arms and fight terrorists, defending their country and their people and their holy places, should volunteer and join the security forces to achieve this holy purpose," a representative announced on behalf of the elderly cleric, who rarely appears in public.

"He who sacrifices for the cause of defending his country and his family and his honour will be a martyr," he added.

The Iraqi government says it will arm any civilian who volunteers to join it in its battle against ISIS militants, and in Baghdad willing residents have been seen pouring onto army trucks.

Sistani is highly influential in the Shia Muslim world and is adored by millions.

12.09
Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent, has delved into the complexities of the global jihadist movement to look at how ISIS has emerged from the al-Qaeda ranks: Iraq crisis: Is ISIS part of al-Qaeda?

He writes:

The sudden rise of ISIS – the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham – is the result of a crisis in the worldwide jihadist movement that has set the two most powerful heirs to the mantle of Osama bin Laden at loggerheads and led to the group's formal split from al-Qaeda.

Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Egyptian long-time deputy to bin Laden, is still technically the head of al-Qaeda. But after more than a decade in hiding – presumably, like bin Laden himself, somewhere in Pakistan – and at constant risk of suffering the same fate at the hands of an American hit squad, his direct control over the organisation is limited to the release of missives of support and instruction which he does not have the same authority to enforce.


Ayman al-Zawahiri (AFP)

The work on the ground is done by units claiming loyalty to the cause led by powerful fighting emirs around the Middle East – from Al-Qaeda in the Maghreb in North Africa to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

It was perhaps inevitable that one of these leaders would eventually challenge the leadership. It is no surprise to jihad-watchers that it was Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, whose predecessor as head of Iraqi operations, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was also at variance with Zawahiri over strategy before being killed by an American air strike in 2006.

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (AP)

Such is the divide that Baghdadi and ISIS have been formally disavowed by Zawahiri, meaning that purists would no longer say that ISIS are part of al-Qaeda.

The argument is partly about tactics: Zawahiri seems to believe that the brutality of the Iraqi operation, which became famous for its beheadings and other grisly, videoed displays of force, alienated local Sunni populations.

It is also about strategy: al-Qaeda Central, including both bin Laden and Zawahiri, wanted jihad to be a worldwide competition of ideas designed to undermine the West.


A representative of Iraq's most influential Shi'ite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, has urged the country's citizens to take up arms and defend their country from the threat of ISIS militants.

Sheikh Abdulmehdi al-Karbalai was delivering the sermon at Friday prayers in the city of Kerbala. More detail to follow.

11.27
The daughter of the toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein has said she is "very happy" with the takeover of several Iraqi cities by Sunni Islamist fighters

Speaking to Al Quds Al Arabi, a London-based Arabic newspaper, Raghad Saddam Hussein credited the fall of Mosul to Izzat al Douri, an aide to her late father who has been linked with a band of former Iraqi army officers and Ba'athists who joined ISIS militants in their assault on the city.

"I am very happy with the victories (which) were achieved by my father’s men," she said.

Saddam Hussein with his daughter Raghad during his time as Iraq's president

10.47
As the Iraqi government seeks to bolster Baghdad's defences in the face of the ISIS offensive, civilian residents of the capital have been volunteering to fight alongside the national army against the al-Qaeda-inspired fighters:

Iraqi civilians board army trucks as volunteers in the fight against ISIS

10.30

The Iraqi government says it has boosted Baghdad's defences as ISIS militants advance towards the capital.

"We put in place a new plan to protect Baghdad," Brigadier General Saad Maan, an interior ministry spokesman, told AFP.

"The plan consists of intensifying the deployment of forces, and increasing intelligence efforts and the use of technology such as (observation) balloons and cameras and other equipment," he said.

"We have been in a war with terrorism for a while, and today the situation is exceptional," the spokesman added.

10.24

The Telegraph's Middle East Correspondent, Richard Spencer, says that while ISIS has Baghdad in its sights, it is questionable whether the militants really have the power to take the capital:

ISIS's spokesman says the battle for Iraq will move to Baghdad and beyond, to Karbala. That is a highly inflammatory statement, even by his standards - Karbala is the focal point of the Shia faith, the place where its founding imam, Hussein, was killed by the troops of the original Sunni Caliphate at the start of the Sunni-Shia divide.

Whether ISIS gets there is another matter. ISIS has a reputation for doing exactly as it threatens, but Baghdad ought to be a different challenge from Mosul. Unlike Mosul, it has large Shia areas which are still loyal to the government, and perhaps more importantly Shia troops, volunteers and militias defending them will be fighting for their families and sect, not just the nation state and its unpopular leader, Nouri al-Maliki.

Iranian forces are already said to be in Baghdad too. A large-scale western presence means that key installations, such as the large and well-fortified airport compound, are also protected by western security contractors.



10.17

In the midst of the chaos, the prospect has been raised of an unlikely alliance between Iran and the US as both seek to counter a common enemy.
A senior Iranian official has told Reuters that the leadership of the Shia state is discussing possible cooperation with Washington in providing support to Iraq government in its battle with al-Qaeda-inspired militants.

The Islamic Republic is reportedly planning to send its neighbour advisers and arms, although probably not troops, to help Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki push back fighters from ISIS, the breakaway Sunni al-Qaeda group.

"We can work with Americans to end the insurgency in the Middle East," the official said, referring to the crisis in Iraq.

"We are very influential in Iraq, Syria and many other countries."

ISIS is one of the key players in the battle to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a key Iranian ally, and its regional rise has rattled Tehran.

"The danger of extremist Sunni terrorist in Iraq and the region is increasing ... There have been several high-ranking security meetings since yesterday in Tehran," the official said.

"We are on alert and we also follow the developments in Iraq very closely."
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Thursday condemned violence perpetrated by insurgent groups in the Middle East.

"Today, in our region, unfortunately, we are witnessing violence, killing, terror and displacement," Mr Rouhani said.

"Iran will not tolerate the terror and violence ... we will fight against terrorism, factionalism and violence."

Brigadier-General Mohammad Hejazi said Iran was ready to supply its neighbour with "military equipment or consultations," the Tasnim news agency reported. "I do not think the deployment of Iranian troops would be necessary," he added.

Washington so far has been cautious in its response to the Iranian comments, possibly due to concerns that Iran could try to use its regional influence with respect to the crisis as leverage in ongoing negotiations over its nuclear programme and international sanctions. Jen Psaki, the US State Department spokeswoman, said: "Clearly, we've encouraged them in many cases to play a constructive role. But I don't have any other readouts or views from our end to portray here today."

09.58

Witnesses have reported that ISIS militants are preparing for a fresh assault on the city of Samarra, home to the Shiite shrine whose 2006 bombing prompted the upsurge in sectarian violence known as the Iraqi civil war.

Residents in the Dur area, between the ISIS-controlled city of Tikrit and Samarra, said they saw "countless" vehicles carrying the fighters south overnight.

In Samarra, witnesses reported that insurgents were grouping to the north, east and southeast of the city, which lies just 70 miles north of Baghdad.

A tribal leader said that ISIS fighters had spoken with security forces in Samarra, asking them to withdraw and promising not to harm the Al-Askari shrine, according to AFP. But the security forces refused to leave, setting the stage for a full-blown attack.

ISIS has already made two attempts to take control of Samarra, one on Wednesday and one late last week, but were pushed back by Iraqi troops.
The bombing of the Al-Askari shrine in February 2006 sparked two years of bloody sectarian conflict between the country's Shiite majority and Sunni Arab minority which claimed tens of thousands of lives

09.25
Watch the latest Telegraph video from Iraq: ISIS fighters stage a parade of American Humvee patrol cars seized from a collapsing Iraqi army in the two days since its fighters overran the northern city of Mosul.

09.00

Iraqi troops are battling ISIS militants advancing towards Baquba, the capital of Diyala province just 30 miles north of Baghdad, after the insurgents took control of a number of towns and villages in the area overnight.

Clashes were reported on the outskirts of Muqdadiyah, 23 miles northeast of Baquba, as ISIS made territorial gains in the ethnically mixed province, said to be one of the incubators for Al-Qaeda-linked activity in the last two years.

Diyala province has a mixed Arab, Kurdish, Sunni and Shiite population and suffered much of the worst sectarian violence during Iraqi civil war of 2006-2008.
The militants have already captured two provincial capitals this week - Tikrit in Salaheddin province and second city Mosul in Nineveh.

ISIS spokesman Abu Mohammed al-Adnani has vowed its fighters would press on to the capital and, further south, to the Shiite shrine city of Karbala, visited by millions of pilgrims from around the world each year.

ISIS fighters at a checkpoint in the northern city of Mosul

07.55

The UN says that some half a million people have fled their homes since Monday, fearing violence, kidnapping and rape as ISIS militants tighten their grip on large parts of the country's north. Most have headed for the autonomous Kurdish region and workers were yesterday busy expanding the Khazer checkpoint in the area known as Kalak to cope with the flood of refugees.

One man told the Associated Press how fighters had come to his home and threatened his family:

"Masked men came to our house and they threatened us: 'We will get to you.' So we fled," said Abed, a labourer who abandoned his home on the edge of Mosul "They kidnapped other people. They took away some people for interrogation."
The young man said rumors were quickly spreading that Islamic State fighters - as well as masked bandits taking advantage of the chaos - were seizing young women for rape or forced marriage.

"They are destroying the honor of families," said Abed, who, like many of the displaced, wouldn't give his full name, fearing the Islamic State fighters.
Many of the displaced said they were on the move because they feared retribution by Iraq's military - underscoring the grave sectarian tensions that have allowed the Islamic State fighters, who are Sunni extremists, to conquer so fast and deeply.

Women flee Mosul for the Kurdish autonomous region

07.45

ISIS fighters have gained more ground overnight, taking two towns in the eastern province of Diyala after security forces abandoned their posts. Reuters cited security sources as reporting that the towns of Saadiyah and Jalawla have now fallen to the militants, who have also moved into several villages around the Himreen mountains, long a sanctuary for insurgent groups.

Iraqi troops launched artillery rounds at the two towns, causing many families to flee towards Khaniqin, close to the Iranian border, the sources said.

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