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Iraq's war against IS terrorism | Updates and Discussions

17 October 2014

The main development today is the security operation announced by the Anbar Operations Command in conjunction with the Anbar Police Command against the western districts of Ramadi. Dozens of military and armored vehicles are still on their way to the area from which loud explosions are being heard in addition to the sounds of the fierce clashes up to this minute. We do not yet have any details of the operation.

In the areas around Baghdadi, ISIL is carrying out an attack that has resulted in heavy clashes but the security forces have prevented the gunmen from penetrating the town's perimeter. Some residential districts have been shelled, resulting in major material damage in a number of residential homes.

In Fallujah and Garma, coalition warplanes have targeted a number of ISIL positions. The security forces have announced that at least 23 gunmen have been killed during the past few hours.

In northeastern riverside areas of Ramadi, security forces have announced that they have taken control of the rural areas along the banks across the Euphrates from Ramadi, after killing a number of the gunmen there.

Daily Updates from Anbar: 17 October 2014
 
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US-Partnered Forces Are Brutalizing Sunnis In Iraq
shia%20militia%20men%20celebrate%20amerli%20tikrit.jpg
Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty ImagesIraqi Shiite militia fighters raise up their weapons as they celebrate pushing back ISIS militants on Sept. 3, 2014, on the road between Amerli and Tikrit, in Iraq.

Executing hundreds of prisoners without trial. Arbitrarily arresting villagers along sectarian lines. Hanging bodies from power lines to instill fear in the local community. Gunning down dozens of civilians as they gather to pray.

If this sounds like a checklist for the Islamic State, or ISIS, try looking across the front line at one of the United States’ key allies on the ground.

While the world is focused on the ISIS terror threat, the US-trained and backed Iraqi government forces and their band of ruthless Shia militia groups have been carrying out atrocities of their own against Sunni civilians, on a scale that in some ways parallels their “terrorist” counterparts.

“Atrocities are being committed on both sides [by government-backed Shia militias and ISIS],” said Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International's senior crisis response adviser. “The crimes being committed by Shia militias throughout Iraq amount to war crimes. These are not one-off cases. They are systematic and widespread.”

They arrest, murder and kidnap for ransom. They have burned or bombed Sunni mosques, killing scores of people.
The Sunni extremist IS, also known as ISIS or ISIL, has grabbed headlines with their ruthless tactics in Iraq. Their systematic executions of Yazidis, Shia Muslims and Western hostages have been widely reported.

But Sunni civilians have also suffered. They are often labeled “terrorists” or “Islamic State supporters” by Iraqi authorities and civilians alike based on no more than ethnicity or sect. They also face arbitrary arrests and even execution at the hands of government forces.

“The Kurds and minority groups have places that are relatively safe within the [Kurdish region]. Shias also have safe havens and Iraqi government protection, but for Sunni families it is really tough,” said Rovera. “Most are really quite terrified, especially the Sunni males and parents with young sons.”

An Amnesty International report released Tuesday titled "Absolute Impunity: Militia rule in Iraq," documented hundreds of abductions of Sunni civilians by Shia militias. In Samarra alone, an area that sits on the ISIS-Iraqi government border, Amnesty outlined 170 abduction cases since June. In many instances the groups demanded ransoms from family members, only to kill their loved ones after payment.

Iraqi lawyer Kassim Ali, who has dedicated his career to fighting for Sunni rights, said the bodies of victims of Shia militia groups were sometimes displayed in the streets of his hometown Baquba to “deter anyone from sympathizing with ISIS.”

He personally has seen four Sunni men hanging from electricity poles. Local reports from July 29 described 15 bodies displayed in the Baquba public square that day.

“For the past two years these militias have been regularly searching Sunni homes without just cause, breaking and destroying everything,” said Ali, who has fled since receiving death threats. “They arrest, murder and kidnap for ransom. They have burned or bombed Sunni mosques throughout Diyala [province], killing scores of people.”

Ali listed the names of Sunnis killed this year in town after town across Diyala, where Baquba is located. The province neighboring Baghdad has been a hotbed of sectarian violence for years. Some of the Sunnis he named were killed in attacks on places of worship, including an Aug. 22 attack on a mosque in the village of Bani Wais.

Medical authorities reported at least 73 were gunned down as they attended Friday prayers and YouTube footage shows bodies lying across the mosque floor, including at least one child.

A report by Human Rights Watch this month detailed 255 cases of Iraqi security forces and government-backed militias executing Sunni prisoners. The reported killings took place in six Iraqi cities and villages in early June as civilians withdrew from IS advances.

“Gunning down prisoners is an outrageous violation of international law,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “While the world rightly denounces the atrocious acts of ISIS, it should not turn a blind eye to sectarian killing sprees by government and pro-government forces.”

Just this week, families living in areas recently retaken from IS by the Iraqi government and Kurdish peshmerga have reported the deliberate burning of Sunni homes and intimidation of Sunni families who have nowhere else to go.

Rovera, who spoke to GlobalPost Thursday by phone from London, said the Iraqi government has not only allowed Shia militia groups to operate with impunity, but has supported and even engaged in committing some of the atrocities.

sunni%20protesters%20fallujah.jpg
Bilal Fawzi/APSunni protesters wave Islamist flags while others chant slogans at an anti-government rally in Fallujah, Iraq, on April 26, 2013.

This calls into question the accountability of governments who form the US-led international coalition currently supporting Iraqi troops fighting ISIS, who have so far failed to pressure the Iraqi government to crack down on militia violence.

President Barack Obama's four-point strategy for fighting the Islamic State, which he detailed in September just after Iraq swore in a new government, acknowledged threats posed to Sunnis by the terror group but not by Shia militias.

“Governments who are involved on the military side must create a concrete and vigorous oversight,” Rovera said. Training and arming local forces means international governments share the responsibility for how those weapons are used both now and in the long term, she added.

Fighting justice
Abu Makaram and his 31-year-old son both worked as lawyers fighting for the rights of Sunnis. Earlier this year his son was representing four Sunni men arrested by Shia militia group Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq, or the League of the Righteous, when he was gunned down as he left the Baquba courtroom. Eyewitnesses claimed the same militia group was behind his murder.

“We used to defend Sunnis who were tortured into confessions,” said Makaram, who asked for his full name not to be used because he is targeted by Shia groups for his work. “One of my clients lost his arm after being strung up and tortured for days. I had clients whose heads were split open. One man had a concrete block tied to his penis.”

According to local media reports, at least seven lawyers known for defending clients arrested over alleged connections with Sunni militant groups have been killed in Baquba this year. Dozens of Sunnis have been killed while in detention.

The night after his son’s murder, Makaram’s home was ransacked and destroyed moments after he fled to the Kurdish region with his remaining family, including four grandchildren and his son’s pregnant wife.

Before he fled, Makaram also saw the bodies of Sunni men hanging in the streets.

“One was an engineering student who lived in our area,” he said. “If Sunnis stay in government areas they are targeted by the Shia gangs. If they go to the ISIS territory they are forced to join them or maybe face worse than the Shia gangs would do to them. They have no options.”

Rovera echoed his concerns.

“Arabs are not allowed to enter the Kurdish regions anymore. Those already there are treated with suspicion. In the government areas it is really tough going,” she said.

“In a way, as incredible as it may seem, the ISIS-controlled areas are safer and easier [for Sunnis] because if you do not step out of line, by and large they leave the Sunnis alone.”

But in ISIS territory the rules are ever-changing. Aside from indiscriminate bombing by the Iraqi army and airstrikes by an international coalition targeting IS, neutral Sunni civilians can’t predict just how long the militants will leave them alone.

US Partners Brutalizing Iraq's Sunnis - Business Insider
 
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New defense and interior ministers assigned by abadi

Defense minister is from ISIL controlled Mosul
 
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Clashes Between Shiite Militia and Peshmerga Near Kirkuk
Hoshmand Sadiq
BasNews, Erbil

In Duzkhurmatu – a town in Salahaddin province in northern Iraq clashes have taken place between the members of the Shiite Badr militia and Kurdish Peshmerga forces. The sides are meeting to address the issues between them.

According to information obtained by BasNews, Peshmerga forces fired on a Badr militia vehicle in Duzkhurmatu area for not stopping at a Peshmerga checkpoint, leading to clashes.

One Peshmerga and two Badr militia were injured, said a source to BasNews.

An eyewitness confirmed the events to BasNews, but was unable to confirm whether anyone has been injured.

“The two sides are holding a meeting to resolve the issue,” said the source.

To gather more information, BasNews contacted the Secretary General of the Peshmerga Ministry Jabar Yawar, but he said that he is unaware of the situation.

“If there is anything, we will let you know,” said Yawar.

http://m.basnews.com/en/News/Details/Clashes-Between-Shiite-Militia-and-Peshmerga-Near-Kirkuk/38385
 
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I thought the Shitte militias were independant from the government. Hasn't the Iraqi army fought them many times before ? Isn't it only the Badr brigade which is connected to the government?
 
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I thought the Shitte militias were independant from the government. Hasn't the Iraqi army fought them many times before ? Isn't it only the Badr brigade which is connected to the government?

They're independent from gov

And basnews is unreliable.
 
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URGENT: ISIS seizes 3rd largest military base in western Iraq and takes its tanks, heavy weapons and supplies

View attachment 133301
ISIS armored unit. File photo.

Hit (IraqiNew.com) On Monday Iraqi military sources confirmed the fall of the military base of Hit, which includes a training camp and the base of the seventh division of the Iraqi army, after a major attack of the organization ISIS, using suicide car bombs and rocket-propelled grenades.

The military sources said that “the organization ISIS attacked the army base in Hit, the third largest military bases in western Iraq, from several axes, and carried out a series of suicide attacks on the walls of the base by car bombs, as well as a missile attack lasted about an hour which led to the storming of the base after the withdrawal of the army from it. “

In a related context, lieutenant colonel, Rahim Aljughaifi said that “ISIS have seized the contents of the base and the training camp, including tanks, heavy weapons, munitions and stores, as well as spare parts and different military supplies,” adding that “the army had requested help of the international coalition during the attack on the base, but the latter did not respond’, asserting the control of ISIS on the three towns surrounding the base.”

URGENT: ISIS seizes 3rd largest military base in western Iraq and takes its tanks, heavy weapons and supplies - Iraqi News

URGENT: ISIS assassinates MP, kills 24, wounds 54 in Baghdad suicide bombing

View attachment 133302
The MP for Bader bloc, Ahmed al-Khafaji.

Kadhimiya (IraqiNews.com) On Tuesday the Iraqi MP Ahmed al-Khafaji was killed in a suicide bombing that targeted Iraqi security forces in the town of Kadhimiya which is located in northern Baghdad, according to a security source.

The source said in an interview for IraqiNews.com “the MP of Badr bloc, Ahmed al-Khafaji, was killed this afternoon by a car bomb driven by an ISIS suicide bomber in the Kadhimiya area north of Baghdad,” without giving further details.

A source in the police said earlier on Tuesday that 24 people were killed and 54 others wounded in the suicide bombing at the entrance of Kadhimiya in northern Baghdad.

The MP Ahmed al-Khafaji was serving as Undersecretary of the Ministry of Interior for Intelligence before becoming a deputy of the Bader bloc during the current session of Parliament.

URGENT: ISIS assassinates MP, kills 24, wounds 54 in Baghdad suicide bombing - Iraqi News
Why doesn't US bomb those Iraqi military bases just before they are taken by ISIS? You can't convince me that US is not aware of their military bases being conquered by ISIS. They can easily bomb all heavy equipment before ISIS takes over the base with minimal air strikes. Looks like US wants ISIS to take over these heavy equipment. Kobane air strikes is just a PR campaign.
 
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18 October 2014

In Ramadi, gunmen have attacked a number of the city's districts; fierce clashes broke out in the areas that were controlled by security forces, with the gunmen trying to re-take those districts. The Anbar Operations Command and the Police Command announced today that they have taken control of the rural area across the Euphrates. However, the surrounding areas are still under the gunmen's control.
Hit has also been the scene of intermittent clashes in the town's southwestern sector, when gunmen tried to move into the areas along the Euphrates that are still controlled by tribal forces.
In Baghdadi, the armed groups are still surrounding the township that is home to the Ayn Al-Asad Military Base. The head of the township's municipality has again warned of an impending humanitarian disaster in the next few days, as a result of the gunmen's blockade on all food and fuel supplies. Making matters worse is the presence in the township of more than 4,000 displaced families.
In Fallujah, some of the city's residential districts have been under bombardment. The General Hospital has announced that 4 residents have been killed and 7 wounded.
In Garma, there have been clashes and mortar fire in some of the town's districts, particularly in those adjacent to northern Fallujah.
The appointment of an Anbar Police Commander is still awaiting the Interior Ministry's decision to appoint Gen. Kadhum Al-Fahdawi, a military man with the former regime. He has stipulated that his appointment would be contingent upon the arrival of military equipment and munitions to the security forces in Anbar, particularly the Police.
The head of the Anbar Council, Sabah Karhoot, has warned against the infiltration of gunmen into Iraq from across the Syrian border. He called on coalition forces to secure the border areas between the two countries.

Daily Updates from Anbar: 18 October 2014


 
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The crashsite of Mi-35.


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There is also one more video under the same youtube account, which has been recently added. You might want to check out.

One Abrams tank destroyed, one BMP destroyed and at least 20 Hummer destroyed, in addition to some 20 corpses which can be seen. Incident happened near Falluja.
 
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What Life Is Like in Iraq's City of Mosul Under ISIS Rule
BY YUKA TACHIBANA

When Sunni extremists seized control of Iraq’s second-largest city, many feared the militants would brutally brandish their new-found power and exert a reign of horror on the residents of Mosul.

One month later, it appears that most in the city are far from terrified, their biggest complaint a lack of electricity rather than explosive violence.

“We all thought ISIS fighters will hurt people, but they did not do so,” said shop owner Fahad, referring to militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS). “It is 100 percent safe here. The only thing we suffer from is the lack of public services.”

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The shop owner's sentiments run counter to reports of brutality carried out by the militants elsewhere. As recently as Wednesday, Iraqi security forces found 53 corpses, blindfolded and handcuffed, south of Baghdad, Reuters reported.

The identity and sectarian affiliation of the dead people was not immediately clear, but the Sunni insurgents have boasted of killing hundreds of captive Shi'ite army troops after capturing the city of Tikrit on June 12. They put footage on the Internet of their fighters shooting prisoners.

ISIS overran Mosul two days before that fight, marking the first of many key victories for the fighters in a lightning offensive through Iraq. The assault triggered an exodus of refugees, with many Shiites fleeing northern Iraq amid fears of sectarian violence at the hands of the Sunni extremists.

While many Shiites left Mosul, those who stayed behind are being treated “just like Sunnis — in a very good way,” insisted Fahad, a 30-year-old Sunni who asked that NBC News only use his first name.

Fahad said he and others initially feared for the safety of their female relatives at the hands of the violent militants.

“We prepared to defend our houses and families, but after a while, we started to see the truth,” he said. “They did not rape a single woman, they did not force people to leave their houses and did not chase innocent people - except those who are wanted.”

Shortly after capturing Mosul, ISIS fighters roamed the city handing out leaflets warning residents away from smoking and drinking alcohol, and promising that lawbreakers would be dealt with under Islamic law, according to The Associated Press. Women also were told to stay home as much as possible.

But ISIS has largely held off on enforcing the group’s strict interpretation of Islamic law, according to residents.

“They announced that it is not allowed to smoke cigarettes and shisha, but in the evening, young men go to a park where they smoke shisha,” Fahad explained. “But, they removed all pictures of women away from the streets and markets,” taking down billboards and advertisements, he added.

ISIS met little resistance from Iraq's million-strong U.S.-trained army when the group launched its assault. Many soldiers fled their posts, shedding uniforms and weapons as they ran. Since then, the militants have given Iraqi soldiers the option to give up and repent for fighting against them, according to Fahad.

“They asked the soldiers in the beginning to give up, promising them that they will take their weapons and set them free,” Fahad said. “Some soldiers did that, and ISIS fighters kept their promise and set them free. For those soldiers who refused, they were killed."

The security forces under Iraq’s Shiite-dominated government have drawn repeated criticism for a heavy-handed approach that has alienated Sunnis – an experience echoed by Fahad.

“I prefer to live under the rule of ISIS,” he told NBC News.

After their initial embarrassing rout, the Iraqi security forces are trying to regroup and reclaim territory from the fighters.

When cellphone services dropped out last week, many Mosul residents thought warplanes might have targeted communication towers, according to Jamal, a Sunni journalist living in the city. Then news came in from the city’s big mosque: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, leader of ISIS, was there.

“After he finished the ceremony, he left the mosque, and nothing happened,” Jamal said. “After that, it was another normal day in Mosul.”

There are some signs in Mosul that ISIS is working to set up the infrastructure for its recently declared caliphate, or Islamic state.

The fighters have set up shop in empty houses and organized “interrogation departments” and prisons, Jamal said.

“They started to take former Iraqi high-ranking officers into unknown places,” he added. “There are rumors that they want those officers to help them in putting military plans to defend Mosul ... Still the reason behind taking those officers is unknown.”

Still, he said the main improvements ISIS has made are the removal of cumbersome concrete blast walls and the opening up of previously closed-off streets.

“People here are living under difficult conditions, because of the lack of public services, especially power,” Jamal added.

One byproduct of the electricity cuts is that shop owners and market vendors have slashed prices of some items: there is no power to turn on their fridges and some food cannot be saved for the next day.

But many of Mosul’s residents held government jobs, according to Jamal, and since ISIS took over have not received their pay.

With no money to buy what they need, many Mosul residents have simply stopped going out, Jamal said.

“The city of Mosul now looks like a city of ghosts.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

What Life Is Like in Iraq's City of Mosul Under ISIS Rule - NBC News
 
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