What's new

Iraq's war against IS terrorism | Updates and Discussions

ISIS attracts attention of radicals in Pakistan, Afghanistan
914a7a9201f9c1fa5e6804f4bdba1128.jpg

ISLAMABAD (AFP) - The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is starting to attract the attention of radicals in Pakistan and Afghanistan, long a cradle for Islamist militancy, unnerving authorities who fear a potential violent contagion.

Far from the militants' self-proclaimed "caliphate" in Iraq and Syria, the name of ISIS has cropped up several times in jihadi circles in recent weeks in Pakistan and Afghanistan, the historic homeland of the Taleban and Al-Qaeda.

Leaflets calling for support for ISIS were seen in parts of north-west Pakistan, and at least five Pakistani Taleban commanders and three lesser cadres from the Afghan Taleban have pledged their support.

Pro-ISIS slogans have appeared on walls in several cities in both countries and in Kabul University, where a number of students were arrested. Militant, security and official sources questioned by AFP in recent weeks say these are local, individual initiatives, and at this stage ISIS has not established a presence in the region. But the success of ISIS in the Middle East is unsettling many of those charged with keeping a lid on Afghanistan and Pakistan's myriad extremist groups.

"ISIS is becoming the major inspiration force for both violent and non-violent religious groups in the region," Pakistani security analyst Amir Rana told AFP.

- Warning letter -

Earlier this month, Pakistan's National Counter Terrorism Agency wrote to a dozen government agencies warning them to be on their guard against the ISIS group.

"The successes of ISIS play a very dangerous, inspirational role in Pakistan, where more than 200 organisations are operational," the agency said.

The letter came as the Pakistani army fights a major offensive in insurgent bastions of the tribal north-west, which appears to be weakening its major enemies, the Tehreek-e-Taleban Pakistan (TTP) and allied Al-Qaeda fighters.

Following the army offensive, the TTP, a coalition of disparate militant groups, has fragmented into rival factions over recent weeks, fuelling rumours that the movement could be overtaken by ISIS.

The TTP say they broadly support both the ISIS militants and Al-Qaeda. They also say say they have sent 1,000 fighters in recent years to help the militant struggle in Syria - an estimate confirmed by a Pakistani government source - and plan to send 700 more.

But if ISIS militants one day envisage extending their influence in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the world's only Islamic state with nuclear weapons, they will have to either defy or find an accommodation with the two countries' Taleban movements.

Currently both the TTP and the Afghan Taleban officially recognise only one leader, Mullah Omar, and a senior Afghan cadre told AFP that ISIS was wrong to declare a caliphate.

"The Taleban and their supporters say that 'amir-ul-momineen' (the commander of the faithful) has already been chosen," the commander told AFP, rejecting ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

- Money, money, money -

So far, the Taleban and Al-Qaeda's new South Asia wing have steered clear of criticising ISIS, maintaining a united front against "Western aggression".

US officials say the group is generating tens of millions of dollars a month from black market oil sales, ransoms and extortion. This financial heft is proving a big draw - including for the five Pakistani Taleban commanders who announced their support for the ISIS.

"The splinter groups are facing financial crisis, so they are contacting Daesh," a senior militant told AFP. Daesh is another name for ISIS.

To spread in the region, ISIS must also eat away at the authority of the state - but, unlike Iraq and Syria, Pakistani state structures look solid and are supported by a powerful army.

Afghanistan, much more fragile, is more worrying - particularly Kunar and Nuristan, mountainous provinces on the Pakistani border, which have long been refuges for militants from the hardline branch of Islam espoused by ISIS and Al-Qaeda.

"The authorities' fear is that IS will join up with the TTP and other extremist groups and from there spread on both sides of the border," said analyst Rana.

Several sources say that in Kunar there is at least one camp training hundreds of fighters sympathetic to ISIS.

Away from the camps, there is a danger that the ISIS militants could attract more and more young Afghans and Pakistanis through their propaganda on Facebook and Twitter.

"People here face problems with the lack of justice, the corruption and the inefficiency of the state, and therefore they need a counter-narrative, and ISIS provides one with religious content," said Tahirul Ashrafi, head of the Pakistan's Ulema Council, seen as close to the authorities.

In the short-term, the big fear in Pakistan stems from the ISIS group's sectarian agenda, more extreme and more explicit than that of Al-Qaeda, heightened by its fight against majority Shiite governments in Iraq and Syria.

Violence against minority Shiite Muslims, who make up about 20 per cent of Pakistan's population, has hit record levels in recent years and there are concerns ISIS could energise sectarian groups even further.

ISIS attracts attention of radicals in Pakistan, Afghanistan
 
.
Bombings targeting pilgrims heading to Karbala leave 36 dead
Updated at 2:00 pm (GMT +2): Weekend bombings in the Baghdad area killed at least 36 people, just days ahead of major Shia religious commemorations that face significant danger from militants, security and medical officials said.

A car bomb targeting Shia pilgrims killed 12 people in Baghdad on Sunday, police and hospital sources said.

In the deadliest attack, a suicide bomber detonated an explosives-rigged truck at the checkpoint leading to southern Baghdad, killing at least 20 people and wounding at least 53 on Saturday.

The truck blew up on Baghdad's Palestine Street near a tent serving water and tea to pilgrims, hundreds of thousands of whom will travel to Karbala, south of Baghdad, for the Ashura commemorations, which peak on Tuesday.

Thousands of tents serving refreshments to pilgrims across the capital, and the main route to Karbala, the shrine city where Imam Hussein is buried, passes through the checkpoint that was bombed on Saturday.

Security officials said the suicide bombing was the only attack in the area, while a medical official said a car bomb also hit shops in nearby Yusifiyah also contributed to the toll.

Pilgrims taking part in Ashura commemorations, which marks the death of Imam Hussein, one of the most revered figures in Shia Islam, have been targeted in attacks that have killed dozens in past years.

Last year, a triple attack on the pilgrims during the tenth day of Ashura processions, which marks the climax of the commemoration, killed 41 people.

An estimated 20 million people visited Karbala during the 40th day of Ashura in December 2013, making it the world’s largest peaceful gathering of people in one place for a single event.

This year's march to Karbala is set to be more dangerous than most, with Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) – which considers Shiites heretics and frequently attacks them – in control of territories along the way and of large areas of Iraq.

Bombings targeting pilgrims heading to Karbala leave 36 dead | Al Akhbar English
 
.
.
ISIS attracts attention of radicals in Pakistan, Afghanistan
View attachment 142449
ISLAMABAD (AFP) - The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is starting to attract the attention of radicals in Pakistan and Afghanistan, long a cradle for Islamist militancy, unnerving authorities who fear a potential violent contagion.

Far from the militants' self-proclaimed "caliphate" in Iraq and Syria, the name of ISIS has cropped up several times in jihadi circles in recent weeks in Pakistan and Afghanistan, the historic homeland of the Taleban and Al-Qaeda.

Leaflets calling for support for ISIS were seen in parts of north-west Pakistan, and at least five Pakistani Taleban commanders and three lesser cadres from the Afghan Taleban have pledged their support.

Pro-ISIS slogans have appeared on walls in several cities in both countries and in Kabul University, where a number of students were arrested. Militant, security and official sources questioned by AFP in recent weeks say these are local, individual initiatives, and at this stage ISIS has not established a presence in the region. But the success of ISIS in the Middle East is unsettling many of those charged with keeping a lid on Afghanistan and Pakistan's myriad extremist groups.

"ISIS is becoming the major inspiration force for both violent and non-violent religious groups in the region," Pakistani security analyst Amir Rana told AFP.

- Warning letter -

Earlier this month, Pakistan's National Counter Terrorism Agency wrote to a dozen government agencies warning them to be on their guard against the ISIS group.

"The successes of ISIS play a very dangerous, inspirational role in Pakistan, where more than 200 organisations are operational," the agency said.

The letter came as the Pakistani army fights a major offensive in insurgent bastions of the tribal north-west, which appears to be weakening its major enemies, the Tehreek-e-Taleban Pakistan (TTP) and allied Al-Qaeda fighters.

Following the army offensive, the TTP, a coalition of disparate militant groups, has fragmented into rival factions over recent weeks, fuelling rumours that the movement could be overtaken by ISIS.

The TTP say they broadly support both the ISIS militants and Al-Qaeda. They also say say they have sent 1,000 fighters in recent years to help the militant struggle in Syria - an estimate confirmed by a Pakistani government source - and plan to send 700 more.

But if ISIS militants one day envisage extending their influence in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the world's only Islamic state with nuclear weapons, they will have to either defy or find an accommodation with the two countries' Taleban movements.

Currently both the TTP and the Afghan Taleban officially recognise only one leader, Mullah Omar, and a senior Afghan cadre told AFP that ISIS was wrong to declare a caliphate.

"The Taleban and their supporters say that 'amir-ul-momineen' (the commander of the faithful) has already been chosen," the commander told AFP, rejecting ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

- Money, money, money -

So far, the Taleban and Al-Qaeda's new South Asia wing have steered clear of criticising ISIS, maintaining a united front against "Western aggression".

US officials say the group is generating tens of millions of dollars a month from black market oil sales, ransoms and extortion. This financial heft is proving a big draw - including for the five Pakistani Taleban commanders who announced their support for the ISIS.

"The splinter groups are facing financial crisis, so they are contacting Daesh," a senior militant told AFP. Daesh is another name for ISIS.

To spread in the region, ISIS must also eat away at the authority of the state - but, unlike Iraq and Syria, Pakistani state structures look solid and are supported by a powerful army.

Afghanistan, much more fragile, is more worrying - particularly Kunar and Nuristan, mountainous provinces on the Pakistani border, which have long been refuges for militants from the hardline branch of Islam espoused by ISIS and Al-Qaeda.

"The authorities' fear is that IS will join up with the TTP and other extremist groups and from there spread on both sides of the border," said analyst Rana.

Several sources say that in Kunar there is at least one camp training hundreds of fighters sympathetic to ISIS.

Away from the camps, there is a danger that the ISIS militants could attract more and more young Afghans and Pakistanis through their propaganda on Facebook and Twitter.

"People here face problems with the lack of justice, the corruption and the inefficiency of the state, and therefore they need a counter-narrative, and ISIS provides one with religious content," said Tahirul Ashrafi, head of the Pakistan's Ulema Council, seen as close to the authorities.

In the short-term, the big fear in Pakistan stems from the ISIS group's sectarian agenda, more extreme and more explicit than that of Al-Qaeda, heightened by its fight against majority Shiite governments in Iraq and Syria.

Violence against minority Shiite Muslims, who make up about 20 per cent of Pakistan's population, has hit record levels in recent years and there are concerns ISIS could energise sectarian groups even further.

ISIS attracts attention of radicals in Pakistan, Afghanistan
This wont change anything in those two countries. If people defect from the Taliban to IS it doesnt really matter because they're still the same people with the same capabilities (or lack thereof) whatever label they put on themselves. Joining IS doesnt somehow make them more dangerous or militarily capable. The threat would be to Iraq and Syria if these Taliban defectors and others were to relocate there to reinforce IS ranks, because for sure no IS fighters are going to relocate themselves to Afghanistan and Pakistan to fight against those two states which at present, are wholly irrelevant to IS' Caliphate project in the Middle East.
 
. .
Arabic news reports death of ISIS official spokesmen al adnani in western Anbar province
18d8825fb94565b142fd8c7052621e83.jpg
 
. .
Peshmerga leave Turkish restaurant ‘without paying’
8ddae91c-ca81-49c1-89f7-2a9c0cdad6fb_16x9_600x338.jpg

Some 80 Peshmerga fighters stopped off late Wednesday at the Demirol motorway services restaurant just outside the city of Sanliurfa - and left a bill amounting to $473. (Shutterstock)

Text size A A A
By Al Arabiya News | Staff writer
Friday, 31 October 2014
They came, they saw and they left, purportedly, without paying the bill.

Amid confusion over the plans of the Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga fighters set to cross from Turkey to fight militants in Kobane, one contingent ate a full meal in a Turkish restaurant without paying the hefty bill, the Hurriyet daily reported Friday, according to Agence France-Presse.

Some 80 Peshmerga fighters stopped off late Wednesday at the Demirol motorway services restaurant just outside the city of Sanliurfa as they travelled from Iraq through Turkey to the border with Syria.

Enjoying the spicy local specialty of Urfa Kebab, as well as soup, beans and rice, the party of 80 worked up a bill of 1,040 Turkish lira ($473).

“The Peshmerga group left the restaurant without paying. So far there has been no sign of payment,” a restaurant source, who was not named, told Hurriyet.

“But we have kept the bills. And we are waiting for the payment,” the source added.

The paper later quoted one of the partners in the restaurant, Bekir Demirol, as saying that there had been a “misunderstanding”, and the bill was subsequently paid by the office of the Sanliurfa province governor.

“I looked today and the payment has arrived,” he told the paper.

However, contacted by the Hurriyet, the governor's office said it had made no payment and was not aware of receiving a bill.

The Peshmerga are supposed to cross into Syria to reinforce Syrian Kurdish fighters battling militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) for control of the mainly Kurdish Syrian town of Kobane.
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/var...-Turkish-restaurant-without-paying-bill-.html
 
.
Just What Americans Want to See: ISIS Posing with U.S. Made Weaponry, Including Tanks
Just What Americans Want to See: ISIS Posing with U.S. Made Weaponry, Including Tanks, More…
BY KEVIN BOYD (1 DAY AGO) | WORLD

IJRSHAREEMAIL
Part of President Obama’s strategy to destroy the Islamic State aka ISIS is to train local forces to engage them in combat on the ground. One of the major components of the strategy is to rebuild the Iraqi Army.

However, that appears not to be going well. This video shows that ISIS has attacked and destroyed a unit of the Iraqi military.

ISIS fighters also appear to be posing with a captured M1A1M Abrams battle tank, which was made in the U.S. and supplied to the Iraqis. The video also shows an Iraqi Army Humvee destroyed and an armored personnel carrier burning, most likely a U.S. supplied M113.

This video show that ISIS continues to inflict severe casualties on the Iraqi Army. This, combined with questions about the training of the Iraqi military, shows that relying on Iraqi forces alone to defeat ISIS will likely result in a long, bloody and futile war.

SHARE (17K SHARES)
by Taboola
Sponsored Links

From The Web

']Discover More than 10,000 Towns and Cities in Germany!German National Tourism





Your Cable Company Doesn’t Want You To Know This!The Motley Fool





15 Really Crazy X-Rays | CaliserCaliser




http://trc.taboola.com/ijreview/log...the&vi=1414967399720&p=cpxinteractive-sc&r=94
Booked! Celeb Mug ShotsP
 
. . . . . .
What's the latest? Did Iraqi army recapture all of Tikrit?

Latest news is about Jurf al Sakhr, Amiriyat Fallujah, Anbar ( ISIS massacring Nimr tribe ), Baji city IA advancing etc.

@Hazzy997 your opinion about ISIS massacring 'your' fellow Sunni brothers ( al nimr tribe ) ?
What about ISIS admitting to use of sex slaves on video ?

You used to deny it.
 
Last edited:
.
Back
Top Bottom