Archive for June 24, 2014

Analysis: A protracted struggle ahead for Iraq

June 24, 2014

Analysis: A protracted struggle ahead for Iraq, The Long War Journal, Bill Ardolino and Bill Roggio, June 24, 2014

The rapid advance of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Sham and its allies is the culmination of over two years of strategy by the renewed terrorist group. Previously “essentially defeated” by American, Iraqi, and Sunni Awakening forces, ISIS has since 2011 carried out a methodical campaign of resurgence, abetted by the dissolution of Syria, the removal of US combat power, and the sectarian policies of Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki’s government.

ISIS, which is leading the charge, is now seeking to consolidate its gains in Iraq and repeat its 2006 “Baghdad Belts” strategy that prefaced the worst sectarian bloodshed of the Iraq War. The challenge of removing the entrenched insurgent groups from recently gained territories will prove impossible in the short to mid-term without a number of key factors, including a change in the national government and renewed, significant international involvement in Iraq, both of which are unlikely.

It’s a sectarian war … but it isn’t

Analysts have correctly pointed out that Maliki’s polices have fueled Sunni anger and provided an opportunity for the ISIS to assert itself as the sword of the Sunnis. The ISIS offensive has been augmented by other Sunni groups, including the Naqshbandi Army, a collection of former Baathists and ostensible Islamists intent on reestablishing Sunni dominance, led by former Saddam Hussein aide Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, as well as other jihadist groups such as Ansar al Islam and Jaish al Muhajideen. Additionally, the Sunni Muslim Scholars Association, a group of hardline religious leaders who resisted the US presence in Iraq, has attempted to credit mainstream Sunni resistance, and not ISIS, for the recent offensive. And Sheikh Ali Hatim Al-Suleiman, the emir of the Dulaimi tribal confederation, has characterized the uprising as a “tribal revolution,” while at the same time denigrating “terrorists and ISIS,” reported Asharq al-Aswat.

After the US withdrew from Iraq, Maliki failed to support and integrate Sunnis into the security forces. He also attempted to arrest prominent Sunni politicians (notably Iraqi VP Tariq al-Hashimi, finance minister Rafi al-Issawi and parliamentarian Ahmed al-Alwani), and his heavy-handed break-up of (mostly) peaceful Sunni protests against his policies, coupled with minimal concessions to the protesters, has fueled great Sunni bitterness toward his regime, which is widely viewed as an Iranian puppet state. But Sunni antipathy toward Maliki and the central government should by no means be conflated with Sunni approval of ISIS and the radical Salafi jihadist ideology it springs from.

Many leaders of the Sunni tribal Sahwa (Awakening) that took place between 2005-2008 became sworn enemies of al Qaeda and the Islamic State of Iraq (the predecessor of ISIS) after battling them into quiescence, and the Awakening leaders’ hatred of the terrorist group’s radical ideology and its violence toward enemies and civilians alike was animated and enduring. As late as the Sunni protests begun in 2012, many protesters were publicly distancing themselves from “al Qaeda” (ISIS) as the group attempted to insert itself into the vanguard of the popular movement. And certain tribal leaders, including the widely regarded head of the Sahwa (Awakening) movement, Sheikh Ahmed Abu Risha, are still holding out against ISIS near Anbar province’s capital of Ramadi, while asking for support from former American allies.

“We’ve been fighting al Qaeda in Anbar for the past six months and we’re ready to fight for another six months, but we need American support,” Abu Risha told Bloomberg News on June 13.

At the height of its power, Abu Risha had lobbied for strategic partnership with America and proposed exporting the successful Awakening to other countries to fight al Qaeda. But he bemoaned loss of contact with his former American allies to journalist Eli Lake in late 2012:

“There is no contact right now,” he said. “They don’t visit at all. Ever since the United States withdrew, we haven’t gotten anyone to visit.”

In addition, the first two years of ISIS’ military campaign in Iraq after US withdrawal (“Destroying the Walls 1 and 2”) were devoted to the methodical assassination of prominent Sunni leaders who had fought the group during the Iraq War. This strategy was motivated by both revenge and the need to eliminate the group’s most dangerous enemies: leaders who could continue to rally Iraq’s Sunnis against the ISIS. As a result, although ISIS now has casual support among Sunnis who seek to use its military prowess to regain power, and has achieved tolerance from some tribal leaders who view ISIS as a necessary evil or have buckled in fear of the group, the mainstream nationalist Sunni agenda in Iraq greatly diverges from the violent zealotry of the terror group and its planned Islamic Caliphate.

Given time, this ideological gulf between mainstream Sunnis and the ISIS will undoubtedly manifest itself in greater conflict, as it did in Iraq as early as 2005, and as it currently does in Syria, where fellow Sunnis (including jihadist groups) have been battling the ISIS because of its greed and harsh ideology. But history is not on the Sunni nationalists’ side. In the early years of the Iraq War, unsupported tribal “Awakenings” against al Qaeda in Iraq repeatedly failed; leaders and movements who resisted the group were assassinated or driven into exile. And the current incarnation of ISIS, flush with international support, recruits, thousands of jihadists freed from Iraq’s prisons, and half a billion dollars looted from Mosul’s banks, is stronger than it has ever been.

If the past is any guide, the likely Sunni-on-Sunni struggle in ISIS-held territory will not soon uproot the terrorist organization from the vast stretch of territory it has acquired. The Sunni Awakening only flourished with financial support, backed up by the American “surge” and counterinsurgency strategy, along with the cooperation of the central government and security forces supporting the groups. At present, while many Sunnis may despise the Maliki government and pine for a return to dominance in Iraq, they are once again facing the prospect of chafing under repressive Salafi-jihadists policies. But without outside assistance and organization, moderate Sunnis will be unlikely to decisively win what will be a protracted conflict.

But it will become a sectarian war

As ISIS tries to consolidate its rule over the Sunnis in areas it controls in Anbar, Ninewa, Salahaddin, and Diyala, and insert itself into the “belts” of small towns surrounding Baghdad, it will attempt to resume the high tempo “commuter insurgency” that sent waves of suicide bombers and anti-Shia forces into the capital during 2006. The most potent resistance to this offensive will be put up by the Iraqi security forces loyal to the government and by reinvigorated Shia militias such as the Mahdi Army (rebranded as the so-called Peace Army), the Hezbollah Brigades, Asaib al Haq, and the Badr Brigades, with support from Iran.

Barring quick, sweeping political accommodation, which is unlikely in the near-term, and significant, direct Western intervention, which is even less likely, the conflict could slip into the horrific sectarian ghettoization and murder that characterized the worst years of the Iraq War. Overt Iranian intervention in the capital and southern Iraq will only sharpen the sectarian divide, and all Iraqis in the path of this clash — from the rabidly sectarian to the cosmopolitan resident of Baghdad who casually rejects sectarianism — will be forced into a brutal struggle. In the north, the Kurds will seek to consolidate their gains in Kirkuk and prevent ISIS incursion, and only time will tell if they broker arrangements with the central government to wage an offensive against ISIS in the territory it has gained.

Thus, unless some powerful political accommodation occurs that redraws nationalist Sunni Arabs into the government in a significant way, Iraq will continue to broadly devolve along sectarian lines, with the outskirts of Baghdad and the edge of Kirkuk marking the major fault lines of the conflict.

The possibility of averting this schism and possible massacre lies with international brokerage that pushes the Iraqi government to come to accommodation with the Sunnis who are against ISIS. The ruling Shia coalition must also placate the Kurds, who will wish to make their gain of Kirkuk permanent and acquire rights to independently export oil from their territory. And any durable political reform would likely include steps that result in the eventual replacement of Maliki, whether in the form of his stepping down or being phased out via the institution of term limits on the office of prime minister.

Problematically, despite significant political pressure from prominent voices, Maliki has shown no inclination to step down, the West retains little leverage to drive political accommodation, and Iran has moved decisively to fill the power vacuum left by the US.

The endgame

The Iraqi government’s military prospects of ejecting ISIS and its allies from much of their newly gained territory in Anbar, Ninewa, Salahaddin, and Diyala provinces appear to be slim in the absence of significant external support. ISIS’ 2006 Baghdad Belts strategy, which called for the strangling of the capital city by controlling the outskirts and surrounding provinces, was so effective that it nearly caused the defeat of Iraqi and American efforts to stabilize Iraq. ISIS has now dusted off this battle plan and is attempting to reproduce it.

The 2006 Baghdad Belts strategy was so successful that it took more than 130,000 US troops with accompanying air and logistical support, combined special operations raids, the Iraqi military and police, and the Awakening forces all more than a year of concurrent operations to dislodge the Islamic State of Iraq, ISIS’ predecessor, from Baghdad, the areas outside the city, and the outlying provinces.

This time, the isolated Iraqi government does not possess the combat power of the US Army, Marine Corps, and Air Force to partner with its military. The Kurds, who once provided tens of thousands of troops to fill or augment the ranks of the Iraqi Army, are seizing areas of interest as Iraqi forces flee the field of battle and they are holding their lines against ISIS and its allies. The Iraqi Army remains plagued by logistical troubles and it has limited intelligence, aerial and movement capabilities. And at least two divisions of the 14 division strong Iraqi Army as well as police and border forces have melted away during the ISIS onslaught. Most recently, ISIS seized the border crossings to Syria at Al Qaim and Al Walid, as well as the Turbail crossing to Jordan after Iraqi forces fled.

Before even thinking of retaking Mosul, the Iraqi military has to clear areas on the immediate outskirts of Baghdad. Complicating the problem is the influx of hundreds, if not thousands, of foreign fighters and more than 4,000 hardened jihadists who have been freed in jailbreaks at TikritAbu Ghraib, Taji, Mosul, and Badush. The Iraqi military has been unable to eject ISIS and tribal allies from Fallujah for the past six months, a city just 30 miles from the capital. If the government and the military have not been able to clean up Baghdad’s back yard, the prospects for quickly retaking Mosul, which is more than 250 miles from the capital, are grim.

In order to counter the ISIS offensive, the Maliki government needs to reach a political accommodation with mainstream Sunnis and the Kurds. But without a level of external military support (which is politically infeasible), that alone may be insufficient, and the government will be unable to reassert itself in the more distant provinces.

 

Elibiary: America Is an Islamic Country

June 24, 2014

Elibiary: America Is an Islamic Country

by John Rossomando

Jun 23, 2014 at 6:09 pm

via Elibiary: America Is an Islamic Country :: The Investigative Project on Terrorism.

 

Last fall, a top Obama Homeland Security adviser generated controversy when he wrote that the U.S. Constitution was “Islamically compliant.”

Mohamed Elibiary returned to the topic in a Saturday morning Twitter post: “… I said America was an Islamic country not a Muslim country. Pls study up on the difference b4 attacking me.” The post appears to have been deleted from Elibiary’s Twitter feed.

Elibiary declined to explain what he meant when the Investigative Project wrote to him asking for clarification. The tweets are puzzling considering that there were 2.6 million Muslims in the United States as of the 2010 census – roughly less than .2 percent of the world’s 1.6 billion Muslims.

A source close to Elibiary told the IPT, however, that the Homeland Security adviser meant to say that he feels there is nothing in the U.S. Constitution and the American system that runs contrary to Islam.

Zuhdi Jasser, president of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy, rejected the theory.

“His entire attempt to repeatedly say that ‘American is Islamic’ is pure deception in the context of an Islamist ideologue like him who has not only never critiqued Islamism but rather continuously advocates for it,” Jasser said. “In fact it is not. American Islamists like Elibiary have consistently rejected debate with other anti-Islamist Muslims about the threat of Islamism and the way to separate Islam from Islamism.

“Why? If they lose that debate, his entire raison d’être inside the U.S. government ceases to exist.”

Elibiary also compared criticism of Islamism, or political Islam, with “segregation era standards,” and invoked the memory of the “separate & unequal doctrine” that marked that era.

Elibiary’s defense of Islamism ignores how Islamist luminaries such as Sayyid Qutb – whom he previously praised – advocated forcing non-Muslims to enjoy an inferior legal status under the “protection” of the Islamic state.

Wherever Islamists have exercised power through violent or non-violent means, religious minorities such as Christians and Jews have found themselves facing violence or discrimination. This has certainly been the case in Egypt, Iraq and Syria.

A week earlier, Elibiary tweeted that the restoration of the long-defunct Muslim Caliphate was “inevitable.”

Elibiary also predicted that conservatives would evolve on the foreign policy front to accept a “Muslim majority world.”

“Islamism is incompatible with liberty and is a supremacist doctrine for which he deceptively argues is Islam the faith,” Jasser said. “In all of his work, you will not find any critique of Islamism, the Islamic state, or government imposed shariah in his opinions or any admission of the deep reforms necessary for American ideals to be compatible with Islam.”

Gaza Misfire Rocket Wounds Four Palestinians

June 24, 2014

Gaza Misfire Rocket Wounds Four Palestinians

Third of four rockets fell short, injuring four – two of them seriously.

Attacked council head calls on IDF to continue security

By Ari YasharFirst Publish: 6/24/2014, 10:05 PM

via Gaza Misfire Rocket Wounds Four Palestinians – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Explosion in Gaza (illustration)
Flash 90/address>
 
Four Arab residents of Gaza were wounded, two of them seriously, after a rocket fired by terrorists in the Hamas-enclave at Israel fell short, landing in Gaza.The rocket was the third of four fired within an hour from Gaza. The Iron Dome anti-missile defense system shot down the first two, which were launched within minutes of each other, and the fourth hit a town in the Sedot Negev Regional Council, causing no damage.

Gaza medical sources told AFP that one of the wounded was a child.

Over 20 rockets have been fired at Israel since Operation Brother’s Keeper began two weeks ago to rescue the three Israeli teens kidnapped by Hamas terrorists, with the IDF noting that over 200 rockets have been fired from Gaza since the start of the year.

Another failed missile was recorded last Friday. After Iron Dome shot down a rocket earlier in the day, another terrorist rocket was fired but fell short of its mark, landing in Gaza. No damage was reported in the incident.

In addition to the four rockets on Tuesday, Arab media sources reported mortar fire being launched from Gaza towards the Erez Border Crossing. IDF sources said the incident is being investigated; no damage or injuries were reported.

Tamir Idan, head of the Sedot Negev Regional Council where the rocket fell on Tuesday told Walla! “this incident emphasizes the great importance of security concentration in the Gaza Envelope communities.”

Idan condemned the Homefront Command decision to cut the security budget and security concentration in the region.

“The Homefront Command decision is scandalous and disconnected from the reality we live in. I call on the defense minister to cancel immediately the ridiculous decision, and to let us lead an emergency protocol in according with the security situation,” stated Idan.

The regional leader added “I don’t want to even consider what would have happened this evening if there hadn’t been an IDF accompanied security concentration on site, even more so in the incident where a missile would fall on a building with injuries G-d forbid.”

 

Rocket Hits Town After Iron Dome Shoots Down Two

June 24, 2014

Rocket Hits Community After Iron Dome Shoots Down TwoRockets fired within minutes of each other shot down; another rocket fired within an hour later lands in town, no damage reported.

By Ari YasharFirst Publish: 6/24/2014, 7:55 PM

via Rocket Hits Town After Iron Dome Shoots Down Two – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Israel’s Iron Dome in action (file)
Flash 90
 

Two rockets were fired back-to-back by terrorists in Gaza on Tuesday evening, only to be shot down by the Iron Dome anti-missile defense system. A later rocket landed in a local community, but did not cause any damage.

“Color Red” missile warning sirens were sounded twice in the Ashkelon Coast Regional Council after the rockets were fired within minutes of each other.

Both missiles were eliminated by Iron Dome, reports Yedioth Aharonoth, noting that a third rocket firing attempt from Gaza apparently failed.

Shards from the two rockets that were shot down fell on several communities in the region, but no injuries or damage has been reported.

Another rocket was fired from Gaza less than an hour after the three rockets, with “Color Red” sirens being sounded in several communities in the Sedot Negev Regional Council area to the west of Gaza.

The rocket fell in one of the Council’s communities, but no injuries or damage were reported.

Over 20 rockets have been fired at Israel since Operation Brother’s Keeper began two weeks ago to rescue the three Israeli teens kidnapped by Hamas terrorists.

Additionally, Walla! referenced Arab media sources reporting mortar fire being launched from Gaza towards the Erez Border Crossing. IDF sources said the incident is being investigated; no damage or injuries were reported.

Evidence that terrorists in the Hamas-enclave of Gaza have stepped up their rocket activity during the operation was seen again on Saturday, when terrorists fired a rocket sparking an IAF airstrike on terror sites in response.

After Iron Dome shot down a rocket last Friday, another terrorist rocket was fired but fell short of its mark, landing in Gaza.

Last Thursday night, Israeli aircraft targeted several terrorist-related sites in Gaza, hours after Iron Dome shot down a rocket as it made its way towards the coastal city of Ashkelon.

The IDF placed Iron Dome anti-missile defense units on the coastal region near Ashdod and Tel Aviv last Wednesday, in anticipation that terror activity from Gaza may flare up soon in order to support the Hamas kidnappers of the three abducted teens, and in response to the IDF’s ongoing crackdown on Hamas in Judea and Samaria.

Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon (Likud) called on Sunday to cut off all Israeli-provided electricity to Gaza and the Palestinian Authority (PA), saying a wider-scale operation was justified by the kidnapping.

However, the Security Cabinet decided on Tuesday to reduce the IDF operation against Hamas’s terrorism infrastructure in Judea and Samaria, fearing international criticism and heightened violence during Ramadan starting this Saturday. It should be noted that Hamas terrorists kidnapped the three Israeli teens two weeks ago.

Iraq crisis: Beiji oil refinery ‘falls’ to Isis – live updates

June 24, 2014

Iraq crisis: Baiji refinery ‘falls’ as Kerry visits Irbil

live updates

Kerry to urge Kurds to help prevent break up of Iraq

UN says hundreds of civilians killed in June Isis ‘take’

Iraq’s main oil refinery after days of fighting Iraqi

leaders agree to set up new government by 1 July

Matthew Weaver theguardian.com, Tuesday 24 June 2014 13.38

via Iraq crisis: Beiji oil refinery ‘falls’ to Isis – live updates | World news | theguardian.com.

 

The US secretary of state pledges support for Iraq’s security forces as they battle against Islamist insurgents Isis. John Kerry claims Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has committed to forming a new government in Iraq from 1 July. It comes after Barack Obama offered up 300 American advisers to help co-ordinate the fight.

 

1.33pm BST

John Kerry has insisted that Kurdish leaders are backing his efforts to form a new government in Baghdad.

In an interview for CNN after his meetings in Irbil, Kerry played down President Barzani’s remark that Iraq is facing a “new reality”. Barzani’s observation is being seen as a rejection of the US secretary of state’s call for unity.

But Kerry said:

Even President Barzani today, who is opposed to the prime minister [Nouri al-Maliki] made it clear that he wants to participate in the process that he wants to help chose the next government. And other leaders that I met with were all engaged and energised and ready to go to bat for a new governance. So while he says there’s a new reality. The new reality is that they are under attack from Isil and they have realised that they cannot continue with this sectarian division.

https://audioboo.fm/boos/2278444-john-kerry-says-kurdish-leaders-have-pledged-to-help-form-a-new-iraqi-government

1.33pm BST

John Kerry has insisted that Kurdish leaders are backing his efforts to form a new government in Baghdad.

In an interview for CNN after his meetings in Irbil, Kerry played down President Barzani’s remark that Iraq is facing a “new reality”. Barzani’s observation is being seen as a rejection of the US secretary of state’s call for unity.

But Kerry said:

Even President Barzani today, who is opposed to the prime minister [Nouri al-Maliki] made it clear that he wants to participate in the process that he wants to help chose the next government. And other leaders that I met with were all engaged and energised and ready to go to bat for a new governance. So while he says there’s a new reality. The new reality is that they are under attack from Isil and they have realised that they cannot continue with this sectarian division.

Updated at 1.38pm BST

 

1.11pm BST

It wasn’t just the body language that was different in Ibril and Baghdad. There was no need for body armour in the Kurdish region, notes Kurdish campaigner Abdulrahman Hamdi.

see the difference between #Erbil and #Baghdad during @JohnKerry’s visit. #Kurdistan pic.twitter.com/wk0dvaBlD8
— Abdulrahman Hamdi (@havall73) June 24, 2014

12.34pm BST

A boutique has opened in one Istanbul’s busies shopping streets selling Isis T-shirts and banners, according to the Turkish news site Yurt.

Store selling ISIS apparel opens in Istanbul neighborhood, eyes 7 additional locations http://t.co/tF6kJUJNgH pic.twitter.com/lOvOKagCMf
— Piotr Zalewski (@p_zalewski) June 24, 2014

12.03pm BST

John Kerry’s flying visit to Irbil is coming to an end.

After several hours in Erbil, Iraq, John Kerry is now about to depart for NATO meetings in Brussels.
— Matt Viser (@mviser) June 24, 2014

The Times reckons that Kurdish leaders rebuffed Kerry’s appeal for unity, which maybe an over interpretation of Barzani’s remark about the “new reality” in Iraq.

Updated at 12.40pm BST

11.49am BST
UN: More than 1,000 killed in Iraq in 17 days

United Nations human rights monitors say at least 1,075 people have been killed in Iraq during June, most of them civilians, AP reports.

The UN human rights team in Iraq says at least 757 civilians were killed and 599 injured in Nineveh, Diyala and Salah al-Din provinces from June 5-22.

Spokesman Rupert Colville told reporters in Geneva the figure “should be viewed very much as a minimum” and includes some verified summary executions and extra-judicial killings of civilians, police, and soldiers who had stopped fighting.

He says at least another 318 people were killed and 590 injured during the same time in Baghdad and areas in southern Iraq, many of them from at least 6 separate vehicle-borne bombs.

Updated at 12.27pm BST

11.04am BST

Iraqi air strikes near the oil refinery in Baiji, have killed at least 19 people on Tuesday, officials told AFP. It also reported that the plant is still in government hands.

The raids, which began early on Tuesday, also wounded at least 17 people, they said.

The officials said the dead and wounded included civilians, and it was unclear if there were any casualties among the militants who were the target of the strikes.

Iraqiya state television said 19 “terrorists” were killed in the Baiji raids.

Militants also launched a renewed push to seize Iraq’s largest oil refinery, which is located near the town, but the overnight attack was repelled by security forces, officials said.

10.54am BST

Residents in a string of Shia Turkmen villages south of Kirkuk have given first hand accounts of alleged Isis killings and brutality.

Scores of people are missing, more than a dozen residents who told the Washington Post.

The survivors’ stories of civilians being gunned down were reminiscent of the most brutal days of the Iraq war.

The Turkmens have been caught up in past sectarian violence in Kirkuk and other ethnically mixed cities in northern Iraq, but the power of the Isis rebels adds an explosive new element to such clashes.

Askar Hassan of the Shia Turkmen village of Brawawchli said the attack began around midday 17 June, when many of the town’s residents were napping in the heat. First, shells began to crash into the village. Then he heard gunfire. Hassan grabbed his family and bolted into a nearby field of date palms.

As they ran, a group of men sprayed the fleeing villagers with bullets.

Hassan said he saw his cousin drop from a gunshot before he felt a bullet pierce his own side, sending him to the ground. “Pretend to be dead,” he told his wife and four children as they fell around him. Two of the children had also been shot, he said.

Within moments, the militants had reached them. “God is great!” they shouted, but they moved past his family members, who were lying still, Hassan said.

Mourners pray during a funeral for 15 Iraqi Turkmen Shia killed by militants in Tuz Khurmato. Photograph: Stringer/iraq/Reuters

10.20am BST

There are yet more competing claims about who is in control of the Baiji oil refinery.

CJ Chivers, from the New York Times, was told by an army officer that militants have captured perimeter towers but that the battle for the plant continues.

ISIS claim of capturing Baji refinery disputed by Iraqi Army officer inside; says militants captured towers by fence but battle continues.
— C.J. Chivers (@cjchivers) June 24, 2014

10.17am BST

US officials are worried that the growing strength of the Kurds could cause them to split off from Iraq, according to the Boston Globe’s Matt Viser who travelled to Irbil with Kerry.

He writes:

One of Kerry’s aims is to convince the Kurds to remain active in creating a central government, according to a senior state department official.

“If they decide to withdraw from the Baghdad political process, it will accelerate a lot of the negative trends,” said the official, speaking on the condition of anonymity. “Whereas if they are an active participant in that process … they will have substantial clout and influence in Baghdad.”

But the gains that Kurdish forces have made in recent weeks, the official said, could complicate the discussions.

“Some facts on the ground can be created that might not be reversed,” the official said. “I mean, they’re in a very different situation and – but they – I think there’s a debate going on in the Kurdish region with some people saying, ‘Hey, this is actually pretty good, look what’s happening here,’ and others saying, ‘So we should just kind of build a moat and kind of do our own thing.’”

10.02am BST

There are unconfirmed reports that the judge who sentenced former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein to death has himself been executed by Isis militants.

The Daily Mail reports:

Raouf Abdul Rahman, who sentenced the dictator to death by hanging in 2006, was reportedly killed by rebels in retaliation for the execution of the 69-year-old.

His death has not been confirmed by the Iraqi government, but officials had not denied reports of his capture last week. He is believed to have been arrested on June 16, and died two days later.

Jordanian MP Khalil Attieh wrote on his Facebook page that Judge Rahman, who had headed the Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal during Saddam s trial, had been arrested and sentenced to death.

9.41am BST

The body language at today’s meeting between Kerry and Barzani looked a lot less awkward than Kerry’s meeting 24 hours ago with Nouri al-Maliki.

Kurdistan Regional Government President Massoud Barzani and US Secretary of State John Kerry talk before a meeting at the presidential palace in Irbil, the capital of northern Iraq’s Kurdistan autonomous region. Photograph: Pool/Reuters

Kerry insisted his meeting with Maliki went well, but the body language suggested otherwise. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

At one point during yesterday’s photo call Kerry appeared to be ushering Maliki out amid speculation that he urged the Iraqi president to resign.

Kerry and Maliki’s awkward meeting in Baghdad Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

By contrast today Kerry was photographed joking with Fuad Hussein chief of staff at the presidency of the Kurdistan regional government.

US Secretary of State John Kerry jokes with Fuad Hussein chief of staff at the presidency of the Kurdistan Regional Government on his arrival in Irbil. Photograph: Pool/Reuters

Netanyahu Calls out Hamas’s ‘War on Israel

June 24, 2014

Netanyahu Calls out Hamas’s ‘War on Israel’PM issues fierce response after Khaled Meshaal blesses abductors, says kidnapping ‘a logical and natural reaction.

By Hezki EzraFirst
Publish: 6/24/2014, 1:38 PM / Last Update: 6/24/2014, 1:44 PM

via Netanyahu Calls out Hamas’s ‘War on Israel’ – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Binyamin Netanyahu Flash 90
 

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu responded to Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal’s blessing toward the abductors of three yeshiva students Tuesday, calling the terror organization out on the difference between its face to the international community and its statements to the Arab world.

“Last night we heard Khaled Meshaal, the leader of Hamas, praise and defend the brutal kidnapping of the three innocent Israeli teenagers who were making their way home from school,” Netanyahu said. “Meshaal once again made clear that Hamas remains committed to its war against Israel and its war against every Israeli citizen, and coincidently, against every Jew around the world.”

The Prime Minister expressed his appreciation for Palestinian Authority (PA) Chairman Mahmoud Abbas’s condemnation of the abduction, but clarified that he will be tested in actions, not words.

“How can President Abbas make an alliance with these terrorists who extoll kidnapping?” he asked. “I appreciate what President Abbas said a few days ago in Saudi Arabia, rejecting the kidnapping. I think these were important words.”

“Now, if he really means what he said about the kidnapping, and if he is truly committed to peace and to fighting terrorism, then logic and common sense mandate that he break his pact with Hamas. This is the only way that we can move forward.”

“I think this is something that is shared by many in Europe who understand that the quest for peace and stability and tranquility means that we have to fight the forces of terror, intolerance and darkness,” he added. “There can be no alliance with the kidnappers of children.”

Earlier this week, Meshaal denied all knowledge of the abduction, and gave the kidnappers his “blessing” in an interview to Al-Jazeera.

He added that the abduction is “a logical and natural reaction to the violations of occupation forces,” and that “we support every resistance attack against the Israeli occupation, which has to pay for its tyranny.”

The comments came hours after Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh stated that a third intifada (terror war against Israel) had started, citing ongoing unrest in the Palestinian Authority (PA) as the IDF cracks down on Hamas in Judea and Samaria.

Despite Meshaal’s denial that Hamas is involved in the kidnapping, both Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and other security officials have confirmed again and again that the terror organization is behind the abduction.

Operation Brothers’ Keeper to find the boys – Naftali Frenkel (16), Gilad Sha’ar (16), and Eyal Yifrah (19) – is now well into its twelfth day.

Since June 13, over 15,000 IDF soldiers have conducted nightly raids in the Hevron area, arresting some 360 terrorists and searching 1,800 suspected holding sites.

Jordanian air force bombs Al Qaeda-Iraq incursion. ISIS also stands at Saudi border. Kerry’s snags in Iraq

June 24, 2014

Jordanian air force bombs Al Qaeda-Iraq incursion. ISIS also stands at Saudi border. Kerry’s snags in Iraq.

DEBKAfile Special Report June 23, 2014, 10:44 PM (IDT)
ISIS patrol

ISIS patrol

The Jordanian air force hit ISIS contingents, Monday night, June 23, as they drove into into the kingdom through the Turaibil border crossing which they seized Saturday, debkafile’s military sources report. The jets destroyed 4 Islamist State of Iraq and Levant (ISIS) armored personnel carriers, which were already on the move. Also Monday, ISIS completed its capture of the strategic Tal Afar and its environs in northern Iraq, capping its conquest in the last two weeks of Nineveh Province and Mosul, all but one town (Ramadi) of the western Anbar Province, and Iraq’s key border posts in the north, west and southwest.
Jordan called up military reserves Sunday, after discovering that its capital Amman was to be the Islamist organization’s next prey.
Instead of making straight for Baghdad, ISIS turned west and south for what it saw as softer targets, deploying two forces for shooting into Jordan – one from Syria, for which they also captured Al Walid, through which to head into the kingdom from the north; and one pointing from Turaibil (which the Jordanians call Karame) and aiming for the eastern Jordanian towns of Zarqa, Irbid and  Amman.

By seizing Turaibil, the Islamists were able to cut off the main Iraqi-Jordanian artery for trade and travel between the two countries. They may have been stopped for now by the Jordanian air strike, espcially if there is a follow-up.
Their capture of the key town of Rutba Saturday is seen by Western military sources tracking the Iraqi conflict as marking out the Islamists’ next target. That force split in two – one heading southwest toward the Saudi Arabia border and the other heading west to Jordan.
Sunday, June 22, the Islamists put on the world web a new site called “ISIS in Saudi Arabia.”

debkafile’s military and intelligence sources report that the US and Israel have laid on a battery of advanced intelligence-gathering measures in the last few hours, including military satellites, drones and reconnaissance planes for keeping track of the Islamist fighters’ rapid advance.
A 500-km broad expanse of desert separates the Iraqi border from Amman which would be no picnic for the ISIS to navigate without discovery. However, they were counting on al Qaeda cells planted in most Jordanian towns to help them make their way across.
It is important to remember that the US and Israel are both bound by military pacts to defend the throne of the Hashemite King Abdullah II.
As for Iraq’s southwestern neighbor, Saudi Arabia, our sources report that the main topic of conversation between King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi Saturday, June 21 at Cairo airport, was the Iraq crisis and the threat the Islamist extremists threat present to the two kingdoms.

The Saudi king made it his business to stop over briefly at Cairo airport on the way to his summer palace in Morocco, and invite the Egyptian president aboard his plane for that conversation. He wanted to hear El-Sisi promise to reward the oil kingdom and Gulf emirates for the generous financial aid they bestowed on him with a pledge of Egyptian military commando units to the rescue in the event of an al Qaeda invasion.
Interestingly, the Saudi monarch’s companion on the royal flight – he also took part in the conversation with El-Sisi – was Prince Bandar bin Sultan, who five months ago was relieved of his posts as Director of General Intelligence and senior strategist of the Saudi campaigns in Syria and Iraq, the first of which failed in its goal to unseat Bashar Assad.

It looked very much as though the king had a change of heart and decided to restore Bandar to his inner circle of advisers under the looming threat of ISIS and its lightening advances in Iraq.
That threat also drove US Secretary of State John Kerry to pay an unannounced visit to Baghdad Monday, June 23, after discussing the Iraqi crisis in Cairo with the Egyptian president.

His arrival was accompanied by further rapid ISIS territorial gains in Iraq and actions to consolidate its grip. After talking to Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki, Kerry said at the US embassy that US support will be “intense, sustained, and effective” – provided Iraq’s leaders came together to form a government representing the rival sects.
debkafile adds: Kerry canvassed Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish leaders for a consensual candidate to lead a government representing all of Iraq’s sects and communities. He had in mind a Shiite prime minister able to gain the endorsement of Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani.
Secretary Kerry planned to visit Irbil Tuesday for talks on this and on Kurdish military aid against the ISIS offensive with the heads of the autonomous Kurdish region. However the Kurds wanted first to hear what they will get from Baghdad for sending their pershmerga militia to fight the Islamists in northern Iraq. Since Maliki is the object of Kerry’s maneuvers to replace him, he is not ready to offer the Kurds any concessions at this point. So Kerry’s Iraq mission has so far struck a high wall.