Ramadi’s fall opens ISIS road to Baghdad. Jordan warns US air strikes won’t stop the terrorists’ advance
Ramadi’s fall opens ISIS road to Baghdad. Jordan warns US air strikes won’t stop the terrorists’ advance, DEBKAfile, May 18, 2015
Jordan’s King Abdullah has warned the Obama administration in an urgent message that US air strikes alone won’t stop the Islamic State’s advances in Iraq and Syria and, what is more, they leave his kingdom next door exposed to the Islamist peril. ISIS would at present have no difficulty in invading southern Jordan, where the army is thin on the ground, and seizing local towns and villages whose inhabitants are already sympathetic to the extremist group. The bulk of the Jordanian army is concentrated in the north on the Syrian border. Even a limited Islamist incursion in the south would also pose a threat to northern Saudi Arabia, the king pointed out.
Abdullah offered the view that the US Delta Special Forces operation in eastern Syria Saturday was designed less to be an effective assault on ISIS’s core strength and more as a pallliative to minimize the Islamist peril facing Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the Gulf emirates.
DEBKAfile’s Washington sources report that US officials refused to heed Abdullah’s warning and tried to play it down, in the same way as Secretary John Kerry tried Monday, May 18, to de-emphasize to the ISIS conquest of Ramadi, the capital of Iraq’s largest province.
At a news conference in Seoul, Kerry dismissed the Islamists’ feat as a “target of opportunity” and expressed confidence that, in the coming days, the loss “can be reversed.”
The Secretary of State’s words were unlikely to scare the Islamists, who had caused more than 500 deaths in the battle for the town and witnessed panicky Iraqi soldiers fleeing Ramadi in Humvees and tanks.
Baghdad, only 110 km southeast of Ramadi, has more reason to be frightened, in the absence of any sizeable Iraqi military strength in the area for standing in the enemy’s path to the capital.
The Baghdad government tried announcing that substantial military reinforcements had been ordered to set out and halt the Islamists’ advance. This was just whistling in the dark. In the last two days, the remnants of the Iraqi army have gone to pieces – just like in the early days of the ISIS offensive, when the troops fled Mosul and Falujah. They are running away from any possible engagement with the Islamist enemy.
The Baghdad-sourced reports that Shiite paramilitaries were preparing to deploy to Iraq’s western province of Anbar after Islamic State militants overran Ramadi were likewise no more than an attempt to boost morale. Sending armed Shiites into the Ramadi area of Anbar would make no sense, because its overwhelmingly Sunni population would line up behind fellow-Sunni Islamist State conquerors rather than help the Shiite militias to fight them.
Iran’s Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan, who arrived precipitately in Baghdad Monday, shortly after Ramadi’s fall, faces this difficulty. Our military sources expect him to focus on a desperate effort to deploy Shiite militias as an obstacle in ISIS’s path to Baghdad, now that the road is clear of defenders all the way from Ramadi.
In Amman, King Abdullah Sunday made a clean sweep of senior security officials, firing the Minister of Interior, the head of internal security (Muhabarat) and a number of high police officers. They were accused officially of using excessive violence to disperse demonstrations in the southern town of Maan.
The real reason for their dismissal, DEBKAfile’s counter-terror sources disclose, is the decline of these officials’ authority in the Maan district, in the face of the rising influence of extremist groups identified with Al Qaeda and ISIS, in particular.
Explore posts in the same categories: Arab nations, Baghdad, Combat troops, Foreign policy, Gulf states, Iraq, Iraqi military, Islamic State, Jordan, Kerry, Obama, Saudi Arabia, Syria, U.S. airstrikes, U.S. MilitaryTags: Arab nations, Baghdad, Combat troops, Foreign Policy, Gulf states, Iraq, Iraqi military, Islamic State, Jordan, Obama, Saudi Arabia, Syria, U.S. airstrikes, U.S. military
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May 18, 2015 at 9:25 PM
The babaric Islamic tusnami is building as is moves towards Israel.
It is written
May 19, 2015 at 1:28 PM
If the West wanted ISIS gone, it would be. Obama wants ISIS strong. And as I explain in Antichrist 2016-2019, evidence indicates that a revived Islamic Caliphate is Daniel’s Fourth Kingdom in the end times.
May 19, 2015 at 3:06 PM
Knock it off with this end times bull shit. It was written by men who lived in mud huts with vivid imaginations. None of it is real.
It is written!
May 19, 2015 at 4:07 PM
Should add, written by men in lived in mud huts THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO with vivid imaginations. It’s the 21st century for crying out loud. Time to GROW UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!
May 19, 2015 at 4:09 PM
Today’s issues require today’s solutions, not that of some mad zealot that lived two millennia ago. Unbelievable!!!!!!
May 19, 2015 at 4:11 PM
Somehow, in all this, I’m reminded of a grave marker I once saw in a museum. It read, “Here lies an atheist. All dressed up and nowhere to go.”
May 19, 2015 at 4:41 PM
Not an atheist at all L.S, been praying to the great maker all my life. I just do not pretend to know the great makers mind or require others to tell me how to communicate with it.
May 19, 2015 at 5:08 PM
“I was asked by a concerned church-goer: “Is your relationship with God okay?” and I answered “My relationship with God is far better than yours. You have to be in a certain place, with a certain group of people, pray at certain days of the week, read the Bible at certain times of the day; all in order to have a relationship with God. But I am with God from the moment I wake up, to the moment I fall asleep at night, I am with God wherever on this earth that I wander to, and whosoever I may be with! I may be sitting on the subway, and I am with God. I can assure you that I am closer to God than you are.”
― C. JoyBell C.
May 19, 2015 at 5:14 PM
😉