Archive for the ‘Iraq war’ category

“Why has the U.N. waited so long?” 21-year-old Iraqi Christian woman asks UNHRC session

September 8, 2014

 

UN Watch testimony delivered by Maryam Wahida, a 21-year-old Iraqi Christian woman, to the UN Human Rights Council special session on ISIS, Sept. 1, 2014                       

Thank you, Mr. President.

My name is Maryam Wahida, and I am a Christian born and raised in Iraq, where most of my family remains. I am privileged to speak on behalf of UN Watch.

I have come here today, with my family, to bear witness before the world about the horrific crimes perpetrated by the Islamic State against my relatives, against the Christians, Yazidis and other minorities in Iraq.

For many weeks now, the terrorists have invaded our villages, destroyed ancient churches, and burned historical archives dating back many centuries.

Mr. President, I welcome today’s meeting. But given the extreme life-and-death urgency, we must ask: Why has the UN waited so long?

The victims of Iraq want to know: What could be more urgent than stopping the terrorists of the Islamic State from persecuting, attacking, enslaving, raping and beheading our men, women and children?

Mr. President,

Those who survived were forced to flee their homes. As displaced persons, they now live in horrible conditions, without basic hygiene and sanitation. They sleep in the streets, on the floor, inside and outside of churches. Children and the elderly suffer the most, and there are many illnesses that quickly spread among the victims.

I speak on the telephone to my relatives in Iraq. I learned about how my cousin Nawar, a 25-year-old pharmacist in Erbil, started collecting money to buy medical supplies for the sick. He managed to buy a wheelchair for one refugee, a 90-year-old woman, who was very happy to receive the help.

I wish to thank all of the governments that have helped so far. But the international community must do more—whatever it can—to help the victims, such as by creating a safe region for displaced persons within Iraq, and to facilitate asylum and migration.

Mr. President, I hope that I can call my relatives in Iraq tonight with news of strong and effective action from the UN, to save the victims who are in such desperate need of the world’s help.

Thank you, Mr. President.

 

Islamic State: What do young British Muslims think about the Caliphate? BBC News

August 16, 2014

BBC: Why Iran has finally let go of Maliki

August 13, 2014

Why Iran has finally let go of Maliki

File photo of Nouri Maliki and Ayatollah Ali KhameneiPM Nouri Maliki was seen as being close to Iran during his time in office

Less than two months ago, Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, spelled out his position on Iraq.

Iran was against US intervention, he said, and the world should respect the results of Iraq’s April election which saw victory for Nouri Maliki’s alliance.

But the ayatollah has been overtaken by events.

“Start Quote

When Maliki started losing and alienating Kurds and Sunnis, Iran didn’t like it”

Ghassan AttiyahAnalyst

The past week has seen the US launch air strikes against Islamic State (IS) militants in northern Iraq, while in Baghdad Mr Maliki has failed in his bid to return to the prime minister’s office.

Although this all goes contrary to Iran’s stated wishes, officials in Tehran have said almost nothing.

“Iran’s silence shows they are happy with what’s happening in Iraq,” says Ghassan Attiyah, president of the Baghdad-based Iraqi Foundation for Development and Democracy.

Mr Attiyah says that Iraq’s new Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi has strong ties to Iran and for this reason the Iranians have not tried to block his nomination.

“They were not happy with Maliki from the beginning but they accepted him because the Shia bloc supported him in parliament,” he says.

“But when he started losing and alienating Kurds and Sunnis, Iran didn’t like it.”

Weapon handlers carry an air to air missile on the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. BushThe US has carried out air strikes in Iraq – but there has been no angry respnse from Iran

Change in tone

Iran has also confounded expectations that it would issue an angry condemnation of the US air strikes this week on IS positions in northern Iraq.

In fact, in a striking change of tone, an advisor to Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Monday that Iran and the US should work together to counter IS in Iraq.

Observers say the realisation that the militants are now just 25km (16 miles) from Iran’s western border may well have influenced thinking in Tehran.

It is clear that the threat posed by the Islamic State is another factor in Iran’s decision not to actively oppose the appointment of Mr Abadi as Iraq’s new prime minister.

Unlike US President Barack Obama, Iran’s president has yet to congratulate Mr Abadi on his appointment.

But in a phone call on Monday to congratulate another newly elected leader in the region, Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said a government must be formed in Iraq “as soon as possible”, and that Iran would support “the person who is approved by the majority of Iraqi lawmakers”.

It was the first clear indication that Iran was not intending to stand firmly behind Mr Maliki as it has done for its other regional protege, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Supporters of Iraqi Hezbollah brigades Groups supported by Iran hold considerable sway in Iraqi politics and society

Time’s up

There was more bad news for Mr Maliki on Tuesday when the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, Ali Shamkhani, also voiced support for the move in Baghdad to choose a new prime minister.

“Start Quote

Maliki won’t leave easily”

Mohsen MilaniDirector of the Center for Strategic and Diplomatic Studies

Mr Shamkhani’s call for all Iraqi groups and coalitions to keep united and work together to protect national unity seemed like a coded message to Mr Maliki that his time was running out.

The hardline Javan newspaper, affiliated to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, adopted a similar tone.

In an editorial, it called on him to show “selfless compliance” to the Iraqi president’s decision.

The final nail in the coffin was Ayatollah Khamenei lending his support to Mr Abadi’s appointment on Wednesday.

“I hope the designation of the new prime minister in Iraq will untie the knot and lead to the establishment of a new government and teach a good lesson to those who aim for sedition in Iraq,” Ayatollah Khamenei said in a speech to foreign ministry officials and diplomats.

“Maliki won’t leave easily,” says Mohsen Milani, the Iranian-born director of the Center for Strategic and Diplomatic Studies in Washington.

“But if both Iran and the US support the new government, he has to go.”

Mr Maliki said Mr Abadi’s nomination was a “violation of the constitution” but for Iran what is important at the moment is to see a unified Shia bloc in Iraq and a new government formed without further delay.

And if Mr Maliki cannot deliver either of these things, then as far as Iran is concerned, his time is up.

Iraqi president to push out al-Maliki, names new P.M.

August 11, 2014

We’re not going to let ISIL create some caliphate: Obama

August 9, 2014

We’re not going to let ISIL create some caliphate: Obama

Obama on the world – US president talks about Iraq and Putin

President Obama’s hair is definitely greyer these days, and no doubt trying to manage in a world of increasing disorder accounts for at least half of those gray hairs. But having had a chance to spend an hour touring the horizon with him in the Map Room late Friday afternoon, it’s clear that the president has a take on the world, born of many lessons over the last six years, and he has feisty answers for all his foreign policy critics.

Obama made clear that he is only going to involve America more deeply in places like West Asia to the extent that the different communities there agree to an inclusive politics of no victor/no vanquished. The United States is not going to be the air force of Iraqi Shiites or any other faction. Despite Western sanctions, he cautioned, President of“could invade” at any time, and, if he does, “trying to find our way back to a cooperative functioning relationship with Russia during the remainder of my term will be much more difficult.” Intervening in Libya to prevent a massacre was the right thing to do, Obama argued, but doing it without sufficient follow-up on the ground to manage Libya’s transition to more democratic politics is probably his biggest foreign policy regret.

I began by asking whether if former Secretary of State Dean Acheson was “present at the creation” of the post-World War II order, as he once wrote, did Obama feel present at the “disintegration?”

“First of all, I think you can’t generalise across the globe because there are a bunch of places where good news keeps coming.” Look at Asia, he said, countries like Indonesia, and many countries in Latin America, like Chile. “But I do believe,” he added, “that what we’re seeing in the Middle East and parts of North Africa is an order that dates back to World War I starting to buckle.”

But wouldn’t things be better had we armed the secular Syrian rebels early or kept US troops in Iraq? The fact is, said the president, in a residual US troop presence would never have been needed had the Shiite majority there not “squandered an opportunity” to share power with Sunnis and Kurds. “Had the Shia majority seized the opportunity to reach out to the Sunnis and the Kurds in a more effective way, (and not) passed legislation like de-Baathification,” no outside troops would have been necessary. Absent their will to do that, our troops sooner or later would have been caught in the crossfire, he argued.

With “respect to Syria”, said the president, the notion that arming the rebels would have made a difference has “always been a fantasy. This idea that we could provide some light arms or even more sophisticated arms to what was essentially an opposition made up of former doctors, farmers, pharmacists and so forth, and that they were going to be able to battle not only a well-armed state but also a well-armed state backed by Russia, backed by Iran, a battle-hardened Hezbollah, that was never in the cards.”

Even now, the president said, the administration has difficulty finding, training and arming a sufficient cadre of secular Syrian rebels: “There’s not as much capacity as you would hope.”

The “broader point we need to stay focused on,” he added, “is what we have is a disaffected Sunni minority in the case of Iraq, a majority in the case of Syria, stretching from essentially Baghdad to Damascus. … Unless we can give them a formula that speaks to the aspirations of that population, we are inevitably going to have problems. … Unfortunately, there was a period of time where the Shia majority in Iraq didn’t fully understand that. They’re starting to understand it now. Unfortunately, we still have (the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant), which has, I think, very little appeal to ordinary Sunnis.” But “they’re filling a vacuum, and the question for us has to be not simply how we counteract them militarily but how are we going to speak to a Sunni majority in that area … that, right now, is detached from the global economy.”

The only states doing well, like Tunisia, I’ve argued, have done so because their factions adopted the principle of no victor, no vanquished. Once they did, they didn’t need outside help.

“We cannot do for them what they are unwilling to do for themselves,” said the president of the factions in Iraq. “Our military is so capable, that if we put everything we have into it, we can keep a lid on a problem for a time. But for a society to function long term, the people themselves have to make decisions about how they are going to live together, how they are going to accommodate each other’s interests, how they are going to compromise. When it comes to things like corruption, the people and their leaders have to hold themselves accountable for changing those cultures…. We can help them and partner with them every step of the way. But we can’t do it for them.”

So, I asked, explain your decision to use military force to protect the refugees from ISIL (which is also known as ISIS) and Kurdistan, which is an island of real decency in Iraq?

“When you have a unique circumstance in which genocide is threatened, and a country is willing to have us in there, you have a strong international consensus that these people need to be protected and we have a capacity to do so, then we have an obligation to do so,” said the president. But given the island of decency the Kurds have built, we also have to ask, he added, not just “how do we push back on ISIL, but also how do we preserve the space for the best impulses inside of Iraq, that very much is on my mind, that has been on my mind throughout.

“I do think the Kurds used that time that was given by our troop sacrifices in Iraq,” Obama added. “They used that time well, and the Kurdish region is functional the way we would like to see. It is tolerant of other sects and other religions in a way that we would like to see elsewhere. So we do think it’s important to make sure that that space is protected, but, more broadly, what I’ve indicated is that I don’t want to be in the business of being the Iraqi air force. I don’t want to get in the business for that matter of being the Kurdish air force, in the absence of a commitment of the people on the ground to get their act together and do what’s necessary politically to start protecting themselves and to push back against ISIL.”

The reason, the president added, “that we did not just start taking a bunch of airstrikes all across Iraq as soon as ISIL came in was because that would have taken the pressure off of (Prime Minister Nuri Kamal) al-Maliki.” That only would have encouraged, he said, Maliki and other Shiites to think: ” ‘We don’t actually have to make compromises. We don’t have to make any decisions. We don’t have to go through the difficult process of figuring out what we’ve done wrong in the past. All we have to do is let the Americans bail us out again. And we can go about business as usual.'”

The president said that what he is telling every faction in Iraq is: “We will be your partners, but we are not going to do it for you. We’re not sending a bunch of US troops back on the ground to keep a lid on things. You’re going to have to show us that you are willing and ready to try and maintain a unified Iraqi government that is based on compromise. That you are willing to continue to build a nonsectarian, functional security force that is answerable to a civilian government. … We do have a strategic interest in pushing back ISIL. We’re not going to let them create some caliphate through Syria and Iraq, but we can only do that if we know that we’ve got partners on the ground who are capable of filling the void. So if we’re going to reach out to Sunni tribes, if we’re going to reach out to local governors and leaders, they’ve got to have some sense that they’re fighting for something.” Otherwise, Obama said, “We can run (ISIL) off for a certain period of time, but as soon as our planes are gone, they’re coming right back in.”

Clearly, a lot of the president’s attitudes on Iraq grow out the turmoil unleashed in Libya by Nato’s decision to topple Col Muammar el-Qaddafi, but not organise any sufficient international follow-on assistance on the ground to help them build institutions. Whether it is getting back into Iraq or newly into Syria, the question that Obama keeps coming back to is: Do I have the partners – local and/or international – to make any improvements we engineer self- sustaining?

“I’ll give you an example of a lesson I had to learn that still has ramifications to this day,” said Obama. “And that is our participation in the coalition that overthrew Qaddafi in Libya. I absolutely believed that it was the right thing to do. … Had we not intervened, it’s likely that Libya would be Syria. … And so there would be more death, more disruption, more destruction. But what is also true is that I think we [and] our European partners underestimated the need to come in full force if you’re going to do this.

Then it’s the day after Qaddafi is gone, when everybody is feeling good and everybody is holding up posters saying, ‘Thank you, America.’ At that moment, there has to be a much more aggressive effort to rebuild societies that didn’t have any civic traditions. … So that’s a lesson that I now apply every time I ask the question, ‘Should we intervene, militarily? Do we have an answer (for) the day after?'”


©2014 The New York Times News Service

Christian Holocaust in Iraq

August 8, 2014

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

Kerry: Iraq faces ‘existential threat’ from ISIS

June 23, 2014

via Kerry: Iraq faces ‘existential threat’ from ISIS – Al Arabiya News.

By Staff writer | Al Arabiya News
Monday, 23 June 2014

Kerry: Iraq faces ‘existential threat’ from ISIS

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (C) greets the crew as he boards a plane at Jordan’s Queen Alia International Airport in Amman, headed to Iraq, on June 23, 2014. (AFP) 

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned on Monday that the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) poses an existential threat to Iraq, after the group overrun swathes of territory north of Baghdad.

“It is a moment of decision for Iraq’s leaders,” Kerry told journalists. “Iraq faces an existential threat and Iraq’s leaders have to meet that threat.”

He vowed that the United States would provide “intense” support to Iraq to help it battle a militant offensive.

“The support will be intense, sustained, and if Iraq’s leaders take the steps needed to bring the country together it will be effective,” Kerry added.

ISIS militants on Monday seized a border crossing between Iraq and Syria and the security forces that had been guarding it headed south to join troops at another crossing with Jordan, a colonel and a captain in the border guards said, according to AFP.

Meanwhile, the strategic Shiite-majority north Iraq town of Tal Afar and its airport is also reported to be in the hands of the militants after days of heavy fighting, a local official and witnesses said.

“The town of Tal Afar and the airport… are completely under the control of the militants,” the official said on condition of anonymity.

Witnesses said security forces had departed the town, and confirmed that militants were in control.

Security forces are still fighting in the Tal Afar area, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s security spokesman Lieutenant General Qassem Atta said on television.

But he added: “Even if we withdrew from Tal Afar or any other area, this does not mean that it is a defeat.”

During his televised announcement, Atta also said that “hundreds” of Iraqi soldiers have been killed by Sunni Arab militants in a major offensive that has overrun vast areas of the country.

Tal Afar, which is located along a strategic corridor to Syria, had been the largest town in the northern province of Nineveh not to fall to militants.
Stock markets

In another development, global stock markets mostly fell amid concerns about turmoil in Iraq.

Investors were watching with unease the escalating violence in Iraq, where militants over the weekend captured a chunk of new territory in the country’s west.

Some worry that the violence could further destabilize the region and possibly affect the flow of energy exports.
Last Update: Monday, 23 June 2014 KSA 17:41 – GMT 14:41

Isis captures more Iraqi towns and border crossings

June 23, 2014

Isis captures more Iraqi towns and border crossings
Sunni militants build on gains by taking checkpoints on frontiers with Jordan and Syria, as well as four more towns

Martin Chulov in Baghdad and Rory Carroll in Los Angeles
The Guardian, Sunday 22 June 2014 19.24 BST

via Isis captures more Iraqi towns and border crossings | World news | The Guardian.

 

Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said he was opposed to any US intervention in the crisis. Photograph: Khamenein offical website/EPA
 

Jihadist fighters in Iraq seized three border crossings into Syria and Jordan and four nearby towns over the weekend, giving the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) control over much of the country’s western frontier and directly threatening the country’s main power supply.

Isis can now add large swaths of the Iraqi border to a 300km stretch of land it already controls along the Euphrates river, from Mosul in the north to Saddam Hussein’s home town, Tikrit, which now gives the group a launching pad for potential attacks on strategic sites, including the lifeblood of Iraq’s electricity generation, the Haditha dam. The gains also bring the crisis in Iraq to the doorstep of Jordan, a key ally of the United States.

The latest Isis offensive comes as Iraq’s polarised political blocs face a week of intense lobbying to form an inclusive government that could unite the fracturing country.

The US secretary of state, John Kerry, is due in Baghdad on Monday to meet Iraqi lawmakers who had been bitterly divided before the jihadist surge, but have recently been reaching out to the US and Iran with increasing desperation.

The latest Isis offensive in western Anbar province has seen the group take four towns in recent days. Iraqi officials said the militants took over the Turaibil crossing with Jordan and the Walid crossing with Syria after government forces there pulled out. Al-Qaim, a restive town on the Syrian border, fell a day earlier.

The capture of the crossings follows the fall on Friday and Saturday of the towns of Rawah, Anah and Rutba. They are all in the Sunni-dominated Anbar province, where the militants have since January controlled the city of Falluja and parts of the provincial capital, Ramadi.

Rutba is on the main highway from Baghdad to the two border crossings and its capture has in effect cut the Iraqi capital’s main land route to Jordan. It is an artery for passengers and goods, though it has been infrequently used in recent months because of deteriorating security.

 

Northern Iraq and neighbouring states. Guardian graphics
 

Iraq’s armed forces are outgunned and ill-prepared to deal with Isis, which has rapidly gathered momentum as it has surged across eastern Syria and back into Iraq, where the earliest incarnation of the group was born a decade ago.

In Baghdad, the enmity between the political factions before the Isis attack meant no consensus about a new government was likely to emerge for some time. Iraqi leaders now increasingly believe that Barack Obama is making US help conditional on their first finding a political solution that empowers disenfranchised groups, especially the country’s Sunnis.

Iran, which had eclipsed the US as Iraq’s main power broker in recent years, on Sunday warned Washington against sending fighter jets into the region. The country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Iraq needed no foreign intervention. Iran is heavily invested in the defence of Baghdad, with a prominent Iranian general, Qassem Suleimani, in the capital to coordinate the city’s defences.

Obama warned in an interview on Sunday that Isis could spread conflict to neighbouring states and pose a “medium- and long-term threat” to the US. “We’re going to have to be vigilant generally,” he said. “Right now the problem with Isis is the fact that they’re destabilising the country. That could spill over into some of our allies like Jordan.

“But I think it’s important for us to recognise that Isis is just one of a number of organisations that we have to stay focused on,” he said, highlighting al-Qaida in Yemen and Boko Haram in west Africa among others.

The president denied US inaction in Syria and Iraq had allowed the crisis to escalate. “What we can’t do is think that we’re just going to play whack-a-mole and send US troops occupying various countries wherever these organisations pop up. We’re going to have to have a more focused, more targeted strategy and we’re going to have to partner and train local law enforcement and military to do their jobs as well.”

Last week Obama said he would dispatch 300 special forces to help train Iraq’s army, but said they would not have a direct combat role.

The increasingly grim news from Iraq fuelled fresh recriminations in Washington on Sunday, with Republicans turning on the White House and each other.

Senator Rand Paul, who has resisted Republican calls for more intervention, said the US should steer clear of Syria and Iraq. “It’s now a jihadist wonderland in Iraq precisely because we got overinvolved, not because we had too little involvement,” he told CNN. Why should Americans fight in Iraq if the Iraqi army was unwilling to do so, he said?

Paul, who may seek the party’s presidential nomination in 2016, did not rule out helping Shia forces, but said the Sunni extremists advancing on Baghdad posed no immediate threat to the US. “I don’t believe Isis is in the middle of a fight right now, thinking, ‘Hmm, we should send intercontinental missiles to America?'”

Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat chairwoman of the senate intelligence committee, defended Obama’s “thoughtful” handling of the crisis, but admitted the intelligence community failed to anticipate the Islamic extremists’ breakthroughs.

“You either have to have the technical means up in the sky or in other places, or you have to have assets – people who will give you human intelligence,” she told CNN. “This is a different culture. It’s very difficult to pierce. The piercing intelligence-wise in terms of humans has been very difficult all along.”

Iraq’s existence as a state was imperilled, Feinstein went on. “Candidly, I don’t know what the US contingency plan is for a complete takeover of Syria and Iraq,” she said. “I do know what we’re on the foot of is a major Sunni-Shiite war.”
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