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Al-Qaeda rebels take Tikrit, force 500,000 to flee Mosul
Hotair ^ | 06/11/2014 | Ed Morrissey

Posted on 06/11/2014 11:53:57 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Tikrit may be remembered more for being Saddam Hussein’s home town. Today it fell to radical Sunni extremists linked to al-Qaeda as western Iraq spins out of Baghdad’s control. ISIS also tightened its grip on Mosul and took aim at the Iraqi oil infrastructure, hoping to establish its own transnational state with territory it controls in Syria:

Iraqi security officials say al-Qaida-inspired militants have seized the northern city of Tikrit.

The two officials in Baghdad told The Associated Press on Wednesday that Saddam Hussein’s hometown was under the control of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, whose fighters this week took control of Mosul, the country’s second largest city.

The BBC reports that 500,000 refugees have fled Mosul to escape ISIS, and that the terrorists have seized diplomatic personnel from Turkey:

As many as 500,000 people have been forced to flee the Iraqi city of Mosul after hundreds of Islamist militants took control of it, theInternational Organization for Migration (IOM) says.

Troops were among those fleeing as the jihadists from the ISIS group took the city and much of Nineveh province.

The head of the Turkish mission in Mosul and 24 consulate officials have been seized, local sources say.

PM Nouri Maliki has asked parliament to declare a state of emergency.

The US said the development showed ISIS was a threat to the entire region.

Yes, but what is the US prepared to do about it? Not much more than cheerlead from the sidelines, according to McClatchy:

U.S. officials were quick to express solidarity with the Iraqi government of Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki, who was elected to his post originally during the American occupation and whose administration the U.S. has backed with weapons shipments and military training. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the United States was working closely with the Maliki government, and Brett McGurk, the State Department’s top diplomat for Iraq and Iran, pointed out via Twitter that U.S. and Iraqi soldiers “have suffered and bled together, and we will help in time of crisis.”

But the nature of that help was perhaps best encapsulated in the response of Pentagon spokesman Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby that made it clear that the U.S. was unlikely to become directly involved in Iraq’s battle with ISIS. “This is for the Iraqi security forces and the Iraqi government to deal with,” Kirby said.

In comments Tuesday, U.S. officials left no room for direct involvement in the conflict there, where ISIS, analysts said, had demonstrated that it could successfully and simultaneously control parts of two major Iraqi cities, while battling multiple forces inside Syria, including the Lebanese militant organization Hezbollah and al Qaida’s Nusra Front. …

The performance of the Iraqi military at Mosul was another source of embarrassment for American officials, who had spent billions of dollars training and equipping the Iraqi military, only to have its soldiers shed their uniforms and flee before the ISIS attackers.

As I wrote earlier, there isn’t much we can do now. Despite the predictable return of al-Qaeda and ISIS to western Iraq, the Obama administration failed to reach an agreement with the Maliki government for a residual force to support Iraq’s security services in that eventuality. We have no footprint on the ground any longer in Iraq, and other than long-range bombing missions that would do damage to the Iraqis as well as ISIS thanks to the latter’s integration into urban areas, no immediate way to impact the fight.

Our materiel on the ground is worse than useless now, thanks to the Iraqi army’s flight:

With the fall of Mosul on Tuesday, Iraq’s al Qaeda offshoot has not only seized the country’s second-largest city, it appears it also has come into possession of the heavy weapons and vehicles the U.S. military had provided Iraq’s military to fight them.

That’s terrible news for America’s few allies left in Iraq as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Sham (ISIS) morph from terrorist menace to a military force capable of over-running an army the U.S. military trained for nearly a decade. It also calls into question the American government’s decision to withdraw the last of its forces from Iraq in 2011. Three years later that withdrawal now appears premature. …

General Najim al-Jabouri, a former mayor of Tel Afar, which is a little more than 31 miles from Mosul, told The Daily Beast the bases seized by ISIS this week would provide the group with even more heavy weapons than they currently control. “The Iraqi army left helicopters, humvees, cargo planes and other heavy machine guns, along with body armor and uniforms,” the general, who is now a scholar at the National Defense University, said. He said he was able to learn about the equipment from soldiers and other politicians in and around Mosul with whom he keeps in touch.

General Najim is not alone in this assessment. Jack Keane, a retired four-star Army general who was a key adviser to General David Petraeus during the counter-insurgency campaign in Iraq in 2007 and 2008 known as the surge, said ISIS has now established itself as a formidable military force.

Speaking of premature, the troops we trained to replace us ended up demoralized when confronted in the field — and are now deserting in large numbers:

After months of grinding conflict against a resurgent militant movement, the Iraqi Army is having its power blunted by a rise in desertions, turning the tide of the war and fragmenting an institution, trained and funded by the United States, that some hoped would provide Iraqis a common sense of citizenship.

In a nation tearing apart along sectarian lines, Sunnis and Shiites have served together in the military. But the defections of Sunni soldiers threatened to deepen the growing perception among Iraq’s Sunnis that the military serves as an instrument of Shiite power, even while Shiites soldiers have also fled.

The toll of the desertions came into sharp relief on Tuesday, as soldiers and their commanders abandoned bases in Mosul, all but ceding Iraq’s second-largest city to extremist fighters belonging to the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.

The fleeing troops left weapons, vehicles and even their uniforms behind, as militants took over at least five army installations and the city’s airport. In a desperate bid to stem the losses, the military was reduced to bombing its own bases to avoid surrendering more weapons to the enemy. American officials who had asserted that the $14 billion that the United States had spent on the Iraqi security forces would prepare them to safeguard the country after American troops left were forced to ponder images from Mosul of militants parading around captured Humvees.

The Wall Street Journal puts the blame on the Obama administration for its decision to completely abandon Iraq:

Since President Obama likes to describe everything he inherited from his predecessor as a “mess,” it’s worth remembering that when President Bush left office Iraq was largely at peace. Civilian casualties fell from an estimated 31,400 in 2006 to 4,700 in 2009. U.S. military casualties were negligible. Then CIA Director Michael Hayden said, with good reason, that “al Qaeda is on the verge of a strategic defeat in Iraq.”

Fast forward through five years of the Administration’s indifference, and Iraq is close to exceeding the kind of chaos that engulfed it before the U.S. surge. The city of Fallujah, taken from insurgents by the Marines at a cost of 95 dead and nearly 600 wounded in November 2004, fell again to al Qaeda in January. The Iraqi government has not been able to reclaim the entire city—just 40 miles from Baghdad. More than 1,000 Iraqi civilians were killed in May alone, according to the Iraq Body Count web site. …

Its promise of a “diplomatic surge” in Iraq to follow the military surge of the preceding years never materialized as the U.S. washed its hands of the country. Mr. Obama’s offer of a couple thousand troops beyond 2011 was so low that Mr. Maliki didn’t think it was worth the domestic criticism it would engender. An American President more mindful of U.S. interests would have made Mr. Maliki an offer he couldn’t refuse.

Mr. Maliki had to plead for emergency military equipment when he visited the U.S. last year, and the U.S. has mostly slow-rolled the delivery of arms. Now that stocks of U.S. military supplies have fallen into ISIS’s hands in Mosul, the Administration’s instinct will be to adopt an ultra-cautious approach to further arms deliveries. Mr. Maliki is likely to depend even more on Iran for aid, increasing the spread of the Sunni-Shiite regional conflict.

The Administration’s policy of strategic neglect toward Iraq has created a situation where al Qaeda effectively controls territories stretching for hundreds of miles through Anbar Province and into Syria. It will likely become worse for Iraq as the Assad regime consolidates its gains in Syria and gives ISIS an incentive to seek its gains further east. It will also have consequences for the territorial integrity of Iraq, as the Kurds consider independence for their already autonomous and relatively prosperous region.

We gave away all that we won in Iraq, and now the same terrorist network we have explicitly named as our enemy since 9/11 is coming close to creating its own state in the Middle East, complete with standing army and American arms. We may pretend to be able to wash our hands of this outcome, but sooner or later those oil resources will generate billions of dollars that will flood terrorist accounts and fuel attacks against Israel and the US. Right now, we don’t appear to want to do much about it, even to the extent we still can.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: alqaeda; iraq; mosul; tikrit
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To: caww

Wow has Hillary 2016 sent them a fundraising mailer yet?


41 posted on 06/11/2014 1:50:14 PM PDT by nascarnation (Toxic Baraq Syndrome: hopefully infecting a Dem candidate near you)
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To: dfwgator

Agree with your post, I still like GWB but I always felt he was after Saddam because of his plot to blow up GHWB in Kuwait.


42 posted on 06/11/2014 1:53:33 PM PDT by nascarnation (Toxic Baraq Syndrome: hopefully infecting a Dem candidate near you)
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To: caww
Islamic terrorists seize Saddam Hussein’s hometown after 500,000 flee unrest in Iraq’s second-largest city, Mosul...Here we go again!!!!


43 posted on 06/11/2014 1:53:45 PM PDT by caww
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To: dfwgator

I agree....that’s why SiSi in Egypt needed to be.

Islam will never bring peace for very long...the fighters love the taste of death.

BTW It can also become an addiction....these fighters get all jacked up on drugs so the combination of that and the adrenaline rush they have when they behead people...these folks are as close to being utterly lost to evil.


44 posted on 06/11/2014 1:57:34 PM PDT by caww
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To: nascarnation

No doubt it’s on the way..lololol

You know I really don’t care if they take each others lives anymore. Sounds heartless perhaps but I really have seen enough since 9/11 and learned enough of these people that war is in their blood one way or another and they will never really do what they need to do to have peace as Islam is diametrically opposed to that.

So I expect the East to be at war....


45 posted on 06/11/2014 2:10:26 PM PDT by caww
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To: nascarnation
Here's the guy with the 10 million dollar bounty on his head who is leading this charge throughout Iraq...guy is worse than Benladin it's been reported, so not surprised his followers are beheading people without blinking an eye...that's how he works.


46 posted on 06/11/2014 2:15:41 PM PDT by caww
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To: caww

I read this book about Afghanistan

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/103088.The_Man_Who_Would_Be_King

And it convinced me that these regions will never be anything but perpetual warmongers.


47 posted on 06/11/2014 2:17:37 PM PDT by nascarnation (Toxic Baraq Syndrome: hopefully infecting a Dem candidate near you)
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To: SeekAndFind

Obama Hussein intentionally flubbed the status of forces. He hates America and the dupes elected him twice.


48 posted on 06/11/2014 3:11:53 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: caww

ISIL is composed of Sunnis, so Iran cannot be behind them. More like Turkey in perhaps some spoils-of-oil agreement for profit-sharing of the Kirkuk fields and Baiji refinery proceeds.

If the ISIL offensive moves into Shia territory Iran may ultimately get involved if for no other reason than to give cover for their utilizing Basra port and oil facilities to export their own crude, avoiding sanctions. They’re already doing that so they’ll likely just take over the southern fields and run it under the guise of the Iraqi government.

Maliki should be able to bring enough Shia into the fight to make them fight for Baghdad. The reason the IA has folded so far is that they deploy Sunni troops into Sunni areas and Shia into Shia territory.


49 posted on 06/11/2014 3:43:04 PM PDT by Justa
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To: caww

Where’s a A10 or AC130 when you need one?


50 posted on 06/11/2014 3:46:36 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: SeekAndFind
As many as 500,000 people have been forced to flee the Iraqi city of Mosul...

Dang!

Who is left behind to RUN the place?

51 posted on 06/11/2014 4:12:37 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: SeekAndFind
Who is left behind to RUN the place?


In 1987,
Mosul's population was counted as 664,221 people;
the 2002 population estimate was 1,740,000,
and by 2008 was estimated to be 1,800,000.

Wiki

52 posted on 06/11/2014 4:16:07 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: A message

#12: OBAMA is not incompetent per se. He has succeeded tremendously in subverting America and freedom around the world.

As he once said, “Yes I did”!

Now the question is, “Who is he working for” or “Who is controlling him”? - The Moslem fundamentalists or the communists, or a combination of both.


53 posted on 06/11/2014 4:39:21 PM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: Cap Huff

The entire conflict in the Middle East is a power struggle between the Sunnis backed by Saudi Arabia and the Shiites backed by Iran.

In Libya Iran is winning as the Saudi backed insurgents are losing, in Iraq Iran is losing as Maliki is a Shiite.

Guess which side the US supports? Yes the Sunnis.

One of the greatest mistakes of western policy was to cosy up to the Saudis and maintain animosity with Iran.

Iran is a much more civilised place than Saudi Arabia, far more tolerant and much more developed. Iran used to be the US’ best friend in the Muslim world. The people of Iran are far better disposed to the Americans than the Saudis who loathe the west and all it stands for.

If Nixon could reach out to China, if Reagan could make peace with Russia, there should have been some way that the US could have reconciled with Iran in the past twenty-five years or so.

We’ve backed the wrong horse with Saudi Arabia, the nation that gave us Osama Bin Laden and 9/11.


54 posted on 06/11/2014 6:20:14 PM PDT by PotatoHeadMick
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To: PotatoHeadMick
The entire conflict in the Middle East is a power struggle between the Sunnis backed by Saudi Arabia and the Shiites backed by Iran.

That may be true; on the surface.

Underneath, other things are going on..



Genesis 16:12
He will be a wild donkey of a man; his hand will be against everyone and everyone's hand against him, and he will live in hostility toward all his brothers."

55 posted on 06/12/2014 4:46:54 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
When Obama said, "You didn't make this.", America cringed.

And now, on TV sets across America, it is getting tossed back into bhis face!

https://www.google.com/search?q=chrysler+we+made+this+ad&sourceid=ie7&rls=com.microsoft:en-US:IE-Address&ie=&oe=&rlz=1I7ADRA_enUS475&gws_rd=ssl





56 posted on 06/12/2014 4:51:13 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: 88keys
"Not to mention the squandering of all that our soldiers worked and sacrificed for over there."

--------------------------------->

Heartbreaking.

57 posted on 06/12/2014 12:44:01 PM PDT by hummingbird (Mark Levin and Article 5. Period.)
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To: jimbug
"It seems to me that one of the devices we should include in weaponry given to other nations is a simple ‘kill switch’. If the weapons fall into the wrong hands or are going to be used against us, we hit a button and the technology gets fried."

---------------------------------->

Great idea, jimbug!

Patent it quickly and you'll make a fortune with US military contracts.

Don't forget me after you make your first million!

58 posted on 06/12/2014 12:48:28 PM PDT by hummingbird (Mark Levin and Article 5. Period.)
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