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ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Black Operations (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-9.html) +--- Thread: ISIS: Remaining and Expanding (/thread-12687.html) |
ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Magda Hassan - 26-06-2014 The US were training ISIS to do their thing in Syria. Acknowledged since 2012. I just heard that Syria has joined the fight against ISIS and they will be bombing them. I wonder how the US will spin this? : :
ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Albert Doyle - 26-06-2014 This is a way to sick Al Qaeda on the arabs to keep them tied up. Eventually I imagine when the US wants to make a move they'll back some form of this movement when it takes down another targted leader or nation and then blame internal local conflicts. ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - David Guyatt - 13-07-2014 ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - David Guyatt - 17-07-2014 Golly gosh. Well I never. A mainstream newspaper letting the cat out of the bag. Quote:Syria conflict exclusive: Western aid going to help territory held by Isis militants ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Magda Hassan - 04-08-2014 ISIS Captures Iraq's Biggest Dam: Baghdad Water Supply In JeopardySubmitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2014 15:00 -0400 With the world's attention focused on the ongoing death and destruction in Gaza most have forgotten that just two months ago a vicious Al-Qaeda spinoff, after taking over the north of Iraq and a third of Syria's territory including its oil production facilities, proclaimed the creation of an Islamic State caliphate a few hundred kilometers north of Baghdad. The reason why the ISIS story fell off the front pages is that while the jihadists were consolidating their power in the caliphate region, it was believed that they have no chance of advancing onto Baghdad and the energy-rich Iraq regions south of Baghdad (and thus have little impact on the price of Brent). And yet there was one major "weakest link" - recall that a month ago we reported that "Baghdad May Lose Its Drinking Water As ISIS Approaches Dam", an outcome which would put Iraq's capital, and its 8 million residents, at the mercy of ISIS. According to Al Arabia it is this "weakest link" that is now in play after ISIS took over Iraq's biggest dam unopposed by Kurdish fighters, who also lost three towns and an oilfield on Sunday to the Sunni militant group, witnesses said cited by Reuters. ![]() Iraqi security officials said Wednesday that fighters for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria were advancing on the Haditha Dam, the second-largest in Iraq. ![]() VOA confirms: Islamic State fighters seized control of Iraq's biggest dam, an oilfield and two more towns on Sunday after inflicting their first major defeat on Kurdish forces since sweeping through the region in June Local officials said militants with the extremist group Islamic State took control of the towns of Zumar and Sinjar near the city of Mosul on Sunday, waging fierce clashes with Kurdish forces. The French news agency AFP quoted a United Nations spokesman saying 200,000 people have fled Sinjar and said there are grave concerns for their safety. Meanwhile, ISIS also seized two small towns in northern Iraq after driving out Kurdish security forces, officials and residents said, according to the Associated Press. The fresh gains by the Sunni extremist militants have forced dozens of residents to flee from the religiously mixed towns of Zumar and Sinjar, near the militant-held city of Mosul, to the northern self-ruled Kurdish region. Earlier on Sunday, ISIS militants have successfully captured an oil field close to the Iraqi town of Zumar after fighting with Kurdish forces who had control of the area. ISIS, which had a lightning advance through northern Iraq in June, warned residents in nearby villages along the border with Syria to leave their homes, suggesting they were planning an assault, witnesses said. ISIS fighters killed 16 Kurdish troops in attacks in northern Iraq, while 30 pro-government forces died battling the jihadists on other frontlines, officials said Saturday. Zumar is a small Kurdish-majority outpost northwest of Mosul, which used to be under federal government control but was taken over by the Peshmerga in June. In other attacks on Saturday, five would-be volunteer fighters were killed and 16 wounded in a suicide car bomb attack on a Shiite militia recruitment center in the town of Balad, north of Baghdad, police said. In equally intense overnight fighting on the main front south of Baghdad, at least 23 pro-government forces were killed by relentless mortar shelling of their positions in Jurf al-Sakhr. ISIS militants began attacking the town late Friday, killing 11 soldiers and 12 members of the Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia, an officer and army medic said. Another seven soldiers were wounded during a subsequent government operation against jihadist fighters in Jurf al-Sakhr, Al-Hamya and Latifiya, the sources said, claiming 37 IS fighters were killed. Using the western city of Fallujah as a rear base, jihadists have repeatedly attacked Jurf al-Sakhr, where pro-government forces are keen to prevent a foray that would expose the nearby holy Shiite city of Karbala and further encircle Baghdad by cutting the main road to the south. Finally, here is a visual summary of all the most recent clashes as ISIS approaches Baghdad, courtesy of the ISW:
ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Lauren Johnson - 14-08-2014 ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Lauren Johnson - 14-08-2014 by BAR executive editor Glen Ford "The problem is, the Pentagon's proxies are evaporating." The rise of the Islamic Caliphate in Iraq and Syria has flipped the script on U.S. proxy war policies in the region, and may ultimately bring down the royal oil states whose survival is indispensable to American hegemony in the world. At the foot soldier level, the imperial proxy strategy has already collapsed with the disintegration of the (always ephemeral) "moderate" armed opposition to the Syrian government and the defection to the Caliphate of formerly U.S.-financed Sunni fighters in Iraq. The $500 million President Obama has requested for Syria has been rendered moot by the Caliphate's stunning political and military victories; no amount of money can create an army out of phantoms. The most active Syrian insurgents have flocked to the self-proclaimed Islamic State formerly known as ISIS, whose leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, served notice on Washington: "You should know, you defender of the cross, that getting others to fight on your behalf will not do for you in Syria as it will not do for you in Iraq." The U.S. corporate media were more interested in the rest of al-Baghdadi's message, in which he warned Washington that "soon enough, you will be in direct confrontation forced to do so, God willing. And the sons of Islam have prepared themselves for this day. So wait, and we will be waiting, too." For most self-obsessed Americans, this was received as a threat to attack "the Homeland." However, downtown Manhattan is not on the Caliphate leader's map. Al-Baghdadi meant that the American strategy of financing Muslim muppets to fight imperialism's wars is kaput, and that the Pentagon will soon have to do its own dirty work, dressed in "Crusader" uniform. Accordingly, the U.S. is sending additional hundreds of "non-combat" troops to northern Iraq as if Marines and Special Forces are anything but combat soldiers to join the 1,000 or so American military and "security" personnel already there, by official count. Contrary to what many Americans on the Left believe, U.S. planners are not itching to send large American units to Arab lands (the Kurds are not Arabs), since their presence is counter-productive in the extreme. The problem is, the Pentagon's proxies are evaporating, in flight, or in the case of Arab Iraq growing even more dependent on Iran and (who would have predicted it?) Russia, which is assisting in reconstituting the Iraqi air force. "Downtown Manhattan is not on the Caliphate leader's map." Some leftists in the U.S. even imagine that Washington has achieved some kind of victory with the imminent departure of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the veteran American stooge. But, Maliki's ouster was also backed by Iran, Iraq's Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husayni al-Sistani (who mobilized millions demanding an end to the U.S. occupation), Muqtada al-Sadr (whose militia fought two wars against the occupation), and even much of Maliki's own Dawa Party. Only the Kurds remain in Washington's (and Israel's) pocket and this matter of convenience, too, may pass as the neighborhood changes all around Kurdistan. By that, I mean the larger neighborhood, encompassing Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the Emirates, Turkey and Jordan. The Caliphate's al-Baghdadi had a message for them, his erstwhile financiers, back in late June: "The legality of all emirates, groups, states and organizations becomes null by the expansion of the caliph's authority and the arrival of its troops to their areas." Thousands of the Islamic State's fighters and, just as importantly, its fundamentalist Wahhabist worldview are indigenous to the Arabian peninsula. That's why journalist Patrick Cockburn, in his new book, excerpted inCounterpunch, concluded that, "For America, Britain and the Western powers, the rise of Isis and the Caliphate is the ultimate disaster...." The Caliphate's victories resonate far beyond the Sunni Arab population of Iraq and Syria. Saudi Arabia's political legitimacy is based on its role as protector of the holy sites of Mecca and Medina and the Old Time Religion. But its royal family, like the rest of the hereditary potentates of the region, is debauched and infinitely corrupted by wealth. The Saudis (and, in no less lethal form, the Qataris) export jihad against Shia and secularists while hoping to control it at home. The Caliphate has taken the ideology to its logical and ghastly conclusion, and dares to challenge the legitimacy of its former funders, staunch allies of the "Crusader." Cockburn puts it this way: "The resurgence of al-Qa'ida-type groups is not a threat confined to Syria, Iraq, and their near neighbors. What is happening in these countries, combined with the increasing dominance of intolerant and exclusive Wahhabite beliefs within the worldwide Sunni community, means that all 1.6 billion Muslims, almost a quarter of the world's people, will be increasingly affected. Furthermore, it seems unlikely that non-Muslim populations, including many in the West, will be untouched by the conflict. Today's resurgent jihadism, which has shifted the political terrain in Iraq and Syria, is already having far-reaching effects on global politics with dire consequences for us all." "All 1.6 billion Muslims, almost a quarter of the world's people, will be increasingly affected." The consequences are, of course, most dire to those Muslims (including but not limited to Shia) labeled heretics by the takfiris of the expanding Caliphate, and for all religious minorities and secular forces within their reach. But, the Salafist chickens are coming back home to roost on the peninsula which is why the Saudis are, at this late date, frantically attempting to put the jihadist genie back in the bottle. As Cockburn writes, "Fearful of what they've helped create, the Saudis are now veering in the other direction, arresting jihadi volunteers rather than turning a blind eye as they go to Syria and Iraq, but it may be too late." It is certainly too late for the U.S. to salvage a critical element of its foreign policy in the Muslim world: war by proxy. It has been a long and bloody ride since the late Seventies, when the CIA, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan invented the global jihadist network almost from scratch, to give the Soviets a black eye in Afghanistan. The Islamists provided the foot soldiers for America's own imperial jihad in Muslim lands. In 2011, it was jihadists to the rescue after popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt threw the imperial pack into panic. The U.S. and its NATO allies mounted a monstrous assault on Libya a kind of Shock and Awe providing air cover for a jihadist army largely financed by Arab oil royals. When regime change was accomplished, Libyan fighters joined their Salafist comrades in the rampage in Syria, already underway. Today, with Libya in utter chaos, and Assad's government still standing in Syria, the Caliphate has declared independence from its western and royal godmothers as we at BAR predicted three years ago. Imperialism has let loose a plague upon the world, that will sooner, rather than later consume the kings, emirs and sultans the U.S. depends on to keep the empire's oil safe. The pace of imperial decline just got quicker. ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Danny Jarman - 22-08-2014 If ISIS were the real deal they'd be attacking the Saudi's and Israel Another CIA mob ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Lauren Johnson - 22-08-2014 Danny Jarman Wrote:If ISIS were the real deal they'd be attacking the Saudi's and Israel Remember when we were supposed to believe that the Bin Laden videos were real when at least one that I can recall was an obvious fake? Now we have the James Foley beheading video, which is critical evidence of how dangerous ISIS is. Jesus. Where have we heard this before. Here is the video. Something is really wrong about it. Scott Creighton thinks it's faked. For sure, thinks they're all faked. This time he's got something. Read what he says about the fake knife. Damn. He's right. ISIS: Remaining and Expanding - Tracy Riddle - 22-08-2014 The video seems fake to me. The guy in red doesn't even look like Foley, who is more slender, darker and nice-looking. The guy in the video looks like an ugly Navy Seal type. And how do you make someone spout all kinds of propaganda they don't believe in, when they know they're going to be killed in a few seconds anyway? One commenter points out: "The production value seems pretty high. A multiple camera shoot. Good sound editing. the props at the end. it's all pretty high. the only problem is, the creation of a wound on an exposed skin surface is very difficult to produce realistically especially in natural lighting. that's why they didn't even try it." |