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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Deaths, injures caused among opposition factions over smuggling in Ras al-Ain
2022-03-23


TEL TAMR, Syria (North Press) – On Monday, infighting between the Turkish-backed opposition factions over a smuggling checkpoint in Sere Kaniye (Ras al-Ain) in northeast Syria, which is under the control of the Turkish forces and the affiliated opposition factions, led to deaths and injuries, including civilians.

“Members of al- Hamzah Division killed a civilian and wounded another at the Aziziyah checkpoint, west of the city of Sere Kaniye, for refusing to pay the bribe to the checkpoint members,” informed local sources told North Press.

The incident then was followed by a military tension among armed groups affiliated with Shohadaa Badr Brigade, which controls the western countryside of sere Kaniye.

According to informed sources, al- Aziziyah checkpoint is considered a checkpoint for smuggling and the imposition of royalties on the local population by the same faction.

On Monday, in fighting broke out between Shohadaa Badr Brigade members and al-Hamza Division members at the same checkpoint over smuggling.

A member of Al-Hamzah Division was shot dead in the infighting, the sources said.

On Tuesday, the city of Sere Kaniye witnessed a vigil by the residents to hand over the body of the killed and to expel Abu Hamid al-Harbi, the leader in al-Hamza Division for being the cause of the infighting.

The internal disputes are usually over sharing of levies, profits and routes used for people smuggling into Turkey and the imposition of royalties on people.

It is worth noting that the Turkish forces and opposition factions have controlled the city of Sere Kaniye and its countryside in addition to Tel-Abyad, northeast, since 2019 following an invasion that displaced about 300 thousand of the indigenous population, according to human rights reports.

In the same context, members of al-Hamza Division, the largest armed faction in the Sere Kaniye area, killed a member named Turki al-Baaj from the Sultan Murad Division, in the countryside of Sere Kaniye on March 20, a special source told North Press.

Reporting by Dilsoz Youssef

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Iraq
US Congress approves bill on suspension of financial aid to the Iran Militia in Iraq and Syria, known as IMIS
2020-08-02
[PUBLISH.TWITTER]
Iran Militia in Iraq and Syria IMIS
Related:
IMIS: 2020-07-30 ISIS claims responsibility for killing of top Iraqi commander
IMIS: 2020-07-27 Huge Explosions Rock Militia Base in South of Baghdad
IMIS: 2020-07-17 There are many more names on the IMIS assassins’ blacklist
Link


Iraq
US seeking to resurrect Daesh in Iraq: Political leader
2018-12-30
[PRESSTV] Leader of a major political party in Iraq has said that there have been clear intelligence evidences suggesting that the United States is trying to resurrect ISIS-led militancy in the Arab country after the Takfiri
...an adherent of takfir wal hijra, an offshoot of Salafism that regards everybody who doesn't agree with them as apostates who must be killed...
terrorist group was defeated in neighboring Syria.

Humam al-Hamoudi, who chairs the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council
Led by Sayyid Ammar al-Hakim, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI, formerly the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRII, pronounced Scarey)) is not nearly as supreme as it makes out to be. The al-Hakim family business is merely another one of political parties, this one Shiite and with its power base in the south of the country. The Iranian government sponsored the party's creation in 1982 during the Iran-Iraq war after the leading Iraqi Islamist group was weakened by a government crackdown. Designed as an umbrella organization to unite Iraqi Shi'a groups, the party supports Islamic government controlled by holy men. In post-Saddam Iraq ISCI has worked closely with other Shi'a organizations to provide social services and humanitarian aid. Though accused of receiving money and weapons from Iran, ISCI leaders maintain that the party is committed to democracy and peaceful cooperation. The Badr Brigade initially acted as ISCI's armed wing but later to split to form the independent Badr Organization., said on Saturday that Washington’s main strategy in Iraq has been to make the Arab country dependent on American military presence by keeping militancy alive in parts of the Iraqi territory.

Speaking to the Iranian television, Hamoudi said many ISIS snuffies fled to Syria after being defeated in Iraq over the past years. However,
some people cause happiness wherever they go; others whenever they go...
he said, the snuffies are mulling a comeback to Iraq with the help of the US after they lost most of their positions in Syria.
Link


Iraq
Shiite armed groups in Iraq decide to disband
2017-12-11
[ARABNEWS] A number of armed Shiite factions that fought ISIS alongside Iraqi government forces have voluntarily announced their dissolution and placed their fighters under the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, Iraqi officials and Shiite leaders told Arab News on Sunday.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi, commander-in-chief of the armed forces, announced on Saturday the liberation of all Iraqi territories and the end of the three-year war against ISIS, which seized almost a third of the territories in the west and north in summer 2014.

"At least four (armed) factions have voluntarily decided to disband their troops and gave the prime minister full authority to determine the fate of their fighters," a senior security Iraqi official told Arab News on condition of anonymity.

"The procedures for disbanding these forces and the implementation mechanisms have not yet been decided, but 90 percent of them are likely to be disbanded and the remainder will be appointed to be a part of the regular security services," the official said.

"No weapon will remain in the hands of anyone outside the control of the state. The decision to disarm the irregular armed factions will be issued in a few weeks and those who refuse to hand over their weapons will be considered outlaw," he added.

Some of these details have been confirmed to Arab News by Karim al-Nuri, a member of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) and a senior Badr Brigade leader; Aws al-Khafaji, the head of the Abu Fadhal al-Abbas armed faction; and Hisham al-Hashimi, a security expert and one of the national security advisers.

In a statement on Saturday, al-Khafaji said: "After the final and big victory against ISIS, we are putting all these troops (Abu Fadhal al-Abass troops) ‐ which are a part of the PMF ‐ fully under the command of the commander in chief of the armed forces."

Shiite armed factions have played a vital role in the fighting against ISIS. They had been fighting under the umbrella of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) which was established by Nuri al-Maliki, the former Iraqi prime minister, in June 2014, to cover the armed factions who volunteered to fight ISIS alongside the government. More than 120,000 is the number of fighters officially registered in the payroll of the PMF.

Saraya al-Salam, or the Battalions of Peace, the biggest Shiite armed faction linked to the powerful Shiite holy man Moqtada Tater al-Sadr
... the Iranian catspaw holy man who was 22 years old in 2003 and was nearing 40 in 2010. He spends most of his time in Iran, safely out of the line of fire, where he's learning to be an ayatollah...
; Kataib al-Imam Ali and the Battalions of Imam Ali, which is linked to the Shiite clergymen in Najaf, led by Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, are among these factions, officials said.

"To restrict the arms at the hand of the state and limit the unjustified militarization of the society, Sadr has called to legalize all the armed factions in Iraq, including the Popular Mobilization Forces," Safa’a al-Timimi, the front man of Saraya al-Salam, told Arab News.

"Of course we are included in this (Sadr’s) call," al-Timimi said.

"We have already begun discussions with the ministers of defense and interior weeks ago to put in place a mechanism to include a number of our fighters in their formations," he added.

Saraya al-Salam has 6,000 fighters who are formally registered within the PMF, and they have been deployed in northwestern Karbala, central Samarra, Balad and Ishaqi, al-Timimi said.

"Our call is clear and explicit. The weapons have to be exclusively in the hands of the government and no one but the disciplined fighters will be included within the regular security services," al-Timimi said.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Calls for disbanding Iraq's PMU, sign of new plot against Mideast: Iran official
2017-12-05
[PRESSTV] Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) Ali Shamkhani says calls for disbanding Iraq's Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) indicate a new plot aimed at bringing back insecurity to the Middle East.

The fact that a Western country's president echoes calls by the Israeli regime and emphasizes the disbanding of the volunteer pro-government forces, commonly known by their Arabic name as Hashd al-Shaabi, shows a new plot is being hatched to bring insecurity and terrorism back to the region, Shamkhani said in a meeting with the head of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council
Led by Sayyid Ammar al-Hakim, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI, formerly the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRII, pronounced Scarey)) is not nearly as supreme as it makes out to be. The al-Hakim family business is merely another one of political parties, this one Shiite and with its power base in the south of the country. The Iranian government sponsored the party's creation in 1982 during the Iran-Iraq war after the leading Iraqi Islamist group was weakened by a government crackdown. Designed as an umbrella organization to unite Iraqi Shi'a groups, the party supports Islamic government controlled by holy men. In post-Saddam Iraq ISCI has worked closely with other Shi'a organizations to provide social services and humanitarian aid. Though accused of receiving money and weapons from Iran, ISCI leaders maintain that the party is committed to democracy and peaceful cooperation. The Badr Brigade initially acted as ISCI's armed wing but later to split to form the independent Badr Organization.

and the first deputy speaker of the country's parliament, Sheikh Humam Hamoudi, in Tehran on Monday.

He added that wisdom of the Iraqi officials, particularly the politicians, would thwart the enemies' plots to undermine the country's solidarity and national security, saying, "Certainly, such plots will be foiled."

During a visit to Iraq on Saturday, French President Emmanuel Macron called for a "gradual demilitarization" and the "dismantlement" of the PMU fighters and all militias in Iraq. His call was widely received with outrage and anger by many in Iraq.

Ahmad al-Assadi, one of the PMU’s leaders, was quoted by AFP as saying that "any such discussion is rejected and we do not accept interference in Iraqi affairs."
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Bangladesh
Midnight raid catches ramp model turned militant commander
2017-09-22
[Dhaka Tribune] Imam Mehedi Hasan was tossed in the slammer
I ain't sayin' nuttin' widdout me mout'piece!
by a Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) team late Wednesday night for being associated with the banned bad boy group New JMB.

He was arrested from a house in South Banasree where they found two laptops, a mobile phone, a passport, and various bad boy pamphlets.

A BBA graduate from Darul Ihsan University, Mehedi had modelled for several years before joining New JMB in 2015. The 29-year-old was serving as the commander of ad-Dar-e-Kutni Brigade of New JMB when he was arrested.

Lt Col Tuhin Mohammad Masud, commanding officer of RAB 3, briefed the media about Mehedi’s past and his role in New JMB.

The RAB commander said New JMB had two operating squads ‐ Badr Brigade and ad-Dar-e-Kutni Brigade.

"The nationwide hunt for bandidos Death Eaters following the July 1 attack had greatly weakened Badr Brigade. Kutni Brigade tried to make up for the losses by bolstering their ranks with new recruits. Mehedi was in charge of financing, recruiting, organising migrations and accepting the swearing in of new recruits" Lt Col Tuhin said.

Mehedi is also reported to have organised the internal marriages within by the bad boy group.
Golly. A runway model and a matchmaker? The no doubt the man looks every inch the proper jihadi.
Lt Col Tuhin continued: "He would record the swearing in of new recruits and send the videos to their media channels for promotion and interested parties to appeal for donations."
Link


Iraq
Iraqi forces accused of mutilating ISIS dead
2016-11-16
[ARA News] Qayyarah – Militiamen, Iraqi Security Forces, and civilians mutilated and dragged the bodies of at least five dead fighters of the Islamic State (also known as ISIS) in the Iraqi town of Qayyarah on October 3, 2016, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Tuesday.

Anti-ISIS forces also executed at least one ISIS fighter after he surrendered.

“The Iraqi government should control its own forces and hold them accountable if it hopes to claim the moral upper hand in its fight against ISIS,” said Lama Fakih, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.

“The failure to hold commanders and abusers to account does not bode well for the looming battle inside Mosul. Mutilation of corpses is a war crime, as is killing captured combatants or civilians,” she said.

According to HRW, the violations were carried out by both Iraqi troops and Hashad al–Asha’r militia fighters from the Maraeed tribe, local to Qayyarah and a branch of al-Jabouri tribe–one of the largest Sunni Arab tribes in Iraq.

A Video published online showed how Iraqi forces encircled an ISIS fighter and shot him dead. Another video showed a group of Iraqi children dragging a dead ISIS fighter by a rope around his ankle. They kick and beat his body with a branch, and a man in military attire with a special forces badge on one shoulder kicks the head of the corpse several times.

Furthermore, a resident of the al-Hud village beheaded the corpse of an ISIS fighter, cut out his heart, and presented the heart to his mother because the dead ISIS fighter was the one who killed the man’s father and three of his uncles.

Human Rights Watch examined photos also taken on October 3, in Qayyarah, of what appeared to be four more corpses, one with various organs outside his body and covered in blood, another stripped naked, with children kicking it. Another was strung up by his leg, at the entrance of the Qayyarah football field, which had been reduced to rubble by airstrikes.

“The Iraqi authorities should prevent armed groups with records of serious abuses from taking part in planned military operations in the city of Mosul,” Human Rights Watch said. “This includes Hashad al–Asha`ri militias and members of the [Shia majority] PMF [Popular Mobilization Units] responsible for serious rights abuses who have not been held to account.”

According to HRW, the Shia paramilitary groups such as the Badr Brigade, Hezbollah Brigade, and Imam Ali brigades operate in Qayyarah.

“The government should not stand idly by while fighters commit atrocities in its name,” Fakih said. “Political, security, and judicial officials should work together transparently to establish the truth about any abuses that take place in the course of this battle.”
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Iraq
HRW urges Iraqi PM to exclude 'abusive' militias from Mosul operation
2016-10-10
[RUDAW.NET] Human Rights Watch
... During the fiscal year ended June 30, 2011, HRW received a pledge from the Foundation to Promote Open Society, of which George Soros is Chairman, for general support totaling $100,000,000. The grant is being paid in installments of $10,000,000 over ten years.Through June 30, 2013, HRW had received $30,000,000 towards the fulfillment of the pledge....
(HRW) sent a letter to Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on Thursday urging him to prevent any gangs responsible for human rights
...which are often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless...
violations to participate in the upcoming battle to retake djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
from Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
(ISIS) myrmidons.

The letter strongly opposed the inclusion of several Popular Mobilization Forces (PMFs or Hashd al-Shaabi) Shiite militias in the Mosul operation. Previous abuses carried out by the Hashd al-Shaabi against Sunni Arab civilians in the recapture of Fallujah from ISIS in June were documented by HRW -- abuses which included torture, summary executions and the disappearance of civilians, including children, and the mutilation of corpses.

These abuses, and the recruitment of child soldiers by groups in Hashd, led HRW to urge Abadi to "prevent armed forces under his command or control who have been implicated in laws of war violations, including the Badr Brigades, the Hezbollah Brigades (Kata'ib Hezbollah), and other groups with the Population Mobilization Forces, from participating in planned operations to retake Mosul."

HRW also pointed out that an estimated 1.2 million civilians are estimated to be in Mosul ahead of this upcoming operation.

"Civilians in Mosul have suffered under ISIS rule for more than two years and will need support if the city is retaken, but risk reprisals instead," said the deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa, Lama Fakih in an HRW statement. "The last thing the authorities should allow is for abusive forces to carry out Dire Revenge attacks in an atmosphere of impunity."
Link


Iraq
Fierce fighting continues in battle-scarred Baiji
2015-08-24
[RUDAW.NET] A top Shiite militia commander announced Saturday his forces had faced "fierce resistance" from Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
in the oil-refinery city of Baiji on the main road to the ISIS stronghold of djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
.

Hadi Ameri, the leader of the Badr Brigade, said gunnies had concentrated efforts to retake the city from Iraqi joint forces as festivities intensified during the weekend in the town and in surrounding villages.

"They attacked Iraqi forces with 28 boom-mobiles in one day alone which made us retreat from some districts," Ameri told a gathering in Baghdad on Saturday, adding the retreat was temporarily.

The city's closed oil refinery, the biggest in the country, and a large power plant have given the city strategic importance by the gunnies reportedly planned to use the facilities.

Ameri also pointed out that Baiji's strategic location between Mosul and Anbar province in the south is "invaluable" for the gunnies who want to preserve control of both areas.

"If they retake Baiji, recapturing Mosul for Iraqi forces will be even more difficult than it is now," Ameri said.

At least 12 security forces were killed on Wednesday when boom-mobiles targeted Iraqi positions in Baiji, officials said.

Officials announced last week a joint force consisting of the Iraqi Army, Shiite militias anti-ISIS Sunni rustics will take part in the much-anticipated offensive to retake Mosul, which fell to ISIS in June last year.

The fall of Mosul effectively changed the nature of the war, with the gunnies gaining access to financial and army resources in Iraq's second-largest city.

Officials have said the joint Iraqi force will coordinate with Kurdish Peshmerga troops as well as a special US military and consultative force based in Rabia near the Syrian border.
Link


Iraq
Baghdad celebrates Quds Day with photos of Iranian ayatollahs
2015-07-12
[RUDAW.NET] Baghdad celebrated Quds Day with hundreds of people coming out to the streets holding photos of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Hosseini Khamenei and of deceased Iranian Islamic Theocratic Republic founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

"The photos of Khomeini and Khamenei that were raised during the Al-Quds Day parade on Friday are used for religious purposes, because those two people are considered religious people and not politicians," Hassan Khallati, the spokesperson of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council
Led by Sayyid Ammar al-Hakim, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI, formerly the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRII, pronounced Scarey)) is not nearly as supreme as it makes out to be. The al-Hakim family business is merely another one of political parties, this one Shiite and with its power base in the south of the country. The Iranian government sponsored the party's creation in 1982 during the Iran-Iraq war after the leading Iraqi Islamist group was weakened by a government crackdown. Designed as an umbrella organization to unite Iraqi Shi'a groups, the party supports Islamic government controlled by holy men. In post-Saddam Iraq ISCI has worked closely with other Shi'a organizations to provide social services and humanitarian aid. Though accused of receiving money and weapons from Iran, ISCI leaders maintain that the party is committed to democracy and peaceful cooperation. The Badr Brigade initially acted as ISCI's armed wing but later to split to form the independent Badr Organization., told Rudaw. "Raising their photos on this day is normal."

"Those who mix this issue with politics aim to create sectarian division and sedition among the Iraqi people," he said.

However,
if you can't say something nice about a person some juicy gossip will go well...
not all were pleased with Iranian leaders being featured so prominently in Iraq.

"This is a violation of Iraqi illusory sovereignty, because those two individuals are the supreme leaders in their country," Iraqi MP Khaled Al-Mafraji, the leader of the Coalition of National Forces, told Rudaw.

"Why did they not raise the photos of Iraqi religious leaders instead of Khomeini and Kamenei?" he asked.
Link


Iraq
A wave of murder and looting erupts in Tikrit
2015-04-05
Arabs being victorious...
On April 1, the city of Tikrit was liberated from the Lion of Islam group Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
. The Shi'ite-led central government and allied militias, after a month-long battle, had expelled the barbarous Sunni radicals. Then, some of the liberators took Dire Revenge.
An Arab tradition, demanded to maintain Honor and Dignity™.
Near the charred, bullet-scarred government headquarters, two federal coppers flanked a suspected Islamic State fighter. Urged on by a furious mob, the two officers took out knives and repeatedly stabbed the man in the neck and slit his throat. The killing was witnessed by two Rooters correspondents.
Somehow my sympathy meter remains on zero for Islamic State turbans.
The incident is now under investigation, interior ministry front man Brigadier General Saad Maan told Rooters.
I really fail to get riled up at the thought. If you're fighting somebody who doesn't merely ignore, but consciously flouts rules of war dating back five hundred years or so then they're not due any mercy, are they?
Since its recapture two days ago, the Sunni city of Tikrit has been the scene of violence and looting.
When the IS took the city didn't they kill everybody who disagreed with them and steal their property?
In addition to the killing of the Lion of Islam combatant, Rooters correspondents also saw a convoy of Shi'ite paramilitary fighters -- the government's partners in liberating the city -- drag a corpse through the streets behind their car.
The sort of thing real soldiers expect from undisciplined militias.
Local officials said the mayhem continues. Two security officers, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
, said on Friday that dozens of homes had been torched in the city. They added that they had witnessed the looting of stores by Shi'ite militiamen.
Sounds like a job for the Bloody Provost.
Later Friday, Ahmed al-Kraim, head of the Salahuddin Provincial Council, told Rooters that mobs had burned down "hundreds of houses" and looted shops over the past two days. Government security forces, he said, were afraid to confront the mobs. Kraim said he left the city late Friday afternoon because the situation was spinning out of control. "Our city was burnt in front of our eyes. We can't control what is going on," Kraim said.
In a city that welcomed the enemy with open arms, where partisans killed those who opposed the enemy even in theory, there's really no surprise. Probably things would have gone better had the inhabitants turned on the turbans and strung them up from the lamp posts. A "Welcome Government Troops" banner across Main Street would have helped, but there wasn't one. Now the inhabitants have to cope with the Deep Blue Sea.
Those reports could not be immediately confirmed.
... but they're probably accurate.
It wasn't supposed to be this way.
Was that a voice from Cloud Cuckooland?
Islamic State, an Al Qaeda offshoot that arose from the chaos in Iraq and Syria, slaughtered thousands and seized much of northern and central Iraq last year.
I said that.
The government offensive was meant not only to dislodge the group but also to transcend the fundamental divide in fractured Iraq: the enmity between the now-ruling Shi'ite majority and the country's formerly dominant Sunni minority.
Nice in theory, unlikely in practice. Had the city surrendered, maybe. Instead it had to be taken by storm.
Officials close to Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, a moderate Shi'ite, had described the Tikrit campaign as a chance to demonstrate his government's independence from one source of its power: Iraqi Shi'ite militias backed by Shi'ite Iran and advised by Iranian military officers. Sunnis deeply mistrust and fear these paramilitaries, accusing them of summary executions and vandalism. But Abadi has had to rely on the Shi'ite militias on the battlefield, as Iraq's regular military deserted en masse last summer in the Islamic State onslaught.
A lot more ferocious on the parade ground than on the battlefield, are they? Had Maliki not stiffed the Sawha maybe things would have gone a little better. But we obviously wasted a lot of time training the Iraqi army.
The militia groups spearheaded the start of the Tikrit assault in early March.
An armored shock brigade would have worked better, but that would have required disciplined troops led by competent officers, which ain't really an Arab thing.
But after two weeks of fighting, Abadi enforced a pause. Asserting his power over the Shi'ite militias, he called in U.S. Arclight airstrikes.
I saw an article yesterday where the militias were dismissing the effectiveness of the airstrikes. One guy said he'd seen U.S. aircraft dropping supplies to the IS positions.
Now, the looting and violence in Tikrit threaten to tarnish Abadi's victory. It risks signaling to Sunni Iraqis that the central government is weak and not trustworthy enough to recapture other territory held by Islamic State, including the much larger city of djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
. Tikrit, hometown of the late dictator Saddam Hussein, is in the Sunni heartland of Iraq.
Too bad they had to rely on a militia, which in this case is basically an armed mob. Had the govt left it to the Peshmerga it probably would have gone better, but that's politix, not strategy.
At stake is much more than future votes: Islamic State's rapid conquests in 2014 were made possible by support from Sunni tribal forces and ordinary citizens. They were convinced that the government -- under Abadi's predecessor, Nuri al-Maliki -- viewed their community as terrorists. If Sunnis dislike what they see in Tikrit, they may not back the government's efforts against Islamic State.
Abadi's approach should be reconciliation now. The Sunnis have the example of what being conquered by militias will get them. If they string up the turbans and let the govt in all that happens is a change in city hall.

DEFENDING LIVES AND PROPERTY
On Friday, the government sought to assure all sides that it will enforce order. Abadi issued a statement calling on the security forces to arrest anyone breaking the law.
Good idea. The Bloody Provost?
Asked to comment on the scenes witnessed by Rooters, his front man Rafid Jaboori said he would not address individual incidents but said: "People's lives and property are priorities, whether in this operation or in the overall military effort to liberate the rest of Iraq."
If there's reconciliation it has to be on the basis of nationality, not religion.
Sunni politicians who visited Tikrit complained that events have spun out of control since the security forces and militias retook the city.
We've already discussed that.
Parliamentarian Mutashar al-Samarrai credited the government with orchestrating a smooth entrance into Tikrit. But he said that some Shi'ite paramilitary factions had exploited the situation. "I believe this happened on purpose to disrupt the government's achievement in Tikrit," Samarrai said. "This is a struggle between the (paramilitaries) and the government for control."
They creating a new problem while solving the immediate (bigger) problem. Since the immediate problem's existential and the Mooksters and the Badr Brigades aren't quite, they have to go with what they have. That doesn't mean the militias have to be given free rein.
Neighborhoods entered by the Iraqi forces and Shi'ite paramilitaries have been burnt, including parts of neighboring Dour and Auja, the birthplace of Saddam Hussein.
The heart (urp!) bleeds.
Security forces blame Islamic State for rigging houses with explosives, while Sunnis suspect the Shi'ite militias and the army and police of deliberately torching their homes.
Probably both statements are true. Certainly the IS left enough booby traps behind in Kobane. The places being deliberately burnt might be according to who's inhabiting them and how they conducted themselves while under occupation.
Looting has also been a problem. Shi'ite paramilitary fighters in pickup trucks raced through the city carrying goods that appeared to have been looted from homes and government offices. The vehicles were crammed with refrigerators, air conditioners, computer printers, and furniture. A young militia fighter rode on a red bicycle, gleefully shouting: "I always dreamed of having a bike like this as a kid."
Discipline. Gallows. Pour encourager les autres.
Brigadier General Maan, the main front man for the government forces, said police were stopping vehicles that appeared to have stolen items. "We are doing our best to impose the law."

IRAN'S FINGERPRINTS
Passions were running high among the Shi'ite militia groups before the assault. Islamic State beheaded people and carried out other atrocities in the lands it conquered. In particular, the militias wanted Dire Revenge for Islamic State's killing in June of hundreds of Iraqi soldiers captured from Camp Speicher, a base near Tikrit. It was an event that came to symbolize the Sunni jihadists' barbarism.
That's kinda the situation, isn't it? The enemy's barbarism justifies counter-barbarism. Hundreds of murdered comrades leads to probably only a few dozen slaughtered murderers since the actual butchers are probably congratulating each other on their escape to slice again another day.
Despite Baghdad's efforts to rein in the paramilitaries, the fingerprints of the Shi'ite militias -- and of Iran itself -- were all over the operation's final hours.
They were before the final offensive,
On Wednesday, as Tikrit fell, holy warriors were racing to stencil their names on houses in order to take credit for the victory.
Meanwhile the guys who's done the actual fighting were probably looking for a hot meal, some sleep, and a hooker if they were lucky.
An Iranian fighter, with a Kalashnikov rifle slung over his shoulder and a picture of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei pinned to his chest, bragging about Tehran's role in the campaign: "I am proud to participate in the battle to liberate Tikrit," said the man, who called himself Sheik Dawood. "Iran and Iraq are one state now."
That's the idea in Terrorhan. But that'll be the next fight after this one.
On the edge of Tikrit in the hours after the city's fall, a Shi'ite paramilitary group drove in a convoy past several police cars. The holy warriors had strung the corpse of a suspected Islamic State fighter from the back of a white Toyota pickup truck. The cable dragging the man snapped, and the vehicle stopped. The men got out to retie the bullet-riddled corpse. As they fastened the cable tighter to the body, a song about their victory over Islamic State played on the truck's stereo. Then they sped off, the corpse kicking up a cloud of dust.
Eventually they just kinda wear down on the asphalt and you're left with nothing but a pair of feet.
The coppers standing nearby did nothing.
... assuming there was anything to do.
On Wednesday afternoon, Rooters saw two suspected Islamic State detainees -- identified as an Egyptian and a Sudanese national -- in a room in a government building. The Egyptian and the Sudanese were then taken outside by police intelligence. Word spread that the two suspected Islamic State prisoners were being escorted out. Federal coppers, who had lost an officer named Colonel Imad the previous day in a bombing, flocked around the detainees.
"Question One: Why aren't you guyz in Sudan and Egypt, respectively?"
The interior ministry front man, Brigadier Maan, said the Egyptian had stabbed an Iraqi police officer, which explains the anger against him. Rooters couldn't verify that claim. The two prisoners were put in the back of a pickup truck. As the vehicle tried to leave, the crowd blocked it.
"We're waiting for answers, turban boyz!"
The federal coppers started shouting to the intelligence officers: Hand over the men. The intelligence officers tried to shield the prisoners. One pulled a sidearm as the federal police began swinging their fists. The mob was screaming: "We want to avenge our Lieutenant Colonel."
"Well, y'see... These things happen..."
Shi'ite paramilitary men swarmed the area. The street filled with more than 20 federal police. Gunfire erupted. Bullets ricocheted. At least one of the Shi'ite fighters was maimed, and began bleeding from the leg.
"We come fer yer prisoners, Sharif!"
"Back off, boyz! Nobody takes our prisoners!"

The pickup truck tried to back up. People in the mob grabbed one of the prisoners from the truck, the Egyptian, and pulled him out.
"Nobody takes our remaining prisoner!"
The Egyptian sat silently at the feet of two big coppers in their twenties. His eyes filled with fear. He was surrounded by a few dozen people, a mix of federal police and Shi'ite militiamen.
"That's how it feels, al-Misery!"
"He is Daesh, and we should take Dire Revenge for Colonel Imad," the two federal coppers yelled, using a derogatory Arabic term for Islamic State.
It's not "derogatory." It's an abbreviation. There's a difference between "hated" and "derogatory." Usually.
One of the coppers held a black-handled knife with a four-to-five-inch blade. The other gripped a folding knife, with a three-inch blade and a brown handle. They waved their knives in the air, to cheers from the crowd, and chanted: "We will slaughter him. We will take Dire Revenge for Colonel Imad. We will slaughter him."
"Orf wif 'is 'ead!"
The coppers laid the Egyptian's head over the curb. Then one of the police pushed the other out of the way and he swung his whole body down, landing the knife into the Egyptian's neck. The cop lifted the knife and thrust the blade in the Egyptian's neck a second time. Blood gushed out, staining the boots of the cheering onlookers.
Life's tough. It ain't all ridin' through the streets and grinning with your black flag flying.
The killer started to saw through the neck, but it was slow-going. He lifted the blade again and slammed it into the Egyptian's neck another four times. Then he sawed back and forth.

"BRING ME A CABLE"
Their fellow coppers chanted: "We took Dire Revenge for Colonel Imad."
By chopping the head off one guy?
The killer lifted himself up the street pole next to the dying man so he could address his comrades: "Colonel Imad was a brave man. Colonel Imad didn't deserve to die at the hands of dirty Daesh. This is a message to Colonel Imad's family don't be sad, raise your heads."
"He's still dead as a rock, but now so's a piece of Egyptian scum!"
Then he shouted: "Let's tie the body to the pole so everyone can see. Bring a cable. Bring a cable."
"Fly the body like a flag!"
His friend with the folding knife kept trying to stab the Egyptian, with no success. He cried out: "I need a sharp knife. I want to behead this dirty Daesh." Finally the men found a cable, fastened it to the dead man's feet and dangled him from the pole.
And this is the cops we're discussing. Imagine how well-behaved everybody else is.
One policeman grew upset at the spectacle and shouted: "There are dozens of media here. This is not the suitable time. Why do you want to embarrass us?"
It's only embarrassing if it's done in public. Right.
The mob ignored him and continued trying to hoist the body. White bone stuck out from his slashed neck, his head flopped from side to side, and the blood continued to gush forth.
Link


Iraq
Hakim, Karim discuss situation in Kirkuk
2015-01-17
[Iraq News] The head of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council
Led by Sayyid Ammar al-Hakim, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI, formerly the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRI, pronounced Scarey)) is not nearly as supreme as it touts itself. The al-Hakim family business is merely another political party, this one Shiite and with its power base in the south of the country. The Iranian government sponsored the party's creation in 1982 during the Iran-Iraq war after the leading Iraqi Islamist group was weakened by a government crackdown. Designed as an umbrella organization to unite Iraqi Shi'a groups, the party supports Islamic government controlled by holy men. In post-Saddam Iraq ISCI has worked closely with other Shi'a organizations to provide social services and humanitarian aid. Though accused of receiving money and weapons from Iran, ISCI leaders maintain that the party is committed to democracy and peaceful cooperation. The Badr Brigade initially acted as ISCI's armed wing but later to split to form the independent Badr Organization.,
Ammar al-Hakim, discussed with the Governor of Kirkuk,
... a thick stew of Arabs, Turkmen, Kurds, and probably Antarcticans, all of them mutually hostile most of the time...
Najim al-Din Karim, the situation in Kirkuk province.

A statement by the SIIC received by IraqiNews.com cited Hakim received Karim at his office in Baghdad where they discussed the situation in Kirkuk province and the situation of the displaced citizens.
Link



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