International-UN-NGOs |
Iraq submits UN complaint over Israeli violation of airspace to attack Iran |
2024-10-29 |
Impotent whining by the impotent. [Rudaw] The Iraqi government on Monday announced it has submitted a letter of protest to the UN Security Council over Israel's "flagrant violation" of Iraq's illusory sovereignty by using its airspace to attack Iran ...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence. The word Iranis a cognate form of Aryan.The abbreviation IRGCis the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA).The term Supreme Guideis a the modern version form of either Duceor Führeror maybe both. They hate two days prior. "The Iraqi government affirms its firm commitment to Iraq’s illusory sovereignty, independence, and sanctity of its lands, and is working at various levels to confront these aggressions, and stressed that it will not allow the use of Iraqi airspace or lands to attack other countries, especially neighboring ones that have respect and common interests with Iraq," government spokesperson Basem al-Awadi said in a statement. Iraqi Shiite militia groups and politicians are voicing anger after Tehran accused Washington of allowing Israel to use Iraqi airspace to attack the country. On Saturday, the Iranian army said that Israel used US-provided airspace in Iraq to attack Iran. Iraq has in turn submitted a protest letter to the UN "which included condemnation of the flagrant violation committed by the Zionist entity by its aggressor aircraft violating Iraqi airspace and illusory sovereignty," according to Awadi. Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudan ...a Moslem country located in the Horn of Africa. It is noted for its affinity for rule by ex- or current generals, its holy men, and for the oppression of the native Afro population by its Arab conquerors. South Sudan, populated mostly by the natives, split off from Sudan proper, which left North and South Darfur to be oppressed by the guys with turbans... i has also directed the foreign ministry to present Iraq’s stance to Washington, Awadi added. Four Iranian soldiers were killed in the attack which Israel said was in response to Tehran’s attacks on Israel. Iran has directly attacked Israel twice. The first time was in April when Iran fired hundreds of missiles and drones in retaliation for a deadly strike on its embassy that Tehran blamed on Israel. The second time was on October 1 in retaliation for Israel’s killing of Hezbollah leader His Eminence Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah ...The late, lamented satrap of the Medes and the Persians in Leb...> , Hamas ![]() leader Ismail Haniyeh ...became Prime Minister of Gaza after the legislative elections of 2006 which Hamas won. President Mahmoud Abbas dismissed Haniyeh from office on 14 June 2007 at the height of the Fatah-Hamas festivities, but Haniyeh did not acknowledge the decree and continues as the PM of Gazoo while Abbas maintains a separate PM in the West Bank... , and an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commander. On Sunday, prominent Iraqi Shiite politician Hadi al-Amiri said the US will be held "fully responsible" for violating Iraq’s airspace, accusing Washington of "giving Israel everything it needs to carry out attacks in the region." "The need has become more urgent than ever to end the American military presence in Iraq in all its forms," Amiri stressed. US forces are located in several bases around Iraq at the invitation of Baghdad, as part of the global coalition to combat the Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... (ISIS). The mission is scheduled to wrap up in September 2025. Last month, the US and Iraq announced that they had struck a deal to end the military mission of the anti-ISIS global coalition within a year. American troops will continue to maintain a military presence in Iraq until 2026 to support the coalition mission in Syria, which will end in two years. On Sunday, pro-Tehran Iraqi militia group Kataib Hezbollah said that the US must face consequences for misusing Iraqi airspace. |
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Terror Networks |
Iran's proxies target Israel: Here's what to know about them |
2024-04-14 |
[Jpost] Iranian pro-government media said in the early hours of April 14 that it had attacked Israel on four fronts. This included attacks by Iran itself using drones and missiles, as well as threats from Iranian-backed groups in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen. Iran has spread its proxies throughout the region. These groups pose an increasing threat to Israel and Israel’s partners and allies. It’s important to understand who these groups are and what their capabilities may be. HEZBOLLAH Hezbollah is the largest and oldest of the Iranian partner and proxy groups in the region. Founded in the 1980s, it has played an increasingly influential role in Lebanon, essentially controlling who is elected president and controlling parts of the economy. Hezbollah has stockpiled more than 150,000 rockets over the last thirty years. Some of these are short-range rockets that threaten northern Galilee. Other Hezbollah rockets are long-range and can threaten all of Israel, almost to Eilat. In addition, Hezbollah increasingly has precision-guided munitions, meaning it can target strategic infrastructure with precision. In addition, Hezbollah is now believed to have 2,000 drones, which it has increasingly used against Israel. Hezbollah also has anti-tank missiles and thousands of fighters. Some of its fighters are part of its more elite “Radwan” force. Hezbollah has suffered casualties in its attacks on Israel since October 8. Around 250 of its members have been killed. This is a setback for the group. It has also carried out around 3,100 attacks on Israel. THE HOUTHIS The Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen have been increasingly a threat since 2015. Originally a small rebel movement, they burst on the scene in 2015 when they took over a swath of Yemen. They are based in the mountains around Sana’a, but they also threatened the coastal cities of Aden and Hodeidah. This caused Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries to intervene in Yemen in 2015. The Houthis received ballistic missile and drone technology from Iran and built an impressive local industry to create long-range missiles and drones. They also developed cruise missiles. Iran used these weapons to target Saudi Arabia, including Riyadh. After October 7 the Houthis began to target Eilat using drones and cruise missiles and then ballistic missiles. Later, the Houthis began targeting ships. It has carried out dozens of attacks on commercial ships, and it has hijacked one ship. It claims to be targeting Israeli-linked and Western ships. The Houthi capabilities have expanded greatly in the last several years. Beginning in 2020, Iran also based its Shahed 136 drones in Yemen. The Houthis now can strike at southern Israel with their weapons. THE IRAQI MILITIAS Iran has been backing militias in Iraq since the 1980s. Key militia leaders such as Hadi al-Amiri, the head of the Badr organization, and the late Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis were close to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Abu Mahdi was active in supporting Iran’s terrorist causes in the 1980s, such as targeting Kuwait and other countries and groups. After the US invasion of 2003, the Iranian-backed militias began to increase their power in Iraq, feeding off the power vacuum. Abu Mahdi’s Kataib Hezbollah became the vanguard of these militias. It was joined not only by Badr but also by Asaib Ahl al-Haq, whose leader, Qias Khazali, had once been detained by the Americans in Iraq. Other groups popped up as well, such as Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba. In 2014, after ISIS invaded Iraq, the Iranian-backed militias formed the backbone of a paramilitary army called the Popular Mobilization Forces, which numbered more than 100,000 fighters. After the defeat of ISIS in 2017 in Iraq, the militias became an official government-paid force linked to the Iraqi Interior Ministry. In essence, they became the Iranian IRGC of Iraq. The groups then stockpiled missiles and drones. They began to operate more freely in Syria and to threaten US forces and Israel. They also carried out kidnappings, such as the kidnapping of researcher Elizabeth Tsurkov in 2023. They murdered key Iraqi intellectuals and targeted Kurds. They have targeted Israel since October 7, using long-range drones to target Iraq and other areas. IRANIAN MILITIAS IN SYRIA Iran’s IRGC operates in Syria. During the Syrian civil war, Iran recruited many groups to support the Assad regime. These included Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, and also Shi’ites from Afghanistan and Pakistan. In 2018, Iran began to build up more bases for these groups, such as the Imam Ali base near Albukamal and also encouraged Hezbollah to open its “Golan file” to threaten Israel from the Golan. Iran also moved drones to Syria and tried to move air defenses to its T-4 base in 2018. The Iranian-backed militias in Syria are disparate and have varying capabilities, but most of them are relatively weak. They have targeted US forces and also Israel. They usually require close IRGC supervision and guidance. PALESTINIAN ISLAMIC JIHAD Palestinian Islamic Jihad is an Iranian proxy group that is also a Palestinian group. Unlike Hezbollah or the militias in Iraq, it is not a Shi’ite group. PIJ has terrorists in Gaza and participated in the October 7 attack. It had thousands of rockets and thousands of fighters in Gaza, but it has taken losses over six months of war. In the West Bank, PIJ is active mostly in Jenin, where it also has hundreds of members. It has benefited from the illegal trafficking of rifles in the West Bank and has tried to increase its stockpile of weapons and explosives and move into IED (explosive) production. The group is relatively small but has destabilized the northern West Bank and poses an increasing threat. |
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Iraq |
Badr Organization says drone attack on Peshmerga a ‘mistake’ |
2024-01-07 |
So much taqqiya. They must be worried about something. [Rudaw] A bigwig from the Badr Organization on Saturday said that last week’s drone attack on the Peshmerga was a "mistake" and Americans, not Kurdish forces, are the target of Iraqi militias."I am certain that targeting the Peshmerga headquarters was a mistake. The first and last target at this time is the American forces occupying Iraq only. The Resistance® does not target the Peshmerga forces," Mohammed Mahdi al-Bayati, head of the Badr Organization in Kirkuk, ... a thick stew of Arabs, Turkmen, Kurds, and probably Antarcticans, all of them mutually hostile most of the time... told Rudaw on Saturday, referring to the Islamic Resistance® in Iraq. Last Saturday, two explosive-laden drones targeted a Peshmerga base in Pirmam, Erbil province. There were no casualties. The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) said it holds the federal government responsible for the "cowardly attacks" of government-linked "outlaw" groups. Prime Minister Masrour Barzani called it a "terrorist attack" and said the KRG has "a right to defend our people." No group has grabbed credit. The Islamic Resistance® in Iraq, a network of shadow Iraqi militia groups affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), has claimed most of the over 100 drone and rocket attacks carried out against United States interests in Syria and Iraq since mid-October, in response to American support for Israel in its war against Hamas ![]() in the Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... Strip. The Badr Organization is a pro-Iran ...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence. The word Iranis a cognate form of Aryan.The abbreviation IRGCis the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA).The term Supreme Guideis a the modern version form of either Duceor Führeror maybe both. They hate party led by Hadi al-Amiri. It has a strong representation in the federal cabinet. Bayati noted that Iraqi and Peshmerga forces both fought against Saddam Hussein’s Ba’ath regime and were victims of its oppression. "I do not believe that any of the Peshmerga bases have been targeted by the Resistance®," he said. Ali al-Bandawi, a member of the Iraqi parliament's security and defense committee, told Rudaw on Saturday that the Peshmerga could have been targeted because of their proximity to US troops. There are no publicly known American forces based in Pirmam. The Badr Organization and the Resistance® have shared interests and objectives in Iraq, most notably opposition to the US. Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudan ...a Moslem country located in the Horn of Africa. It is noted for its affinity for rule by ex- or current generals, its holy men, and for the oppression of the native Afro population by its Arab conquerors. South Sudan, populated mostly by the natives, split off from Sudan proper, which left North and South Darfur to be oppressed by the guys with turbans... i on Friday said his government is taking the first step to ending American presence in the country. Masoud Barzani, leader of the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party ...every time you hear the phrase white people, white supremacy, whiteanything but paint, you're listening to a Democrat. Ask him/her/it to reimagine something for you; they do that a lot, though not well. They can hear a dog whistle a mile or two away. They invented the spoils system and Tammany Hall, and inspired the addition of the word (Thomas) Nastyto the English language. They want to stop continental drift and repeal the law of unintended side effects... (KDP), separately received Iraqi National Security Advisor Qasim al-Araji and Falih al-Fayadh, head of the Hashd al-Shaabi Commission, in Erbil following the Pirmam incident. They discussed "security threats" and Fayadh condemned the drone attack on the Peshmerga, a statement from Barzani’s office noted. Erbil’s international airport and Harir air base to the northeast of the city are among frequent targets of militia groups who claim to target US troops who are based near the airport but have recently left Harir. Related: Badr Organization: 2023-12-24 Top Shiite politicians consolidate grip on power in Iraq’s local elections Badr Organization: 2023-10-10 IRAQ (Actually Iran Shill) Threatens US Badr Organization: 2023-09-05 Volunteer mobilization in Sinjar District for deployment in Syria, Source |
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Iraq |
Top Shiite politicians consolidate grip on power in Iraq’s local elections |
2023-12-24 |
[Rudaw] Iraq’s former prime minister and a pro-Iran ...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence. The word Iranis a cognate form of Aryan.The abbreviation IRGCis the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA).The term Supreme Guideis a the modern version form of either Duceor Führeror maybe both. They hate politician emerged as the main winners of Monday’s provincial elections in Iraq, according to official preliminary results. The State of Law Coalition, led by former premier Nouri al-Maliki, gained most of the votes in Muthana province. It emerged second in Wasit, Najaf, Diwaniyah, Karbala, Maysan and Dhi Qar provinces and third in the oil-rich Basra as well as in the capital city of Baghdad, announced the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) in a presser on Tuesday. The We Build Alliance, headed by Hadi al-Amiri, leader of the pro-Iran Badr Organization, performed extremely well in the polls. The alliance garnered most of the votes in Najaf, Diwaniyah, Babil, Maysan, and Dhi Qar province. It emerged as second in Basra and Baghdad provinces and third in Wasit, Karbala and Muthana provinces, according to the official preliminary results by the IHEC. The IHEC announced that the results represented 94 percent of the counted votes. Both Shiite alliances are among the main backers of Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani’s cabinet. Maliki was the third winner of the 2021 parliamentary vote and Amiri was the fifth. Moqtada Tateral-Sadr ...hereditary Iraqi holy man and leader of a political movement in Iraq. He had his hereditary rival al-Khoei assassinated shortly after the holy rival's appearance out of exile in 2003. Formerly an Iranian catspaw, lately he's gagged over some of their more outlandish antics, then went back to catspawry... , whose Sadrist Movement, gained most of the seats in the parliamentary poll but later withdrew from the political scene boycotted Monday’s polls after labeling them as "corrupt elections." However, a person who gets all wrapped up in himself makes a mighty small package... he called on his supporters not to attack the process. The main Shiite winner in the elections is the National State Forces Alliance which includes Ammar al-Hakim’s National Wisdom Movement and former prime minister Haider al-Abadi’s Victory Party. The overall voter turnout reached 41 percent, higher than the parliamentary elections in 2021 despite the boycott by influential holy man Sadr. The councils were dissolved in 2019 in response to demands by Tishreen protesters who criticized the system for its failures and for enabling corruption. After several delays, the election date was set for December 18. Iraq's long-anticipated provincial elections took place in 15 provinces, excluding the Kurdistan Region. The last provincial council elections took place in 2013, without Kirkuk. The provincial councils were created by the 2005 Iraqi constitution following the fall of dictator Saddam Hussein’s regime. They hold significant power, including setting budgets for several key sectors such as education, health, and transport, but are accused of being rife with corruption. Related: Hadi al-Amiri: 2023-10-10 IRAQ (Actually Iran Shill) Threatens US Hadi al-Amiri: 2023-07-30 Why Iraq thinks a plot is fanning the flames of its diplomatic crises Hadi al-Amiri: 2022-01-02 Secretary-General of Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq: the ''resistance'' will force the Americans to leave Iraq Related: Badr Organization: 2023-10-10 IRAQ (Actually Iran Shill) Threatens US Badr Organization: 2023-09-05 Volunteer mobilization in Sinjar District for deployment in Syria, Source Badr Organization: 2023-07-30 Why Iraq thinks a plot is fanning the flames of its diplomatic crises Related: Nouri al-Maliki: 2023-08-07 Iraq blocks Telegram over ‘national security’ concerns Nouri al-Maliki: 2022-08-30 Day 2: Death toll rises to 15 amid Clashes after Iraqi Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr resigned Nouri al-Maliki: 2022-08-14 Sadrist Movement calls for 'million' demonstration in Baghdad |
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Iraq | |
IRAQ (Actually Iran Shill) Threatens US | |
2023-10-10 | |
[GatewayPundit] In a recent meeting with Iraqi tribal leaders, Hadi al-Amiri, the leader and secretary-general of the Badr Organization, an Iranian-backed Shiite militia and political party based in Iraq, issued a stark warning to the United States. Ummm... Been dere. Done dat. He declared that Iraq would target the U.S. if it intervened alongside Israel against Palestinians, according to reports from Iraqi news media outlet Shafaq and Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).
“The achievements in Palestine, which were beyond the reach of all Arab armies, are being realized. The new Iraq stands by the Palestinian cause, and we will not waver in our support,” he said. He criticized other Arab leaders for abandoning the Palestinian cause, leaving only the Islamic revolution and resistance factions to support it. “Today, it’s the will of the Palestinian people that prevails, and the Palestinian cause is now desired by the followers of Ahl al-Beit and religious authorities,” Amiri added. Amiri also took the opportunity to laud the Hamas terrorists for their recent attacks against Israel. “We proudly say that the Palestinian people have achieved a significant victory against the Zionist enemy,” he said. “No one could have imagined that Palestine would achieve this victory against the Zionist entity, and the failure of Zionist intelligence.” The most striking part of Amiri’s speech was his explicit warning to the United States. He stressed that Iraqis, especially those who are part of the 1920 Revolution, must support the legitimate Palestinian cause wholeheartedly. He warned that if “the United States intervenes in Palestine, we will intervene and have no hesitation in targeting.” IRNA reported that “American forces’ bases in the region would become legitimate targets for Resistance.” The foreign ministers of Iran and Iraq have urgently requested a meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to address the unfolding situation in Palestine, amid ongoing Israeli airstrikes on the Gaza Strip, Tasnim News Agency Reported. Related: Hadi al-Amiri: 2023-07-30 Why Iraq thinks a plot is fanning the flames of its diplomatic crises Hadi al-Amiri: 2022-01-02 Secretary-General of Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq: the ''resistance'' will force the Americans to leave Iraq Hadi al-Amiri: 2021-12-26 Al-Fateh Coalition: we do not accept even one foreign soldier to remain in Iraq Related: Badr Organization: 2023-09-05 Volunteer mobilization in Sinjar District for deployment in Syria, Source Badr Organization: 2023-07-30 Why Iraq thinks a plot is fanning the flames of its diplomatic crises Badr Organization: 2023-07-22 Unknown assailants attack IRGC, Hezbollah in Syria causing casualties Related: Shiite militia: 2023-07-30 Why Iraq thinks a plot is fanning the flames of its diplomatic crises Shiite militia: 2023-07-17 Israeli abducted in Iraq said to have initiated contact with her kidnappers Shiite militia: 2023-07-10 Report: Tehran set up Russian-Israeli’s abduction in Iraq to secure Iranian’s release Related: IRNA: 2023-10-02 Iran official admits country's role in terror bombing that killed 241 US military members: report IRNA: 2023-09-28 Iran claims to launch imaging satellite into orbit as tensions simmer with West IRNA: 2023-09-18 Iran guard shot and killed on anniversary of Amini death Related: Hamas: 2023-10-08 Democratic Socialists of America cheer murder and kidnapping of Israelis at hands of Hamas terrorists Hamas: 2023-10-08 Victor Davis Hanson - A 50th Anniversary War? Hamas: 2023-10-08 German tattoo artist ID'd as woman paraded through streets by Hamas Related: 1920 Revolution: 2021-12-20 IED explosion targets a convoy of the Coalition in al-Anbar, Hezb Brigades sez wusn’t them 1920 Revolution: 2020-05-20 Qassem Soleimani’s last message to Palestine revealed 1920 Revolution: 2020-05-17 1920 Revolution Brigadeshas released video footage of what it claims are recent IED attacks on U.S. military supply convoys | |
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Iraq |
Why Iraq thinks a plot is fanning the flames of its diplomatic crises |
2023-07-30 |
Paranoia runs deep in that part of the world. Long. [Shafaq News] After months of relative calm, Iraq has been buffeted by a slew of controversies and crises that have taken on an international dimension. Their arrival all at once is not a coincidence, and there is a plan to destabilise the country ahead of December's provincial elections, Iraqi officials and politicians say.Since last week, security forces have been on high alert, with attacks on diplomatic missions and foreign interests expected in the coming weeks, security officials told Middle East Eye. MEE is a Middle East news portal based in London, edited by a former foreign news writer from the Guardian, and claims to be owned by a former manager of Al Jazeera and the Hamas-affiliated Al Quds TV in Lebanon. MEE is said to be funded by Qatar and biased toward the Muslim Brotherhood. Most prominent among the recent controversies has been the expulsion of Sweden's ambassador and the storming of the Swedish embassy by followers of influential Shia holy man Moqtada Tateral-Sadr ![]() . The Sadrists attacked the embassy on Saturday night in response to Swedish authorities giving their permission to allow someone to burn a copy of the Koran for the second time in three weeks. Also in the Sadrists' sights that night was the Green Zone, the fortified Baghdad neighbourhood that hosts most governmental offices and embassies. Sadr's followers tried to storm the Green Zone - where they held a months-long sit-in last year - and target the Danish embassy after a far-right group burnt the Koran and Iraq's flag outside the Iraqi mission in Copenhagen hours earlier. Ever since, larger numbers of Iraqi security forces have been deployed in the surrounding areas and other measures tightened, security sources told MEE. The noise coming from Iraqi officials indicate that they believe that the provocative incidents in Scandinavia are part of efforts to target their country. President Abdel Latif Rashid described it as a "sedition plot" carried out by people living abroad and exploiting free speech laws "to implement suspicious aims against Iraq and Iraqis". All that excitement far away would have no impact on Iraq, not to mention the rest of the Ummah, if y’all weren’t so eager to throw temper tqntrums about it. On Saturday, Rashid said "the sequence of events indicates that there is an intentional aim to provoke the Iraqis exclusively to show our country as an unsafe country for foreign missions".And so it is. But wasn’t it the Dey of Algiers who kidnapped Americans, following his habit of kidnapping Englishmen and Europeans, which led President Madison to send in the Marines to teach him better manners? This is not something new in the Ummah, nor unique to Iraq. He accused those responsible of seeking "to tarnish the image of a stable and secure Iraq, damage its international reputation and deprive it of cooperation with other countries".Since then, the far-right group Danish Patriots has set fire to another Koran outside the Iraqi embassy and trampled on Iraq's flag, the fourth such incident in Denmark and Sweden within a month. Security officials told MEE that their intelligence indicates that "something is cooking against Iraq specifically", and that this explains why the Iraqi flag is being destroyed alongside the holy text outside Iraq's embassies. "The scenario is clear and it targets Iraq exclusively," a military commander serving in the Baghdad Operations Command told MEE. The commander noted that all the incidents take place abroad, but the response is always felt domestically. "We do not yet know whether it was a state or just personalities behind this scheme, but the goals are clear to us. Disturbing the security situation, paralysing the government and turning it into a goalkeeper who is concerned only with repelling attacks is the main objective," he said. "We believe that the demonstrations will continue for one reason or another, and will be accompanied by fiercer attempts to enter the Green Zone. If the demonstrators enter this time, things will not return to their previous state." Notably the Swedish government has also said external actors are trying to stoke the flames, indirectly accusing Russia and linking it to its recent bid to join NATO ...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all.... 'EXPLOITED AND EMPLOYED' The man who ignited this rolling crisis by first burning a copy of the Koran in Stockholm in late June is Salwan Sabah Momika, a 37-year-old Iraqi Christian from the predominantly Syriac town of Hamdaniya, 15km southeast of djinn-infested Mosul ... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn... He left his hometown in 2012, fleeing a three-year sentence for wrongful death, handed to him by a court after causing someone to die in a traffic accident, Iraqi security sources told MEE. Following that, Momika disappeared for almost two years before he showed up suddenly in a video broadcast in January 2015 by the Imam Ali Brigades, an Iranian-backed Shia armed faction. The video, which was shot in Taji military base north of Baghdad, shows a group of young Christians who joined the Brigades to fight the Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... group, which invaded their territory in the Nineveh Plains in the summer of 2014. Momika is seen introducing himself as the commander of the group, which he called Kataeb Ruhallah Isa Ibn Mariam. ...a Christian Assyrian militia under the Iraqi Shiite militia Kataib al-Imam Ali for the purpose of driving out ISIS. "With our Shia brothers, we are now ready to liberate our regions and our lands that were stolen from us," Momika says. "Either we live with our dignity or we die with our courage."It is not clear how Momika was able to reemerge following his conviction, but the Islamic State group's takeover of northeastern Iraq appears to have made it moot. Momika's military and political progress rocketed subsequently, but for vague reasons. In less than two years, he became the commander of a regiment that called itself Suqur al-Suryan, which was linked to the Popular Mobilisation Authority (PMA) paramilitary umbrella organization but not officially recognised, and founded another shadowy outfit called the Syriac Democratic Union Party. His former commanders told MEE that Momika never stood out, and that the "only" reason he rose to senior positions was because of the relationship between his older brother Wissam and Rayan al-Kaldani, the commander of the Babylon Brigades, a Christian armed faction affiliated with the PMA. Wissam oversaw the education ministry's Syriac and Christian storage facilities, and was a founder of the Babylon Movement, Kildani's political wing, commanders said. Wissam ran on the Babylon Movement's electoral list in the 2014 parliamentary elections, but did not win. In February 2017, Momika was arrested by the Popular Mobilisation's security directorate on charges of "immoral activities and extortion", a PMA official told MEE. After three days, he was released on condition that he leave Mosul and pledge never to cite the PMA in any of his dealings, the official added. Momika left for Erbil, then headed to Sweden, where he obtained temporary residency after claiming that his life was in danger. In Stockholm, Momika was involved in numerous offences, one of which was a criminal one, where he assaulted his roommate and threatened him with a knife, Iraqi lawyers preparing to sue him in Sweden over the Koran burning ...One of the basic tenets of Islam is that once a Koran has been printed it is expected to last for all time, no matter how old, ratty, and smelly other, lesser holy books may become. Should it actually become necessary to put a Koran out of its misery there is a ritual that includes extensive charivari, featuring long drawn-wailing and head bonking, ritual wife beating, and the sacrifice of dozens of women's noses and pubic lips. When the actual disposal has been completed there is a prescribed period of celebratory gun sex with the expectation of a minimum of two hundred casualties. Should actual infidels dispose of a Koran, Islamic custom calls for three weeks of rioting and a minimum of three dozen dead, which is a holdover from the days of Moloch worship.... told MEE. When Momika burned a copy of the Koran in June in front of Stockholm's central mosque, "he was seeking to provoke Moslems and lure them into threatening him, preventing the Swedish authorities from sending him back to Iraq", an Iraqi security official following up on the case told MEE. "This is the logical explanation for the first attempt, but in the second it was different." The next time Momika pulled such a stunt, on 21 July, he tore up a copy of the Koran and wiped his shoes with it. This time, he did it in front of the Iraqi embassy, and desecrated an Iraqi flag and an image of Sadr too. Iraqi security officials told MEE that the initial information they received from their sources in Sweden suggested that Momika had been "exploited and employed" to do this. Officials said they are now almost certain that there is a link between Momika and the group that burned the Koran in Copenhagen, and that they believe that the instigator was the same in both cases. "In the second time around, Momika was executing a scenario drawn for him. It was not an angry or spontaneous reaction,'' a security bigshot told MEE. CHAOS A GREAT DISTRACTION Security officials and politicians told MEE that whomever is behind this alleged plot must know about Iraqi leaders and the best ways to rouse them. Sadr was the first to be provoked. The Shia holy man has been a dominant figure in Iraqi politics, winning the 2021 parliamentary elections. But in June last year he declared his retirement from political activity and made his MPs resign after being blocked from forming a government. Since then, he has faced huge pressure from his followers and opponents alike to reenter politics. Sadrists have since watched their Iranian-backed Shia rivals take control of the government and the international community lend its support to Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, much to their chagrin. Many have begun to question Sadr's decision to boycott politics, and some have even joined his rivals. They may have finally convinced their leader. Last month, Sadr began studying the feasibility of participating in December's provincial elections, sources told MEE. Sadr often uses issues such as defending Islam, combatting corruption and criticising homosexuality to rally his base. "Burning copies of the Koran in front of Iraqi embassies would provide a perfect argument for Sadr to mobilise his followers," a prominent Sadrist leader told MEE. And the fierce reaction of Sadr and his followers went like clockwork. Since the Sadrists first stormed the Swedish embassy in late June, they have been mobilising, particularly in Baghdad and Basra where they and their Iranian-backed rivals have the largest presence, in a "blatant challenge" to the security services and Shia armed factions linked to the government. Sadr's followers did not wait for Momika to carry out his threat the second time, and stormed the embassy the night before the Koran was burnt. Sadr's opponents accused him of "exploiting" the event to position himself as the "defender" of the Koran and Islam. But Sadrist leaders claimed that the storming (twice) of the Swedish embassy building, the recent attack on the headquarters of Sadr's opponents in the central and southern governorates, and the attempt to get into the Green Zone to reach the Danish embassy are all "unplanned and spontaneous reactions" carried out by Sadr's followers without his direction. "Why don't you believe that he does not issue such orders? We know how he thinks and we read between the lines of what he publishes," a commander of Saraya al-Salam, Sadr's armed wing, told MEE. "Usually, we move to do something. If he remains silent and does not comment, we proceed with what we do. If he asked us to stop, we would stop." Two prominent Sadrist leaders did not deny that Sadr had exploited the event "to distract his followers and disturb his opponents", as they put it. "Let's first admit that he is very smart" and good at utilising such moments, one of the leaders said. "Yes, he took advantage of the event to [allow] our youth [the opportunity] to vent the tensions they have been suffering from since last June and to divert their attention away from the provincial councils elections," the leader said. "Our youth are frustrated and feel that they have been marginalised and that Sadr was forced to withdraw from the political process, so they are looking for any opportunity for Dire Revenge. Sadr provided them with the opportunity to vent these feelings and at the same time [reminded] his opponents that he is [still] here and that he still has the final word in the Iraqi arena." INTERNATIONAL DISSATISFACTION There's no doubt that Sadr has the manpower and resources to create chaos in Iraq. But he's not the only person capable of this, nor is he believed to be the main figure driving these events, according to one of Sudani's advisers. The adviser pointed to several recent issues that have brought international pressure on Iraq, including the disappearance of Israeli-Russian researcher Elizabeth Tsurkov, a row over the Patriarch of the Chaldean Church Cardinal Daniel Raphael Sako, and the looming elections. "We don't yet know whether what is happening is related to the case of the kidnapped Israeli or the case of Patriarch Sako, or the provincial councils elections," the adviser told MEE. "We are currently investigating all of these possibilities and have not ruled out any of them." The adviser said that the international community has begun dialling pressure up on Iraq following the latest developments, and is losing confidence in Sudani's government. He added that the government will need time to seriously tackle each issue to regain the international community's confidence. Tsurkov, who entered Iraq with her Russian passport last year, was kidnapped in Baghdad in March. Israeli authorities accused Kataeib Hezbollah, the Shia armed faction most involved in intelligence issues. The Iraqi government initially distanced itself from the issue and "chose not to interfere", Sudani's advisor said, although it promised to investigate the matter last month. Meanwhile, ...back at the cheese factory, all the pieces finally fell together in Fluffy's mind... western countries have been dragged into another drama: the crisis over the Chaldean Church. In early July, the president stripped its patriarch, Cardinal Sako, of executive powers to manage the church's property. This, a western diplomat told MEE, represents another serious challenge to Sudani. Rashid said the withdrawal of his presidential decree was aimed at "correcting a constitutional situation". However, Caliphornia hasn't yet slid into the ocean, no matter how hard it's tried... most Iraqi Christians at home and abroad saw the decision as an attack on them and their symbols, and that it represented an unjustified "interference" by Rashid into their private affairs. Several European ambassadors in Baghdad expressed their dismay over the decision in private. The Apostolic Nunciature to Iraq, which represents the Vatican in Baghdad, issued a statement calling it inappropriate and the result of "biased and misleading" reports. The Chaldean Church is affiliated with the Catholic Church and its patriarchs are made cardinals. Meanwhile, ...back at the cheese factory, all the pieces finally fell together in Fluffy's mind... the US State Department described the decision as a "blow to religious freedom". "We are concerned that the cardinal's position as a respected leader of the Church is under attack from a number of quarters, particularly a militia leader who is sanctioned under the Global Magnitsky Act," a State Department spokesperson said. In a mass he held in Erbil on Sunday, Sako said that the president's decision was "insidious, political, and moody" and issued "under the influence of the Babylon militia". The militia leader alluded to by the State Department and Sako is none other than Kildani, leader of the Babylon Brigades, who has been subject to US sanctions since 2019 for his involvement in "gross violations of human rights When they're defined by the state or an NGO they don't mean much... " in the Nineveh Plains during the fight against IS. Sako has previously publicly accused Kildani of seizing the property of displaced Christians in Christian towns in the Nineveh Plains and in Baghdad. He has also accused Kildani of seizing church property and assuming governmental offices reserved for Chaldeans, with the help of his allies in the Iranian-backed armed factions. "The chaos at this time, the person responsible for it and the targeting of diplomatic missions, all serve as excellent distractions for the international community and government" from the controversy over Sako, Sudani's adviser said. "Regardless of the president's motives for withdrawing Sako's decree, it was an ill-conceived decision that put the Sudani government in a tough position," he added. "Revocation of the decree in the first place was a mistake, it embarrassed us. And retracting it now will embarrass the president and call into question all his previous and subsequent decisions." POSTPONING THE ELECTIONS December's provincial council elections are set to shake up Iraqi politics and redraw the map of influence in Baghdad and other provinces. Many Shia and Sunni political forces are expected to lose their influence in favour of others that have recently been ascendant. Provincial councils haven't been functioning since 2019, when they were abolished in response to the Tishreen protest movement. But resuming their work would allow political parties to secure access to hundreds of millions of dollars and millions of electoral votes. Whoever wins the largest number of seats will play a pivotal role in formulating the upcoming political and parliamentary alliances. If the polls are held on schedule, Sadr and Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi are set to be the biggest losers. By urging his followers not to participate in the elections, Sadr will naturally lose ground. Sunni leader Halbousi, meanwhile, is vulnerable after a shifting of alliances in Iraqi politics. Qais Khazali, leader of the Iranian-backed armed faction Asaib Ahl al-Haq, is expected to do well. The other Shia and Sunni traditional political forces "do not seem enthusiastic" about holding the elections on time, said a leader in the Coordination Framework, the pro-Iran ...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence. The word Iranis a cognate form of Aryan.The abbreviation IRGCis the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA).The term Supreme Guideis a the modern version form of either Duceor Führeror maybe both. They hate Shia political alliance that now dominates the Iraqi government. Since getting in power, a degree of disunity has been seen among Framework parties, rivalry which will see them run on three separate electoral lists. The first will include Asaib Ahl al-Haq, the Badr Organization led by Hadi al-Amiri and Ammar al-Hakim's Hikma Movement. The State of Law and the Islamic Fadhila Party will participate in another list, while the Sanad bloc led by Labour Minister Ahmad al-Asadi and the Supreme Islamic Council, led by Hammam Hamoudiwill, will run on a third. It is not yet clear what the Sunni parties' alliances will look like. As for the Kurdish parties, their impact will be limited to the situation within the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, and various disputes between them are still being worked through, so their electoral lists are yet to be solidified. Sudani and Kataeb Hezbollah will not participate in these elections, sources said. "Everyone knows that the biggest winner in these elections will be Khazali, so they are not enthusiastic about holding them on time," a Shia leader told MEE. "There is a real fear of his encroachment in the absence of the Sadrists. There is an unspoken desire to postpone the elections in the hope that the situation will change in the future, but no one dares to speak about it publicly." However, Caliphornia hasn't yet slid into the ocean, no matter how hard it's tried... Sudani's adviser said that "the Iraqi scene, as usual, is full of many complications and dozens of players, local and international", and that they "would not be surprised" if they found that "one of these players was behind the game of burning copies of the Koran in front of the Iraqi embassies". "The goal is to pressure and manipulate the Iraqi government and some key politicians. So far the target was achieved," he added. |
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Iraq |
Al-Fateh Coalition: we do not accept even one foreign soldier to remain in Iraq |
2021-12-26 |
[SHAFAQ] al-Fateh Coalition announced its total rejection of the staying of U.S. forces in Iraq under cover of training and advice, sending a warning message to Washington and the Iraqi government. The head of the Coalition, Hadi al-Amiri, said at a memorial conference for the victims of the liberation of Dhuluiya, "We have been patient for a long time until the departure of foreign forces from Iraq, and we agreed, after all the stalling, that all American combat forces will withdraw. it is a goal that cannot be negotiated." He stressed, "Our illusory sovereignty is a red line," adding that "my message is clear to the U.S. forces and the Iraqi government, that you should implement what was agreed. We do not accept any manipulation, fraud, or changing missions." "If the U.S. forces want to remain in Iraq, they must bear this wrong decision." He said. He affirmed, "We do not accept for Iraq's illusory sovereignty to be incomplete, and we do not accept even one foreign soldier, neither at Ain al-Assad base nor in Harir, neither for training nor consultation. "If the Iraqi government needs trainers and advisers, it must make a contract that clarifies their whereabouts, numbers, and tasks." Earlier this month, The top U.S. commander for the Middle East said that the United States would keep 2,500 troops in Iraq for the foreseeable future. He also warned that he expects increasing attacks on U.S. and Iraqi personnel by Iranian-backed factions. Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie said in an interview with The News Agency that Dare Not be Named that despite the shift by U.S. forces to a non-combat role in Iraq, they will still provide air support and other military aid for Iraq's fight against ISIS. Related: Al-Fateh: 2021-11-28 Government, Turkey-backed opposition exchange sporadic clashes in Syria’s northwest Al-Fateh: 2021-11-22 Government, opposition exchange shelling in northwest Syria Al-Fateh: 2021-10-09 Government forces targeted areas northeast of Idlib, northwestern Syria, with heavy artillery |
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Iraq |
Official discloses details about al-Sadr's meeting with the leaders of the coordination framework |
2021-12-03 |
[SHAFAQ] The head of the political body of the Sadrist movement, Ahmed al-Mutairi, disclosed al-Sadr's two conditions to the leaders of the coordination framework to let them participate in the new government. Al-Mutairi said in a statement that al-Sadr renewed, during his meeting with the leaders of the coordination framework in Hadi al-Amiri's house, his call for a national majority government, the fight against corruption, and holding the corrupt accountable. Al-Sadr stressed that if the leaders of the framework wish to participate in the government, they must hand over the weapons of al-Hashd al-Shaabi's armed factions and hold the corrupt accountable. He added, "Al-Sadr assured the attendees that civil peace is a red line for everyone. He also mentioned that the religious authority in Iraq has not met with politicians for a long time, which indicates its dissatisfaction with the political blocs." Al-Sadr called, according to al-Mutairi, "Let us send a message, love and apology to the religious authority and the people. Let us present a government of a national political majority to save Iraq." |
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Iraq |
Iraq election results see giant parties fall, unexpected victories |
2021-10-13 |
[Rudaw] Iraq’s parliamentary election, as expected, handed a victory to the Sadrist bloc, but also dealt a major defeat to Iran-backed parties. The Fatih Alliance, led by Hadi al-Amiri of the Badr Organization and supported by a range of pro-Iran ...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneouslytaking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militiasto extend the regime's influence. The word Iranis a cognate form of Aryan.The abbreviation IRGCis the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA).The term Supreme Guideis a the modern version form of either Duceor Führeror maybe both. They hate militia groups, was the second largest bloc in the outgoing parliament with 48 seats. According to preliminary results from Iraq’s Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC), it won just 16 seats in Sunday’s vote. |
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Iraq |
RCD poll predicts win for Sadr Movement |
2021-10-10 |
[Rudaw] A nationwide opinion poll conducted by the Baghdad-based al-Rafidain Center for Dialogue (RCD) predicts the Shiite Sadr Movement to win the Iraqi election, followed by the Fatah Alliance, its rival Shiite bloc headed by Hadi al-Amiri. The survey, conducted across the 18 provinces in Iraq between Sept. 25 and Oct. 5, 2021 shows Sadr Movement is to win 47 seats. The opinion poll calculated the best, medium and worst-case scenarios for all the political parties. Sadr's Sairoon coalition is expected to win 53, 47 and 43 seats in each category, respectively. Sairoon - then a coalition of the Sadr Movement, the Iraqi communist party and some smaller Iraqi entities - won the last Iraqi election with 54 secured seats. The poll surveyed 5,700 people across the provinces with 300 questionnaire sheets except for Baghdad, which has 69 seats up for grabs and received 600 forms. The RCD said that Saladin, Baghdad and Nineveh have the highest numbers of candidates per electoral district, with 64.3 candidates per district. Kurdistan Region's provinces have the least number of candidates per an electoral district, with Duhok numbering just eight candidates per district. The center states that the high number of the candidates in the rest of Iraq might "shatter the votes," whereas the situation in the Kurdistan Region means that candidates might receive a higher share of the votes. The poll results slate the Kurdistan Democratic Party, the largest Kurdish party in the Kurdistan Region, to win 32 seats in a best-case scenario or 24 in a worst-case scenario. The KDP has said that they will maintain or increase their votes in the upcoming election. Of those surveyed, 37.2 percent indicated their intention to take part in the election, 50.5 responded they would not and 12.3 were undecided. According to the survey, public trust in the transparency of the election is almost even, 41.6 percent responded the election will be transparent and clean, and 42.1 percent did not have any trust at all. Of the respondents, 70 percent said they would not trust the candidates to follow up on promises they made during the election campaign. In Dhi Qar, a southern province where it witnessed one of the bloodiest protests that led to the resignation of the former Iraqi cabinet in late 2019, only 17 percent believed the candidates will meet their promises. Anbar and Erbil with 77.8 and 56 percent, respectively, scored the highest trust in their candidates. |
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Iraq |
Amnesty urges Iraq to reveal fate of 643 men ‘disappeared’ by militias |
2021-06-05 |
[Rudaw] "For five years, the families of these men and boys have been living in anguish, not knowing the fate of their loved ones, or whether they are even alive," said Lynn Maalouf, deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa at On June 3, 2016 around 1,300 men and boys were put into buses and trucks by gunnies as they were trying to flee from the Islamic State ![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... group (ISIS) in the city of Saqlawiyah in the Fallujah district of Anbar province. The men were considered to be of fighting age. The whereabouts of at least 643 of them are still unknown. Survivors told ISIS seized control of vast areas of northern Iraq in 2014, killing civilians and enslaving others across Sunni-majority provinces. Fallujah was the first major urban center seized by the Death Eater group. The Iraqi army and the PMF launched an offensive on May 22, 2016 to retake the city. According to a 2016 report from Human Rights Watch, militias belonging to the PMF, also known as Hashd al-Shaabi or the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU), entered the district alongside Iraqi federal police and detained at least 1,700 men. A day later, 605 detainees were released for medical treatment — many of them bearing the marks of rape and torture. According to the watchdog, at least four men died under torture. Some of them had been dragged behind vehicles. Another later died in hospital. The PMF had a database of wanted individuals. As families fled the fighting and crossed PMF lines, their names were checked with the database. If a name matched, the men of the household were arrested and taken to an undisclosed location. Human Rights Watch has accused the PMF militias, many of which are Shiite, of committing war crimes by destroying Sunni homes and executing civilians accused of ISIS affiliations. Hadi al-Amiri, a senior PMF commander and current head of the Iraqi parliament’s Fatih coalition, "vowed" at the time to hold to account those who had committed war crimes and abuses against civilians. Two separate committees were formed by then Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi and the governorate of Anbar, but neither has revealed any details about the missing men and boys. "To date, the Iraqi authorities have never publicly revealed the outcome of an investigation into disappearances and abuses committed during the retaking of Fallujah, ![]() the City of Mosques, which might have somthing to do with why it's not called Center of Prosperityor a really nice place to raise your kids... leaving families in a perpetual state of limbo," said "The Iraqi authorities must end this anguish and reveal the fate and whereabouts of those forcibly disappeared by the PMU. We also urge the authorities to publicly disclose the findings of their official investigation and hold those responsible to account to the full extent of the law," she added. According to the International Committee of the Red Thingy (ICRC), Iraq has one of the highest numbers of missing people in the world, to a point that every Iraqi family has firsthand experience or knows someone who was forcibly disappeared. |
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