enjoy this great show: Obama about to lose Baghdad to ISIS

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http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/1...troops-as-isis-jihadists-close-in-on-baghdad/


Iraq urges U.S. to send ground troops as ISIS jihadists close in on*Baghdad

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Alastair Beach, Robert Tait, The Telegraph | October 12, 2014 | Last Updated: Oct 12 1:47 PM ET
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AP PhotoIraqi security forces patrol after clashes with militants from ISIS near the town of Jbala, about 56 kilometres south of Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 4, 2014.

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Iraqi officials issued a desperate plea Saturday night for America to provide ground troops, as heavily armed ISIS jihadists came within striking distance of Baghdad.

Conrad Black: Fixing the Middle East, for now and forever

Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Foreign Minister John Baird are certainly correct to support Canada’s traditional allies in attacking the Islamic State (IS). It is such an unspeakably odious organization that it is beyond normal political discourse and as many as possible of its active adherents should be killed or otherwise eliminated as quickly as possible. Further, anything that seems to reactivate the Western Alliance, the most successful in world history, is a good thing. It has recently fallen to a somnolent condition even less fearsome than the former “coalition of the willing,” i.e. we’ll do it if we’re threatened ourselves but otherwise we’ll just be happy with a U.S guaranty of our national security. There cannot be any debate that the Islamic State is a sociopathic, genocidal, barbarous outrage to any concept of civilization, and should be physically exterminated. Some effort should be made to reorient surviving prisoners rather than simply executing them, but it is the duty and in the self-interest of all countries to apply the most ruthless and expeditious force available to eliminate this unmitigated evil. It is to the credit of the Green party that its MP, Bruce Hyer, voted with the government, whose motives were perfectly sensibly explained by Messrs. Harper and Baird.

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Amid reports that Islamic State of Iraq and Al-Sham forces have advanced as far as Abu Ghraib, a town that is effectively a suburb of Baghdad, a senior local governor claimed that up to 10,000 fighters from the movement were now poised to assault the capital.

The warning came from Sabah Al-Karhout, the president of the provisional council of Anbar Province, the vast desert region to the west of Baghdad that has now largely fallen under ISIS control.

The province’s two main cities, Fallujah and Ramadi, were once known as “the graveyard of the Americans,” and the idea of returning there will not be welcomed by the Pentagon.

But were the province to fall completely into militant hands, it would give ISIS a perfect springboard from which to mount an all-out assault on Baghdad, where a team of about 1,500 U.S. troops is already acting as mentors to the beleaguered Iraqi army.

Iraqi government officials claim that while international attention has been focused in recent weeks on the Syrian town of Kobane on the Turkish border – where Kurdish fighters are still battling to keep advancing ISIS gunmen at bay – Anbar province has been on the verge of collapse.

Government forces in the provincial capital Ramadi are still holding out against the ISIS offensive. But U.S. officials yesterday warned that the city was in a “tenuous” position.

“I think it’s fragile there now,” said one senior US defence official, speaking to AFP.


“They are being resupplied and they’re holding their own, but it’s tough and challenging.”

The surge of jihadi activity has also led to speculation that the group’s operation in Kobane was part of an elaborate decoy mission orchestrated by Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, the ISIS “caliph.” Observers point out that while the capture of Kobane would not greatly increase ISIS’s military clout, the capture of Ramadi or other cities in Anbar would be catastrophic both for the Iraqi government and Western hopes of attempting to contain the group.


Most of the Euphrates valley – which runs south east from Turkey through Syria, into Iraq and towards the capital – is now under ISIS control. Were Ramadi to fall, jihadi commanders would control a vital supply chain running from Baghdad directly back to their Syrian headquarters in Raqqa. They would also control the Haditha dam, the second largest in Iraq.

“It’s not a good situation,” admitted one U.S. official.

The region of Anbar remains haunted by the ghosts of America’s 2003 invasion.
 
In China, the Chinese started the Boxer Revolution, also chopped heads. The head is the IC, more precise way of identification, cannot argue type where no electricity or photo making machine (batteries required) in that area chop heads are the only option. This showed that angmoh inventions are unsustainable.

No God is used and fearless marital artist Chinese take on angmoh bullets and cannons. Nothing new, just history repeats itself and this time no Chinese are killed.

6 Million Chinese died in the Boxer revolution to free China from the Christian Crusaders with both looking for blood in their hands. Let's see they can beat the Chinese record of 6 million killed this time.
 
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http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Mi...tants-closing-in-around-it.ashx#axzz3Fy5bpOKg





Worried Iraqi capital sees militants closing in around it

Iraqi federal policemen search a car at a checkpoint in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 11, 2014. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)
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Vivian Salama| Associated Press
BAGHDAD: On the western edge of Iraq’s capital, ISIS militants battle government forces and exchange mortar fire, only adding to the sense of siege in Baghdad despite airstrikes by a U.S.-led coalition. Yet military experts say the militants, who now control a large territory along the border that Iraq and Syria share, won’t be able to fight through both government forces and Shiite militias now massed around the capital.

It does, however, put them in a position to wreak havoc in Iraq’s biggest city, with its suicide attacks and other assaults further eroding confidence in Iraq’s nascent federal government and its troops, whose soldiers already fled an initial lightning advance led by ISIS in June.

“It’s not plausible at this point to envision ISIL taking control of Baghdad, but they can make Baghdad so miserable that it would threaten the legitimacy of the central government,” said Richard Brennan, an Iraq expert with RAND Corporation and former Department of Defense policymaker, using an alternative acronym for ISIS.

The siege fears in Baghdad stem from recent gains made by ISIS in the so-called Baghdad Belt – the final stretch between Anbar province, where the group gained ground in January, and Baghdad. The group has had a presence in the Baghdad Belt since spring, Iraqi officials say, but recent advances have sparked new worries.

Last week, ISIS fighters seized the towns of Hit and neighboring Kubaisa, sending Iraqi soldiers fleeing and leaving a nearby military base with its stockpile of weapons at risk of capture. The U.S.-led coalition recently launched two airstrikes northwest of Hit, U.S. Central Command said Saturday.

Government forces still control most of the Anbar provincial capital of Ramadi, but the city is vulnerable.

Perhaps most worrying, ISIS group fighters now battle Iraqi forces in Abu Ghraib, the town home to the infamous prison of the same name that’s only 29 km from the Green Zone, the fortified international zone protecting Baghdad-based embassies and government office.

A senior military official in Anbar told the Associated Press Saturday that government helicopters fire on targets daily in Abu Ghraib, though the town remains in the hands of security forces.

To the south of Baghdad, security forces fight to hold onto the town of Jurf al-Sakhr, and to the north, one Sunni tribe has held onto the town of Dhuluiyah despite an ISIS onslaught. However, ISIS fighters have taken over a number of towns in Diyala province, east of Baghdad.

Yet authorities believe an assault to take Baghdad remains unlikely. An Iraqi military and intelligence official each told the AP that as many as 60,000 government security personnel, including soldiers and police officers, are currently in position outside the city along the Baghdad Belt. A plot by ISIS to enter Baghdad in September through the Shiite Kazimiyah neighborhood was foiled, the officials added.

Iraqi officials say that at least 1 million men make up the military and police forces in the country, though U.S. officials say that figure is grossly exaggerated. According to one senior U.S. military official, who spoke anonymously as he’s not authorized to brief the media, the Iraqi military had strength of about 205,000 soldiers in January. Today, that number is under 125,000 men, he said.

Both the U.S. and Iraqi officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Since that initial September assault, Baghdad largely has been spared and remained relatively calm, considering the intense sectarian bloodshed residents saw in 2006 and 2007 after the U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein. Still, many remain worried.

“It’s scary,” said Maha Ismail, who recently visited one of Baghdad’s new shopping malls. “But we have seen a lot worse than this so we are gathering despite all the warnings.”

A U.S. counterterrorism official who spoke to the AP said Baghdad would remain a target for ISIS attacks, though seizing it outright would be nearly impossible.

“Attacking Baghdad is probably still in [its] playbook but its leaders must know they would face overwhelming odds in striking the city,” the U.S. official said, speaking on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to talk to journalists.

Analysts, like Brennan from the RAND Corporation, say capturing Baghdad remains beyond the ability of ISIS. At its worst, the group might “start pressing into the western areas of Baghdad, going into the Sunni areas of Baghdad and pressing up against the Tigris [River] – if not controlling it, then at least testing the control of the central government,” he said.

At a recent news conference, Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby also said Baghdad is protected.

“Airstrikes around the city, particularly to the south and to the southeast of the city, we believe, have been effective in blunting” ISIS, he said.

Beyond the U.S.-coordinated airstrikes and the massing of Iraqi troops, the country’s religious and ethnic lines likely will staunch any advance by the Sunni militants of ISIS. From Baghdad further south, Iraq’s population is overwhelmingly Shiite and the lands there are home to some of its most important shrines.

Already, Shiite militias back up government forces in Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq – their flags and symbols provocatively displayed across the capital. Such militias, like Iran-supported Asaib Ahl al-Haq and Moqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army, “are battle tested,” said David L. Phillips, the director of the Peace-building and Rights Program at Columbia University. Challenging them likely would become a bloody slog for ISIS, he said.

“The militias are not bound by rules of war,” he added.

“They and [ISIS] share one thing in common: Neither is bound by the Geneva Conventions.”

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Good lah.......Got Saddam Hussien not happy, now see lah.......let the West play backside.
 
thats hilarious after 10 years of iraq war,the iraq government in now begging US to come back?
 
thats hilarious after 10 years of iraq war,the iraq government in now begging US to come back?

What so hilarious? The Iraq govt is installed by USA, not what the people want. Now, the govt goes into hiding. Even the soldiers run away.
 
Generals are fighting to restores peace in the region.

和久必分 分久必和 as said in 三国演义. Generals are performing righteousness in 中东。
 
This is a chance that USA to help those in the middle east in exchange for 1000 years of privilege excess to oil..why not...
 
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