angelburst29
The Living Force
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced on Iraqi television early Monday that the long-awaited offensive to retake the Daesh stronghold in Iraq has begun.
Iraqi Prime Minister Announces Launch of Operation to Retake Mosul from Daesh
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201610171046396767-Iraq-Mosul-Daesh/
The offensive, expected to be bloody, is predicted to last for weeks, if not longer, experts say.
Violence has sparked outside the city in recent days, and a strike on Sunday on one of Mosul's main bridges was seen as one of several indications the battle's launch was imminent.
On Saturday, reports emerged that US howitzers deployed about 13 miles from the Mosul’s city center opened fire against Daesh positions while the US-led coalition carried out a number of airstrikes.
Leaflets declaring "Victory Time" were reportedly dumped over the city on Sunday. US troops are said to be playing a "supporting role" in the offensive, with the Iraqi army and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters making up the bulk of the 30,000-strong force.
Washington recently announced the deployment of 600 additional US troops to help with the city's recapture, bringing the total number of US force management personnel to move than 5,000, according to the Pentagon.
Around half of the city's original population of more than 2 million remain in Mosul, and UN refugee officials say most of them could flee once fighting begins, which would create what one representative has called "one of the largest man-made displacement crises of recent times," according to CNN.
Camps are reportedly being set up to accommodate those who leave the city. Mosul, Iraq's second biggest city, along with a number of other northern and western Iraqi cities and towns, was seized in 2014 during a Daesh offensive.
Yemen's Ansarullah Repeats Call for International Probe into Saudi Funeral Strike
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13950725001460
The 8 October raid, condemned by Human Rights Watch as an "apparent war crime," was one of the deadliest air strikes since the pro-government coalition launched an air campaign against Yemen in March 2015, Middle East Eye reported.
The coalition's acknowledgement that it wrongly hit the funeral "does not clear its leadership of violating international humanitarian law and all humanitarian norms and conventions," said the Yemen's foreign ministry.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon "should form an independent and international investigation committee headed by a high-profile, neutral and international personality as soon as possible to probe war crimes committed by the coalition in Yemen," it said in a statement.
The Riyadh-based coalition acknowledged on Saturday that the airstrike was based on "incorrect information".
It pledged "appropriate action" against those responsible and compensation for families of the victims.
Wikileaks: Israel after Building Airbase in S. Arabia to Attack Iran
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13950725001385
The Palestine news website quoted Israeli radio as reporting that the Wikileaks documents which are based on the emails sent to former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, show that Israel is still thinking of an airbase in Saudi Arabia and using the country's soil against Iran's nuclear and military centers.
According to the documents, Israel also sought to deploy a large number of its advanced fighter jets in Saudi Arabia to carry out operations against Iran.
Wikileaks had also released similar documents in 2012.
Also in 2010, the Times had reported that Saudi Arabia has practiced standing down its anti-aircraft systems to allow Israeli warplanes passage on their way to attack Iran's nuclear installations, adding that the Saudis have allocated a narrow corridor of airspace in the north of the country.
Prince Mohammed bin Nawaf, the Saudi envoy to the UK, speaking to the London-based Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat, denied that report, saying such a move "would be against the policy adopted and followed by the Kingdom."
Iraqi Prime Minister Announces Launch of Operation to Retake Mosul from Daesh
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201610171046396767-Iraq-Mosul-Daesh/
The offensive, expected to be bloody, is predicted to last for weeks, if not longer, experts say.
Violence has sparked outside the city in recent days, and a strike on Sunday on one of Mosul's main bridges was seen as one of several indications the battle's launch was imminent.
On Saturday, reports emerged that US howitzers deployed about 13 miles from the Mosul’s city center opened fire against Daesh positions while the US-led coalition carried out a number of airstrikes.
Leaflets declaring "Victory Time" were reportedly dumped over the city on Sunday. US troops are said to be playing a "supporting role" in the offensive, with the Iraqi army and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters making up the bulk of the 30,000-strong force.
Washington recently announced the deployment of 600 additional US troops to help with the city's recapture, bringing the total number of US force management personnel to move than 5,000, according to the Pentagon.
Around half of the city's original population of more than 2 million remain in Mosul, and UN refugee officials say most of them could flee once fighting begins, which would create what one representative has called "one of the largest man-made displacement crises of recent times," according to CNN.
Camps are reportedly being set up to accommodate those who leave the city. Mosul, Iraq's second biggest city, along with a number of other northern and western Iraqi cities and towns, was seized in 2014 during a Daesh offensive.
Yemen's Ansarullah on Sunday once again demanded an international probe into an airstrike that killed more than 213 people at a funeral, after a Saudi-led coalition admitted "wrongly" hitting it.
Yemen's Ansarullah Repeats Call for International Probe into Saudi Funeral Strike
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13950725001460
The 8 October raid, condemned by Human Rights Watch as an "apparent war crime," was one of the deadliest air strikes since the pro-government coalition launched an air campaign against Yemen in March 2015, Middle East Eye reported.
The coalition's acknowledgement that it wrongly hit the funeral "does not clear its leadership of violating international humanitarian law and all humanitarian norms and conventions," said the Yemen's foreign ministry.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon "should form an independent and international investigation committee headed by a high-profile, neutral and international personality as soon as possible to probe war crimes committed by the coalition in Yemen," it said in a statement.
The Riyadh-based coalition acknowledged on Saturday that the airstrike was based on "incorrect information".
It pledged "appropriate action" against those responsible and compensation for families of the victims.
The documents released by Wikileaks show that Israel has sought to build a military airbase in Saudi Arabia to launch attacks against Iran.
Wikileaks: Israel after Building Airbase in S. Arabia to Attack Iran
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13950725001385
The Palestine news website quoted Israeli radio as reporting that the Wikileaks documents which are based on the emails sent to former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, show that Israel is still thinking of an airbase in Saudi Arabia and using the country's soil against Iran's nuclear and military centers.
According to the documents, Israel also sought to deploy a large number of its advanced fighter jets in Saudi Arabia to carry out operations against Iran.
Wikileaks had also released similar documents in 2012.
Also in 2010, the Times had reported that Saudi Arabia has practiced standing down its anti-aircraft systems to allow Israeli warplanes passage on their way to attack Iran's nuclear installations, adding that the Saudis have allocated a narrow corridor of airspace in the north of the country.
Prince Mohammed bin Nawaf, the Saudi envoy to the UK, speaking to the London-based Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat, denied that report, saying such a move "would be against the policy adopted and followed by the Kingdom."