A group of Iraqi security forces pounded and destroyed several ISIL military training camps in the Western part of Anbar province as their comrades engaged in fierce clashes with the terrorists in Nineveh province.
Several ISIL Military Training Camps Destroyed in Western Anbar Province
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The Iraqi forces' operations aimed to prevent any chance of relief for ISIL as government troops entered the terrorist-controlled areas in Sanjak and Jarijab regions in the Western part of Anbar province and near the Syrian border.
The Iraqi fighter jets also pounded and destroyed ISIL's military positions in Anbar province, killing around 50, including several notorious terrorists and injuring around 40 others.
The Iraqi army also destroyed a large number of military equipment and armored vehicles of the terrorists.
Iraq's joint military forces have purged terrorists from 70 percent of Anbar province, including al-Tharthar Lake and the regions bordering Syria, including al-Qaem border passage.
Daesh took to social media recently to show off a new drone, bragging that the terror group has an air force.
Daesh Terrorists Use Attack Drones in Iraq
https://sputniknews.com/military/201701261050013883-daesh-terrorists-use-attack-drones/
While Daesh’s drones lack the firepower of a Northrop Grumman RQ-4 Global Hawk, attaching IEDs to an unmanned aerial device indicates a level of lethality beyond surveillance.
One scheme involves dropping IEDs on groups of civilians, waiting for first-responders and emergency crews to arrive on the scene, and then sending in a suicide car bomber to wreak even more destruction, according to Bridget Johnson, terrorism fellow at the Haym Salomon Center.
Maj. Gen. Gary Volesky, US commander of the 101st Airborne Division, pointed to the drones as "commercial, off-the-shelf-kinds of things," noting that Daesh unmanned aerial vehicles are "clearly" not of the same capacity nor capability as drones used by the US-led coalition.
In October 2016, the US Air Force downed a Daesh-controlled drone that killed four civilians. Air Force secretary Deborah Lee James noted at the time that "a top priority for me" is the "emerging danger" posed by unmanned aerial systems in the Middle East. "These cheap, buy-them-over-the-internet, small drones and if explosives are placed on them…they can do damage," James said.
One counter-drone technique employed by the US-led coalition against Daesh rests in the US Navy’s laser weapon systems, which have been touted for presenting “an extremely low cost-per-engagement” with enemy targets.
Daesh can obtain drones, according to Russian UAV expert Denis Fedutinov, by acquiring the devices commercially, such as a Chinese-made X-UAV. The jihadists have also been known to seize small UAVs transferred from the US to Iraq at the time Washington was providing Baghdad with military and technical assistance. Terrorists have acquired many pieces of military hardware in this fashion, he said, and drones are no different.
Lastly, he proposed that "Daesh could be carrying out its own research into UAVs. We are speaking only about reconnaissance and fire adjustment," Fedutinov said, adding, "I think that these projects resemble amateur aeromodelling communities."
Iraq’s prime minister declared Eastern Mosul “fully liberated” from ISIL after a day of fierce fighting and more than three months after a massive operation to retake the city began.
Iraq’s PM: Eastern Mosul ‘Fully Liberated’ from ISIL
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Iraqi forces drove ISIL militants from one of their last bastions in the Eastern half of the city, while aid groups expressed concern for the estimated 750,000 people still in the militant-held West, the Star reported.
In his weekly news conference, Haider al-Abadi hailed the “unmatched heroism of all security forces factions” and public support for the operation.
“ISIL has quickly collapsed and no one expected such collapse,” al-Abadi said. “The heroism of our security forces was behind ISIL’s defeat.”
Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city and ISIL’s last urban stronghold in the country, fell into the hands of the extremists in the summer of 2014, when the group captured large swaths of Northern and Western Iraq.
The US-led coalition against Daesh would not specifically comment on the role of Chechen fighters in the battle for eastern Mosul, Iraq, Operation Inherent Resolve Land Component Commanding General Joseph Martin said in a briefing on Wednesday.
US Coalition Declines to Comment on Daesh Chechen Fighters’ Role in Mosul Battle
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201701251050008827-us-coalition-daesh-chechens/
The Mosul operation aimed to liberate the city from the Daesh forces started in October 2016. The operation is jointly conducted by the Iraqi military, Iraqi Kurds and the United States-led coalition. The eastern part of the city has been recaptured from terrorists.
"There are foreign fighters that have fought in eastern Mosul. But I can’t specifically comment on the Chechens," Martin stated when asked about the role Chechen fighters played in the Mosul battle and whether their presence was significant.
The Yemeni Ansarullah movement slammed the UN’s Yemen envoy for failing to speak the truth about the situation on the ground in the conflict-torn country, saying the diplomat is in fact siding with the invaders by keeping silent on Saudi crimes.
Ansarullah: UN Envoy Failing to Tell Truth on Yemen Conflict
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UN Special Envoy for Yemen “Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed cannot utter a word of truth,” said Ansarullah spokesman, Mohammad Abdulsalam, Al Masirah reported.
Abdulsalam, whose movement has been defending Yemen against a deadly Saudi war, further said the United Nations “only seeks to cover up the invaders’ crimes and the issue of Yemen’s blockade.” The UN envoy “is unfortunately in cahoots with the invaders,” he added.
The Ansarullah official further pointed to a recent visit by the UN envoy to the capital, Sana’a, saying the enemy carried out numerous attacks against Yemen during Cheikh Ahmed’s stay, but he showed no reaction.
The United Nations has suffered a vehement defeat in its peacemaking efforts aimed at ending the crisis in Yemen, he added.
The Saudi war on Yemen, which local sources say has killed at least 12,800 people, was launched in an unsuccessful attempt to bring back the former government to power.
Several ceasefires brokered by the United Nations have failed to hold amid incessant Saudi attacks. The UN-backed peace talks have also repeatedly broken down.
On January 23, Cheikh Ahmed concluded a mission to Yemen, calling for a comprehensive political settlement of the conflict gripping the Arabian Peninsula state.
The UN diplomat said he had met with Ansarullah and the General People's Congress leaders, and the two sides had agreed on talks in Jordan on the formation of a ceasefire committee before the UN-sponsored peace talks later this year.
The Yemeni army's air defense systems downed an Apache helicopter belonging to the Saudi-led troops in the coastal city of al-Mukha in the Western part of Ta'iz province in Southwestern Yemen.
Ta'iz: Saudi-Led Apache Helicopter Downed by Yemeni Forces in Al-Mukha
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The US-made helicopter was downed in al-Mukha region contrary to Saudi regime's allegations that they have taken full control over al-Mukha's port area in the past two days. The chopper was brought down as it was attacking the positions held by the Yemeni army and popular forces.
The Yemeni army and popular forces also fired a ballistic missile at the concentration centers of the Saudi-backed militias loyal to former fugitive Yemeni President Mansour Hadi in Bab al-Mandab region.
The Iraqi defense ministry announced on Wednesday that the ISIL terrorist group has lost over 50 percent of its militants in the city of Mosul in Nineveh province in the last 100 days.
ISIL Loses 3,400 Terrorists, over Half of Militants, in Mosul
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"The intelligence obtained by us indicates that there have been over 6,000 ISIL terrorists in Mosul and around 3,400 of them have been killed in battles with Iraq's joint military forces in the major city of Nineveh province," Iraqi Defense Ministry Spokesman Colonel Laith al-Naimi said.
He noted that over 250 bomb-laden vehicles and the entire bomb-making workshops of the terrorists have been destroyed in Mosul which means that the ISIL has been paralyzed by the Iraqi forces.
Earlier on Wednesday, Iraqi rapid response forces targeted ISIL positions on the Western bank of the Tigris River in Mosul, after officials announced the complete recapture of the Eastern side.
Mopping-up operations were still under way in Rashidiya, the last district liberated from the militants on the East bank of the Tigris to flush out remaining militants in a pocket in the Northeastern district, NRT reported.
Hundreds of people from Rashidiya left the district with their belongings to escape fighting.
The Royal Saudi Air Force fleet is getting new US-developed F-15SA Strike Eagle multirole fighters, local media report.
Saudi Arabia Showcases Newly Received US F-15SA Fighters - Reports
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201701261050016702-saudi-arabia-showcases-new-fighter-jets/
The F-15SA aircraft were displayed during a Wednesday air show that marked the 50th anniversary of the founding of King Faisal Air Academy in Riyadh, The Saudi Gazette said.
Saudi Arabia ordered 84 F-15SAs as part of a $60-billion deal with the United States approved seven years ago.
According to The Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabia also ordered almost 70 kits to upgrade its existing F-15S fleet.
The Taliban has demanded that President Donald Trump withdraw remaining US forces from Afghanistan, saying responsibility for ending the 15-year conflict "rests on his shoulders" - however, Omar Samad, the former Afghan ambassador to France and Canada, has told Sputnik there's little chance of a reversal of US policy in the country.
Past US Taliban Policy 'Wishy-Washy,' Trump’s Generals Better Equipped - Expert
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201701251049994503-trump-taliban-afghanistan-conflict/
While then-President Barack Obama suggested the war was over in December 2014, when NATO officially ended its combat operations in Afghanistan, around 8,400 US troops remained stationed in the war-torn country. The election of Donald Trump as president raised hopes US involvement would end outright although others are more circumspect — the same optimism attended Barack Obama's election in 2008.
Omar Samad, the former Afghan ambassador to France and Canada, told Sputnik that while there are "few hints" as yet as to what Trump's administration will do in Afghanistan, "all indications" are there will be some level of continued commitment to the Afghan 'mission.'
"I don't see why the US would disengage quickly. It would be a terrible strategic move, contrary to US interests, spelling trouble for the Afghan government, emboldening the Taliban and other terror groups in and around Afghanistan to take more drastic measures, producing regional instability," Mr. Samad told Sputnik.
On the campaign trail, Trump was repeatedly and vehemently critical of past US policy in the Middle East, particularly the strategy of training and arming local militias to indirectly achieve military, political and economic goals in the region.
However, Mr. Samad believes Trump could reverse his stance, as "aligning with people on the ground" with the same "objectives" can be an effective means of fighting terrorism. The Islamic world is potentially the US' best ally in the fight against localized terrorism, as they are its primary victims. Mr. Samad added.
Moreover, he says
Afghanistan welcomes the appointment of General Michael Flynn as US national security adviser, and James Mattis as US Defense Secretary.
"Afghans are hopeful the experience these generals have in region will help shape policy in a realistic, effective manner. Past policy was wishy-washy — it didn't identify risk factors, or change them. Flynn and Mattis are familiar with the Taliban — we know where their sanctuaries can be bound, where their support lies, and who their allies are. This perspective will allow the generals to take a strategic view and adopt the policies necessary for dealing with the group," Mr. Samad continued.
However, Mr. Samad concluded that Pakistan — "historically the main thorn in the side of Afghanistan" — complicated the prospect for a cessation of hostilities.
"There are distinct factions of the Taliban, one which is amenable to peace, another allied to terrorist groups and state sponsors of terrorism. Policy must make note of this distinction, and be reshaped accordingly, or the same mistakes will keep being made."