Iraq

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US Military Aircraft Crashes in Iraq 16.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201803161062583071-us-military-aircraft-crash-iraq/

Seven US troops killed in Iraq helicopter crash Friday 16 March 2018
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1267586/world

WASHINGTON: Seven US troops were killed when the helicopter carrying them crashed in western Iraq, a US defense official said on Friday. “There were seven people aboard, they are all believed to be dead,” the official said, adding they were US service members.

“It was a routine troop transport operation going from Iraq to Syria, nothing out of the ordinary.”

A Pentagon statement said the crash involved a Sikorsky HH-60 Pave Hawk and did not appear to be a result of enemy activity.

An accompanying US helicopter reported the crash and a quick reaction force comprising Iraqi Security Forces and coalition members secured the scene.

“This tragedy reminds us of the risks our men and women face every day in service of our nations. We are thinking of the loved ones of these service members today,” Brig. Gen. Jonathan Braga said. “We are grateful to the Iraqi Security Forces for their immediate assistance in response to this tragic incident.”

The identities of those killed will be released after next of kin are notified.

The US has operated both helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft in Iraq during the war against Daesh, which overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in 2014.

US forces began carrying out airstrikes against Daesh in August 2014, a campaign that was later expanded to Syria, and has provided weapons, training and other support to forces fighting the militants in both countries.

Baghdad declared victory over the extremists late last year, but Daesh still has the ability to carry out deadly violence in Iraq, including a series of attacks in the country's north that left 25 dead earlier this month.


BAGHDAD: Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi has ordered an “immediate” investigation into the killing of a senior military officer by “undisciplined individuals” at a checkpoint north of Baghdad.

Iraqi PM orders probe into killing of officer at checkpoint Thursday 15 March 2018
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1266631/middle-east

Brig. Gen. Shareef Ismaeel Al-Murshidi, a brigade commander whose forces are tasked with protecting Abadi and Baghdad’s Green Zone, was shot dead Tuesday at a checkpoint outside Samarra.

State-sanctioned Shiite militias play a large role in securing the town, which is home to a major Shiite shrine.

The statement issued by Abadi’s office late Tuesday did not provide further details about the incident.

Two police officers in Samarra said the three-vehicle convoy ignored orders to stop at two checkpoints. When it reached a third checkpoint an exchange of fire erupted between the convoy on one side and militiamen and Federal Police on the other. The militiamen belonged to the so-called Peace Brigades, led by Shiite cleric Moqtada Al-Sadr.

Two of Al-Murshidi’s guards were also killed, while four others were wounded, they said. A medical official confirmed the casualty figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release information.

On Wednesday, Iraqi state TV aired the official funeral in the Green Zone, which Abadi attended along with the slain officer’s relatives. Al-Sadr has sent a delegation to Samarra to investigate the incident.

When Daesh militants swept across northern and western Iraq in mid-2014, tens of thousands of Shiite men answered a call-to-arms by the country’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, to defend the nation. They played a key role in a number of battles against Daesh, which has since been driven from nearly all the territory it once ruled.


BAGHDAD: Iraq is reopening airports in the country’s Kurdish region to international flights after federal authority was restored at the hubs, according to a statement from Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi on Tuesday.

Iraqi PM reopens Kurdish airports to international flights Tuesday 13 March 2018
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1265436/middle-east

The announcement comes some six months after the airports were initially shut to international flights following a controversial referendum vote in northern Iraq’s self-ruled Kurdish region that overwhelmingly backed independence from Baghdad.

The airports are due to open “within a few days” government spokesman Saad Al-Hadithi told The Associated Press.

Al-Abadi described the move as “a gift to the people of Kurdistan,” during a meeting aired on Iraqi state television and added that the central government would also release salaries for government employees in the Kurdish region ahead of the celebration of the Kurdish new year later this month.

During the same meeting Tuesday, the interior minister added that 500 people suspected of having ties to the Daesh group were handed over to the central government from the Kurdish region.

At a news conference in Irbil, the prime minister of Iraq’s Kurdish region, Nechirvan Barzani, described Al-Abadi’s decision as “a step in the right direction,” and said he would continue to work to resolve issues between the region and the central government.

The Kurdish independence vote last September, though non-binding, was held across the autonomous region’s three provinces as well as in some disputed territories controlled by Iraqi Kurdish security forces but claimed by Baghdad.

The referendum was vehemently rejected by Baghdad and Iraq’s other neighbors, ratcheting up tensions in the region on the heels of military victories against the Daesh group.

The decision to lift the flight ban comes as Iraq is preparing for national elections slated to be held in May. Initially, Al-Aabdi’s tough line on Iraq’s Kurds translated into widespread public support among his base in Iraq’s Shiite-heartland.

However, Iraqi parliament remains deeply divided, raising fears of a protracted government formation process following national elections. Kurdish lawmakers boycotted a recent vote in parliament approving the country’s 2018 budget.

Iraq’s small landlocked Kurdish region has been increasingly isolated following the September referendum, straining relations with key allies such as the United States and neighboring Turkey.

Today the militias number in the tens of thousands and are deployed across the country to maintain security, alongside the army and police.
 
Iraqi forces have captured a fugitive ISIL ringleader, who used to hold a “prominent” post within the Takfiri terror group.

Iraqi Forces Capture Senior ISIL Leader near Mosul
http://english.almanar.com.lb/466116

Reporting on Saturday, Iraqi News website said the terror kingpin was captured in the al-Shaiqara village, north of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, the capital of Nineveh Province.

The terrorist leader used to function as the Takfiri group’s “police chief” for Nineveh, collecting the revenues of its members.

Mosul, once ISIL’s so-called headquarters, was liberated last July, upon which the ringleader went into hiding in the Badush mountains in the province’s town of Tal Kaif.


The cave may have been used as a staging area from which the jihadists could rest and eat.

Iraqi military reportedly finds US Army rations in cave used by Daesh (photos) 12/03/2018
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/iraqi-military-reportedly-finds-us-army-rations-in-cave-used-by-daesh-photos/

Directorate 4, a Telegram channel monitoring the security situation in Iraq and Syria, reported the find, saying that US MRE (Meal, Ready-to-Eat) individual field rations packaging was found in the terrorists’ cave.

“Daesh shelter found by Iraqi forces in southern Mosul.”

The channel explained that in addition to caches of weapons and ammunition, the Iraqi military has also been finding these kinds of Daesh (ISIS)* underground shelters where the jihadists could get a bit of rest and relaxation. Directorate 4 added that it can be assumed that some of these secret facilities continue to be used.


Iraqi security forces arrested members of the Daesh terrorist group and discovered a warehouse belonging to them in the north of Iraq, in the province of Nineveh.

Daesh hideaway full of weapons discovered in Iraq (PHOTOS) 01/03/2018
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/daesh-hideaway-full-weapons-discovered-iraq-photos/

A source in the Iraqi security forces told Sputnik that “the Department of Intelligence and Counter-Terrorism in the province of Nineveh arrested members of Daesh in the area of al-Maidan in the old city of western Mosul.”

The source added that there were “bombs, mortars, and suicide belts”.

Earlier, a mass grave containing the bodies of 20 tortured women was found in Nineveh, city on the outskirts of Mosul in northern Iraq.

“Relics of 20 women were found inside a mass grave while removing debris in western Mosul,” police official Omar al-Hajjar said, Iraqi News reported.

“[The women] were executed by the so-called Islamic State as they were trying to escape toward the eastern side of the city during the liberation offensives last year,” Hajjar added.

Daesh terrorists invaded Iraq back in 2014, seizing Mosul, the country’s second largest city and made it the group’s capital in the country.
 
Erdogan threatens to expand military operations to northern Iraq 20/03/2018
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/erdogan-threatens-to-expand-military-operations-to-northern-iraq/

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that there could be a “second Olive Branch” military operation in the Kurdish-held parts of Iraq, while addressing his supporters in Ankara, Monday.

He said that if the Iraqi government was not able to do so, Turkish military forces “can enter Sinjar in one night suddenly and we clean those PKK elements.”

Erdogan underlined that he had already suggested to the past Iraqi government, “if you cannot finish the PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party] here let us do that, let us clean [up] the PKK there too.”

Commenting on operations in Syria he said: “now we will continue this process until we entirely eliminate this corridor, including in Manbij, Ayn al-Arab, Tel Abyad, Ras al-Ayn and Qamishli.”


The Iraqi government has expressed its readiness to cooperate with Turkey on ensuring security of the countries’ shared borders, the Iraqi Justice Ministry said Tuesday in a press release received by Sputnik.

Iraqi gov’t ready to work with Turkey to secure border 21/03/2018
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/iraqi-govt-ready-to-work-with-turkey-to-secure-border/

“The Iraqi government has expressed its intention to cooperate with Turkey on all issues related to the security along common borders,” the minister stated.

According to Zamily, Iraq is strengthening good-neighborly relations with countries in the region, particularly with its Turkish neighbor.

For his part, Yildiz stated that terrorist groups were located at the Turkish-Syrian and Turkish-Iraqi borders, and that Ankara, in cooperation with the Iraqi government, had launched military operations to clear the frontiers from terrorists.

On Tuesday, Iraqi Justice Minister Haidar Zamily received Turkish Ambassador Fatih Yildiz at the ministry office.

During the meeting, the ambassador reiterated Ankara’s readiness to cooperate with Iraq on counter-terrorism.

On March 8, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusolgu said Ankara and Baghdad would carry out a joint cross-border operation against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militant group, which is on the Turkish terrorism blacklist.

The operation is expected to take place after the Iraqi election, slated for May 12.


The so-called Islamic State (Da’esh) carried out another massacre against the people of Iraq after their forces opened fire on a civilian bus in southern Kirkuk.

ISIS terrorists massacre 35 people in southern Kirkuk 21/03/2018
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/isis-terrorists-massacre-35-people-in-southern-kirkuk/

According to Hashd Al-Sha’abi (var. Popular Mobilization Units), the terrorist group setup a fake checkpoint along the Baghdad-Kirkuk Road near the town of Daqouq.

Once the civilian bus reached this fake military checkpoint, the terrorist group opened fire on the civilians that were on the way to celebrate the Nowrouz holiday in Baghdad.

The terrorist group’s official media wing claimed that their forces had killed 35 Iraqi fighters, but Hashd Al-Sha’abi confirmed that it was in fact a civilian bus that was targeted by ISIS.

In response to the ISIS attack, Hashd Al-Sha’abi closed the road and begun an operation to find the terrorists responsible for this massacre.


The Iraqi judicial courts have sentenced over 3,000 Islamic State (ISIS) to death, the Associated Press (AP) reported on Wednesday.

Iraq sentences over 3,000 ISIS members to death: AP 21/03/2018
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/iraq-sentences-over-3000-isis-members-to-death-ap/

According to the statistical analysis conducted by the Associated Press, Iraq has detained or imprisoned 19,000 people for terror-related offenses.

The AP conducted this analysis after they were provided a spreadsheet from unnamed Iraqi official; the data on the spreadsheet allegedly had information about those detained and imprisoned for terror-related offenses.

“The AP determined that 8,861 of the prisoners listed in the spreadsheet were convicted of terrorism-related charges since the beginning of 2013 — arrests overwhelmingly likely to be linked to the Islamic State group, according to an intelligence figure in Baghdad,” the AP report claimed.

The Iraqi government has yet to issue a statement regarding these latest claims from the AP.


Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced the start of a military campaign in northern Iraq this afternoon that will target the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Breaking: Turkey announces start of military campaign in northern Iraq 25/03/2018
https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/breaking-turkey-announces-start-of-military-campaign-in-northern-iraq/

According to Erdogan’s statement, the Turkish Army will specifically target the PKK’s positions inside the Sinjar region of northern Iraq.

So far, there has been no movement on the ground by the Turkish military, despite this afternoon’s announcement by the Turkish President.

No further details have been released.

Earlier this week, it was announced that the PKK would be leaving Sinjar by the local governor; however, this does not appear to be the case.


At least eight police officers were killed in an attack carried out by the Islamic State (IS, outlawed in Russia) terrorist group on a highway in Iraq, media reported.

Several Police Officers Killed in Daesh Ambush in Iraq 25.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201803251062873481-iraq-police-officers-killed/

The incident took place on the road between Baghdad and Kirkuk, the Turkish Anadolu news agency reported Saturday citing a local police officer.

According to the media outlet, police forces and pro-government Shia militias had been sent to the accident site after the attack.

Iraq has been suffering from the terrorist activities, such as suicide attacks, for years, and in 2014 vast territories of the Middle Eastern state were occupied by Daesh, which is infamous for recruiting youth, including via social networks. The Iraqi army has successfully fought back against Daesh since then.

This is not the first attack of Daesh militants on the highway between Baghdad and Kirkuk. On March 12, media reported that 10 civilians were killed by the jihadists.
 
18/04/2018 - Iraqi forces launch large-scale offensive in western Iraq
Iraqi forces launch large-scale offensive in western Iraq

Earlier today, the Iraqi Armed Forces kicked off a major offensive inside the Al-Anbar Governorate, targeting the Islamic State’s (ISIS) last positions near the provincial capital.

Led by their army and Popular Mobilization Units (var. Hashd Al-Sha’abi), the Iraqi Armed Forces stormed the Islamic State’s positions inside the vast Tharthar Desert near the provincial capital (Al-Ramadi) of Al-Anbar.

According Iraqi activist Haidar Sumeri, the offensive was launched from seven axes and it won’t stop until the entire area is cleared.


18/04/2018 - High ranking ISIS commander killed along Syrian-Iraqi border
High ranking ISIS commander killed along Syrian-Iraqi border

Another high ranking Islamic State (ISIS) commander was killed this month along the Iraqi-Syrian border, following a large attack by Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Units (var. Hashd Al-Sha’abi).

According to Iraq-based Al-Sumaria TV, the Iraqi forces killed the Islamic State leader, Abu Huzeifa Al-Iraqi, during a surprise raid on his compounds near the Syrian-Iraqi border on Wednesday.

“Al-Iraqi was hiding inside a tunnel near the Iraqi-Syrian border when the troops stormed his hideout,” the Al-Sumaria TV source pointed out, as quoted by Iraq News.

Prior to the death of Al-Iraqi this week, the Iraqi Armed Forces killed another high-ranking Islamic State leader in the Huwaija region of the Kirkuk Governorate.
 
21 March 2018 - No Spirit Of Liberty – The Salisbury Case, Corbyn And The Need For Dissent
Media Lens - No Spirit Of Liberty – The Salisbury Case, Corbyn And The Need For Dissent

Fifteen years ago this month, the US-led 'Shock and Awe' offensive began against Iraq, supposedly to disarm the country of its 'weapons of mass destruction'. The illegal invasion and subsequent brutal occupation led to the loss of around one million lives, created millions of refugees, destroyed the infrastructure of a country already ravaged by over a decade of cruel UN sanctions, and contributed significantly to the rise of Islamic State. All of this might never have happened were it not for an intense campaign of propaganda and deception in which the so-called 'mainstream' media, including 'impartial' BBC News, were enthusiastic participants.

In the Guardian, Martin Woollacott had declared of Saddam's supposed 'WMD':

'Among those knowledgeable about Iraq there are few, if any, who believe he is not hiding such weapons. It is a given.'​

This conformity throughout the corporate media was remarkable. Ardent armchair war supporter David Aaronovitch, also writing in the Guardian, confidently asserted:

'If nothing is eventually found, I - as a supporter of the war - will never believe another thing that I am told by our government, or that of the US ever again.'​

As the Downing Street Memo showed, intelligence and facts were 'fixed around' the pre-existing policy of invasion. The Chilcot Report, finally released in 2016, was damning of the way Tony Blair's government took the UK into war. Analysis of the report published last year by Sheffield University's Piers Robinson, emphasised the fundamental deception at the heart of the 'war on terror':

'9/11 was exploited in order to pursue a regime-change policy against countries unconnected with Al Qaeda and Islamic fundamentalist terrorism.'​

Iraq was not a one-off. As we have documented, an onslaught of media propaganda facilitated the 2011 devastation of Libya, the deaths of up to 25,000 Libyans, including the brutal murder of Gaddafi, and a refugee crisis that has seen thousands drown trying to make the perilous sea crossing to Europe. The rationale for 'intervention' was the alleged threat of a massacre by Gaddafi's forces in Benghazi.

The Guardian's Jonathan Freedland had declared:

'If those nations with the power to stop these pre-announced killings had stood aside, they would have been morally culpable. Benghazi was set to become another Srebrenica – and those that did nothing would share the same shame.'​

After 'something' had been done, the BBC's Nick Robinson observed that Downing Street:

'will see this, I'm sure, as a triumphant end.
'Libya was David Cameron's first war. Col. Gaddafi his first foe. Today, his first real taste of military victory.'
(BBC, News at Six, October 20, 2011)​

In September 2016, a report into the Libyan war was published by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons. In contrast to the near-total uniformity in media coverage at the time, the parliamentary report concluded that:

'the proposition that Muammar Gaddafi would have ordered the massacre of civilians in Benghazi was not supported by the available evidence.'​

As with Iraq, virtually an entire country's infrastructure had been destroyed by the West's 'intervention':

'The result was political and economic collapse, inter-militia and inter-tribal warfare, humanitarian and migrant crises, widespread human rights violations, the spread of Gaddafi regime weapons across the region and the growth of ISIL [Islamic State] in North Africa.'​

Cynical geopolitics and media disinformation campaigns have also characterized the ongoing war in Syria, with confident and immediate declarations of Assad's alleged use of chemical weapons (for example: see here, here and here). Rational challenges to this establishment consensus, and reasonable questions raised, have elicited howls of outrage from establishment politicians and commentators. Dissent simply will not be tolerated.

The parallels with the confident and immediate declarations of Russian responsibility for the nerve agent Novichok poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury on March 4 are disturbing.

Instant Certainty?

Prime Minister Theresa May's response was to declare it 'highly likely' that Russia was responsible for the Salisbury attack. Russia's ambassador to the UK was summoned to the Foreign Office on March 13 'to provide an explanation'. May said that if there was no 'credible response' by the end of that day, the UK would conclude that there had been an 'unlawful use of force' by Russia.

The following day, the very first line read out by presenter Sophie Raworth on BBC News at Ten was a propaganda bullet point:

'Britain expels 23 Russian diplomats after Moscow fails to explain the chemical attack in Salisbury.'​

The loaded phrase, 'after Moscow fails to explain', was the UK government-approved framing: the alleged perpetrator of the crime was required to 'explain' its actions. The conformity to this state script was widespread across the 'free press'.

A Telegraph editorial demanded total consensus for the government's agenda:

'Theresa May needs the whole country's support to see Britain through this crisis with Russia'.​

A Sunday Times editorial stated:

'Mrs May must show Russia that she is an Iron Lady too'.​

A Guardian editorial declared that the Prime Minister had made:

'a compelling case for Kremlin culpability in the Salisbury incident and is right that such a reckless, hostile act by another state requires a robust response.'​

In the Commons, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn had very reasonably challenged the government by asking for evidence for its claims, and by insisting that international law and conventions be upheld. The Guardian, however, found Corbyn's response 'dispiriting':

'He sounded too keen to find another explanation for the use of the nerve agent novichok in the attack.'​

And:

'his reluctance to share Mrs May's basic analysis of the Salisbury incident made him look eager to exonerate a hostile power.'​

This was the editorial response by supposedly one of the world's leading liberal newspapers.

A Telegraph leading article hinted at an underlying truth: that the incident was being exploited for the benefit of 'defence' and intelligence services:

'To protect itself, this country has to give its intelligence services the tools they need and invest properly in its defence forces. This week's spring statement must guarantee better funding.'​

'Mainstream' media coverage has been instrumental in presenting a misleading image of May as the 'strong, stable' leader she has long tried to claim for herself. John Pienaar, deputy political editor for BBC News, noted:

'Among senior ministers and officials, there's quiet satisfaction that the Russia crisis seems to be going according to plan. Maybe even better.'​

All the better if you have a compliant corporate media onboard.

The headline to a 'politics sketch' by the Guardian's John Crace, whom we are supposed to find amusing, was comical for the wrong reasons:

'Theresa May transforms into cold war colossus by not being Jeremy Corbyn'​

Under the cover of 'comedy', Crace slipped in this smear:

'Jeremy had never met a Russian he didn't like or trust – especially one that had been head of the KGB'.​

The portrayal of Corbyn as some kind of Putin stooge was continued on BBC Newsnight on March 15.
Reporter David Grossman posed the leading question, 'Does Labour have a Russia problem?'. The Labour leader was then depicted in a huge studio backdrop using an image that seemed to be deliberately manipulated to make him look embedded in the Kremlin. Even Corbyn's cap appeared to have been altered to look like a Russian fur hat.
A post on our Facebook page noting this BBC propaganda went viral, with around 650,000 hits at the time of writing (most of our posts achieve hits in the low thousands). This was a strong indicator of public awareness and outrage at the BBC's biased portrayal of Corbyn; and a sign of the power of social media in challenging 'MSM' distortions.

The following evening on Newsnight, Guardian commentator Owen Jones rightly criticised the programme's Corbyn imagery. But when Newsnight later tweeted a clip of Jones's appearance, they omitted the section where he took them to task. (The deleted section can be seen here).

Responding to the tsunami of public challenges, acting Newsnight editor Jess Brammar defended the use of biased imagery, commenting via Twitter:

'By all means criticise Newsnight. That's healthy, and we will always welcome people like @OwenJones84 coming on the show to criticise us from our own studio. But no one photoshopped a hat.'​

She added:

'the Russia background was a rehash of one Newsnight used a few weeks ago, for a story about Gavin Williamson, the Defence Secretary'.​

This 'explanation' got short shrift across social media. The manipulation of Corbyn's image, including its placement close to the iconic St Basil's Church in the Moscow skyline, the red tinting and the altered appearance of his 'Lenin-style' cap, obviously served a clear propaganda purpose.

As the remarkable WW2 veteran and social justice campaigner Harry Leslie Smith said on Twitter:

'I think you will find most see that the particular photo used of Corbyn dead in the middle of the backdrop with a super enhanced cap to make it look more soviet and the shot of Gavin Williamson in a suit, not in frame, imply two different things.'​

Clearly, one figure (Williamson) was depicted as a sober, responsible and senior government politician; and the other (Corbyn) as an untrustworthy figure with dubious ideological links to an Official Enemy.

No doubt deluged with public complaints, the BBC subjected itself to scrutiny and swiftly adjudged that it had done nothing wrong. Long-time readers of Media Lens will recall that former BBC Chairman Lord Grade once described his experience of complaining to the BBC as 'grisly' due to a system he said was 'absolutely hopeless'. If that is what he thought, then what hope for the rest of us?

But, embarrassingly for the BBC, evidence has emerged that the corporation does knowingly manipulate images to portray Corbyn in a negative light. Barrister Jo Maugham QC revealed:

'Just remembered I have a written message from a senior BBC bod explaining (unambiguously) that the BBC does code negative messages about Corbyn into its imagery.' [Our emphasis]​

He followed up with:

'The message was communicated to me in confidence so I will give *no* further details. But I would swear a witness statement that this tweet is true.'​

BBC News coverage basically echoed and amplified UK state propaganda over the Salisbury attack on the Skripals, dangerously ramping up tension with Russia. On BBC News at Ten on March 12, BBC 'security' correspondent Gordon Corera said of the Novichok nerve agents:

'The crucial thing is that these agents were only developed by Russia'.​

The careful wording, in line with the government script, indicated there was no unequivocal proof of Russian involvement. The flood of propaganda continued for days, with contributions by several senior BBC News journalists, including diplomatic correspondent James Landale, Moscow correspondent Sarah Rainsford and home affairs correspondent Daniel Sandford.

In the meantime, strong scepticism about the established 'MSM' consensus appeared across social media. An important briefing document, titled 'Doubts About Novichoks', published by an academic group working on media and propaganda, noted that there was no solid evidence that the compounds used to poison the Skripals were:

'military grade nerve agents or that a Russian "Novichok" programme ever existed'.​

The document also observed that 'the purported "Novichoks" is within the capability of a modern chemistry laboratory', such as nearby Porton Down, less than ten miles from Salisbury. In 2015, the Independent reported that Porton Down had run secretive chemical and biological weapons experiments on hundreds of thousands of unwitting civilians during the Cold War, including on the London Tube.

Craig Murray, a former UK ambassador, said that he had:

'received confirmation from a well placed FCO [Foreign and Commonwealth Office] source that Porton Down scientists are not able to identify the nerve agent as being of Russian manufacture, and have been resentful of the pressure being placed on them to do so. Porton Down would only sign up to the formulation "of a type developed by Russia" after a rather difficult meeting where this was agreed as a compromise formulation.'​

This echoes the manipulation and distortion of intelligence about Iraq's alleged WMD for the political objective of launching an invasion.

Investigative journalist Nafeez Ahmed observed that Russia has been:

'certified by the OPCW [Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons] as having destroyed its chemical weapons programme, including its nerve agent capabilities. The OPCW found no evidence to indicate that Russia retains an active [Novichok] capability. The same is not the case for the US, Britain and Israel.'​

Ahmed concluded sensibly:

'It may turn out that Russia did indeed carry out the Novichok attack. But at this time, the British state has no real basis to presume this. Which implies that the state has already decided that it wants to manufacture a path to heightened hostilities with Russia, regardless of the evidence.'​

If BBC News and the rest of the 'MSM' were actual news organisations based on proper journalistic principles, they would extensively report and investigate serious concerns about the official narrative on the Salisbury nerve agent attack. When we challenged BBC News journalists Gordon Corera, Sarah Rainsford, James Landale and Laura Kuenssberg to do so we were met with the usual wall of silence.

'I Am Scared, And I Never Have Been Before'

Hyping Russia as an Official Enemy is a natural consequence of the corporate nature of the media. Big profits are there to be made. It is an age-old strategy to boost fear in bogeymen abroad, all in the interests of a huge military-industrial complex with strong ties to state-corporate media.

A piece by Kenny Coyle in the Morning Star correctly observed that:

'The media has not considered how Russophobia is benefitting big business'.​

Coyle addressed the extensive business and military links of former British army officer, Colonel (rtd) Hamish de Bretton-Gordon:

'Quoted daily by multiple media outlets on the Skripal case, de Bretton-Gordon has become a very public expert, relied upon for unbiased comment and analysis by the British and foreign media on chemical weapon threats from Salisbury to Syria.'​

For some time, he has been:

'urging greater government expenditure on chemical protection counter-measures and equipment. He has used his columns in The Guardian, Daily Telegraph, as well as TV appearances to repeat this message.'​

Coyle added:

'While his Guardian online biography selectively mentions his military record and work on Syria, it overlooks his day job — de Bretton-Gordon is managing director CBRN [Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear] of Avon Protection Systems, based in Melksham, Wiltshire.'​

Last month, reported Coyle, Avon Rubber, Avon Protection's parent company, announced a five-year £16m contract to supply the Ministry of Defence with equipment.

Journalist John Pilger summed it all up succinctly when he said that the:

'Skripal case is a carefully-constructed drama as part of the propaganda campaign that has been building now for several years in order to justify the actions of Nato, Britain, the United States towards Russia.'​

He continued:

'Russia is ringed by missiles, has Nato right up on its western border. This is unprecedented since the Second World War. Most people in Britain, most people in the United States, don't understand these dangers; the dangers of this propaganda.'​

As Pilger pointed out:

'Why on earth would Russia, on the eve [of] an election, and on the eve of staging the world football cup, want to destroy its international name with such a crime?'​

He added:

'But there's plenty of motive on the other side. [...] This is part of a carefully constructed drama in which the media plays a role, the government plays a role, both sides of the House of Commons play a role, unfortunately.'​

Craig Murray described how he has been hounded and subjected to abuse for raising rational questions about government claims:

'In 13 years of running my blog I have never been exposed to such a tirade of abuse as I have for refusing to accept without evidence that Russia is the only possible culprit for the Salisbury attack. The abuse has mostly been on twitter, and much of the most venomous stuff has come from corporate and state media "journalists". I suppose I am a standing rebuke to them for merely being stenographers to power and never doing any actual research, but that hardly explains the visceral levels of hatred exhibited.'​

Owen Jones made a crucial point about the treatment meted out to those who challenge official propaganda:

'It's the same [thing], every time. Iraq, Helmand Province, Libya. Anything other than total subordination to the government line invites accusations of being a stooge for Saddam/Taliban/Gaddafi, of treachery, of cowardice. All dissent has to be bullied out of existence.'​

As he noted in a short, powerful clip on Sky News:

'Why are the politicians and pundits who brought us Iraq and Libya still treated as statesmen and sensible hard-headed pundits?'​

By contrast:

'Those who were (tragically) vindicated are traitors and cowards.'​

Kerry-Anne Mendoza, editor of The Canary, rightly emphasised the point:

'The same people who spent the last three years bemoaning the "post-truth era" are now denouncing as heretics anyone who wants facts re: the Skripal poisoning. And they see nothing contradictory in that *at all*. Welcome to modern McCarthyism. The witch hunt is on.'​

Veteran journalist Peter Hitchens warned:

'In the past few days I have begun to sense a dangerous and dark new intolerance in the air, which I have never experienced before. [...] The treatment of Jeremy Corbyn, both by politicians and many in the media, for doing what he is paid for and leading the Opposition, seems to me to be downright shocking.'​

He continued:

'There's no real spirit of liberty left in this country.
'Yes, I am scared, and I never have been before. And so should you be.'​

George Galloway observed of the distasteful media treatment of Corbyn:

'The grisly collection of #Russian exiles, opposition exiles, absconded thieves and oligarchs donated £3 million to the Tories and zero to #Corbyn. That "the story" is instead Corbyn expressing the same view as France & Germany shows the absolute corruption of the British media'.​

In an excellent Morning Star piece titled, 'Desperate Establishment resorts to fear-mongering', Callum Alexander Scott recalled that a 2016 study by media scholars at the London School of Economics found that:

'the British press has repeatedly associated Corbyn with terrorism and positioned him as a friend of the enemies of the UK.'​

Scott points out that, on the eve of last year's general election, the Daily Mail ran a front-page headline calling Corbyn and his colleagues 'APOLOGISTS FOR TERROR', while the Sun ran a headline that read 'JEZZA'S JIHADI COMRADES.' More recently, the Daily Mail screamed, 'CORBYN "THE COLLABORATOR"' and 'CORBYN, THE KREMLIN STOOGE'. Meanwhile, the Sun shrieked, 'CORBYN AND THE COMMIE SPY'.

Dan Hodges, also in the Mail, confidently declared that 'Corbyn is most certainly an agent of Russia'. Readers may recall that a comment piece in 2016 by Hodges bore the notorious headline, 'Labour MUST kill Vampire Jezza'.

In its own subtly insidious way, the BBC is also playing a powerful role in ramping up the 'patriotic' fervour. For example, Sarah Smith, presenter of the BBC Sunday Politics show, 'impartially' asserted:

'At times like this you might expect the leader of the opposition to back up the Prime Minister'.​

Is that so? Who is this 'you'? And might we not instead, as Peter Hitchens noted, expect Corbyn to continue 'doing what he is paid for' by 'leading the Opposition'?

The BBC's primary role as a bulwark of the establishment is shockingly obvious at times like these. Perhaps never before has dissent been so marginalised, so demonised. However, the more that BBC News and the 'free press' act so obviously like state mouthpieces, the more people will recognise and reject their propaganda. Elite power, especially the state, fears any threat to the status quo. And a well-informed, well-motivated public is the greatest threat of all.
 
03.05.2018 - US Seeks Low-Key Military Presence in Iraq to Avoid Political Blowback - Report
US Seeks Low-Key Military Presence in Iraq to Avoid Political Blowback – Report

The US strategy of remaining largely invisible to ordinary Iraqis in efforts to defeat the Daesh* terror group needs to continue if American forces are to remain in Iraq, the private intelligence firm Soufan Group said in a report on Thursday.

Now the US will shift to a lower-profile but essentially permanent presence in Iraq," the report said. "The US will continue to advise and train but seek to avoid becoming a political or social problem for the [Prime Minister Haider] al-Abadi government."

On May 1, the US Defense Department announced it was disbanding the command structure it had set up almost four years ago to assist the Iraqi military and security services in their fight against Daesh.

But ending the command structure "doesn’t mean the US is completely pulling its uniformed personnel from Iraq," even though future US troop strength and the role for American forces has yet to be defined, the report noted.

Keeping the US troops in remote bases and off the streets of Baghdad helped keep the issue off the front pages during the battle to defeat Daesh, the report said.

The bottom line, according to the release, is that the US wants to continue helping without having its military participation create political problems, according to the report.


30.04.2018 - US Led Coalition Signals End of Major Anti-Daesh Ops in Iraq
US-Led Coalition Signals End of Major Anti-Daesh Ops in Iraq

US-led coalition forces have closed the Baghdad headquarters of the Combined Joint Forces Land Component Command Headquarters, signaling the end of major combat operations against Daesh terrorist group, Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve (CJTF-OIR) said in a press release on Monday.

The Combined Joint Forces Land Component Command (CJFLCC) Headquarters was deactivated today at a ceremony in Baghdad, signifying the end of major combat operations against ISIS* [Daesh] in Iraq and acknowledging the changing composition and responsibilities of the Coalition," the release said.

The responsibilities of the CJFLCC to train, advise, assist and equip missions supporting the Iraqi Security Force are now consolidated into a single headquarters under CJTF-OIR command, the release said.


29.04.2018 - Influential Daesh Leader Arrested in Northern Iraq - Reports
Influential Daesh leader Arrested in Northern Iraq - Reports

The Iraqi authorities have arrested an influential leader of the Daesh terrorist group in the city of Mosul in the north of the country, local media reported Saturday citing its sources.

The terrorist has been identified as Ebrahim Mesha'al Marei, and arrested due to the presence of precise intelligence information, the Baghdad Post newspaper reported.

In addition, the media reported that an Daesh linked terrorist possessing a Kornet anti-tank guided missile was arrested in northern Baghdad.
 
U.S. oil expert Gary Vogler discusses the plan for Israel to get Iraqi oil
Published on May 7, 2018 / 3:00
In this interview by MSNBC, Gary Vogler discusses when he first heard of a theoretical pipeline stretching from Iraq to Israel. Was the Iraq war really about oil? As a senior oil advisor for the Office for Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance (ORHA) and briefly as minister of oil, Gary Vogler thought he knew. But while doing research for a book about his experience in Iraq, Vogler discovered that what he knew was not the whole story—or even the true story. The Iraq war did have an oil agenda underlying it, one that Vogler had previously denied: "The oil agenda I discovered and experienced was to supply Iraq oil to Israel." Pro-Israel neocons were involved. More information at iakn.us/2FPFpaF

Iraq's War on Meth
May 4, 2018 / 3:29
Iraq's oil-rich southern province, Basra, has become a breeding ground for drugs and criminals, While the rest of Iraq was battling the so-called Islamic State group. Yalda Hakim has gained access to Basra's police SWAT team, and the prison where dealers and addicts are kept.

Years After This POW Was Rescued From Iraq, She Revealed The Astonishing Truth About Her Ordeal
Published on May 7, 2018 / 6:14
 
12.05.2018 - What You Need to Know about Parliamentary Election in Iraq
What You Need to Know About Parliamentary Election in Iraq

Iraqi citizens are on Saturday casting ballots in the first parliamentary election after the defeat of Daesh* in the country.

Meanwhile, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi has ordered to open the country's airspace and airports, which were shut down for 24 hours amid the ongoing parliamentary election, the prime minister's media office said Saturday on Twitter.

Ahead of the election, a committee formed by Abadi ordered the shut down of airports beginning from midnight Friday until midnight Saturday.

Iraqi Parliament - The parliament, which is the Council of Representatives, is the main legislative body in the country. It has 329 seats, nine of which are reserved for representatives of ethnic and religious minorities, including five seats for Christians. The remaining 320 seats are distributed among 18 Iraqi provinces.

In line with the Iraqi legislation, one member of the parliament represents 100,000 people, and women should occupy 25 percent of all seats.

A nominee to the Council of Representatives must be an Iraqi citizen with a college education and no involvement in a crime. The law does not allow members of the Council of Representatives to simultaneously occupy another official position or engage in business activities.

The election is held every four years. The new lawmakers are elected no later than 45 days before the previous parliament completes its duties. The vote for a lawmaker is cast by direct secret ballot on the single day of universal voting designated by order of the Presidential Council.

The responsibility for organizing elections rests with the Supreme Independent Election Commission (SIEC) of Iraq.

The election is based on a proportionate system. Once the election threshold is met, mandates are distributed among the lists of candidates in proportion to the votes cast for them. Iraqis living abroad also have the right to vote.

Voter Registration System - In order to prevent to prevent the election tampering, automatic voter registration (AVR) was introduced. A new electronic voting system that uses fingerprint identification and sends the data from regional polling stations to the capital via a secure connection was tested in Iraq on Saturday at the parliamentary election.

After voters' IDs have been scanned, they can mark the results on the ballots, which will then be put into a scanner that registers the results. The system is not only secure, but also very quick.

"Each person needs 7 seconds [to file the results]," an official present at one of the polling stations explained.

Mandates Distribution - In 2013, the authorities introduced a new method of distributing mandates – the Sainte-Lague method. It increases the chances that small parties will be elected to the parliament. According to this method, seats are distributed consecutively and are occupied by those who have a higher coefficient calculated on the basis of a formula.

Within 30 days since the start of the first session, members of the Council of Representatives must choose a new president of the country among its members. In the next 15 days, the parliamentary bloc that won the elections should submit for the approval of the president a candidate for the position of the prime minister.

The Council of Representatives approves the national budget, monitors the activities of the executive, and exercises certain other powers, for instance, approving the heads of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Prosecutor General’s Office, the Department of Court Inspections, and the chief of the Army General Staff. It also ratifies international agreements. By an absolute majority vote, the Council of Representatives can pass a no-confidence motion against any government minister and relieve the president of his duties before his term expires.


12.05.2018 - US is Responsible for Discord in Iraq - Iraqi Ex-Defense Minister
US Is Responsible for Discord in Iraq - Iraqi Ex-Defense Minister

The elections were initially set for September but were postponed due to the fight against the Daesh* terrorist group. The vote will be the first since the liberation of the country from the jihadists.

"Americans are mainly responsible for what happened to Iraq because they were the first to form a government on a base of confessional quotas… It was decided under Paul Bremer's [US Presidential envoy and head of the transitional government during US military presence in Iraq] leadership that Sunnis would get 5 ministerial offices, Shiites — 11, and Kurds — 7. This decision laid the foundation of the discord between confessional and ethnic groups and led us to the situation in modern Iraq with its sectarianism and inter-ethnic hostilities," the former Iraqi Minister of Defense Khaled Yassin al-Obaidi told Sputnik.

Obaidi is also among the leaders of the Victory Alliance, a coalition established by Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.

The vote was initially set for September but was postponed due to the fight against Daesh. Thereby it will be the first time the country holds an election since Daesh was declared defeated.

Major coalitions were put forward by the leading Shiite politicians of the country — Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi and Vice-President Nuri al-Maliki. There are 6,686 candidates, 2,014 of them women, for 328 seats in the parliament.

The US launched its Operation Iraqi Freedom on March 20, 2003, claiming that the then-president of the country, Saddam Hussein, was developing weapons of mass destruction and colluding with al-Qaeda. The operation led to the overthrow of Hussein and was followed by an eight-year-long US military presence in Iraq.

Corruption and Terrorism - Al-Obaidi also mentioned that Daesh could regain its position in the country if the government would continue its policy towards the Sunni population of the country.

"There is no doubt, that our armed forces managed to destroy them, however, Daesh isn't only about weapons, it's about ideology. This ideology may hide for a time… but I am afraid, that Daesh may return one day under another name and in another shape, maybe even more violent," the politician told Sputnik.

Among other challenges to the country, he noted corruption which previously "caused the destruction of Iraqi state". Al-Obaidi also stated that the new government has to work strenuously, to ensuring the rule of law, starting work on the construction of a rightful state and civil society.

Neutral Position - While the Interior situation calls for harsh measures, the ex-minister said he hopes the next government will continue the balanced foreign policy, established by the prime minister Haider al-Abadi and will abstain from joining any alliance.

"We would not want to be either on the axis of the Russian Federation or in the US to bring even greater misfortunes. We have internal problems. We want to restore our country, we want to restore the dignified life of the Iraqi citizens, and to preserve the sovereignty of Iraq, "the politician said.


04/05/2018 - Iraqi journalist who threw shoe at Bush reveals why he’s running for office
Iraqi journalist who threw shoe at Bush reveals why he’s running for office

The Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at former US President George W. Bush in 2008 commented on his running for parliament in the upcoming elections in Iraq, during an interview in Baghdad on Wednesday.

Muntadhar al-Zaidi explained how he was forced into exile after the incident, then returning to Iraq where he was incarcerated and tortured with his brother, forcing him into exile again. “I thought, I had to change the miserable state of affairs in Iraq,” he said.

“With regards to the George Bush incident, I did not and will not—let me say—I will not exploit it. I will not make use of it for the sake of Muntadhar al-Zaidi, it is for the sake of Iraq,” he added.

“History recorded that when the American invaders invaded Iraq, some Iraqis were on their side, but the Iraqi people beat them with shoes.”

In December 2008, Muntadhar al-Zaidi threw his shoes at Bush in protest against the US invasion during a press conference in the Iraqi capital. “This is a goodbye kiss from the Iraqi people, dog. This is from the widows, the orphans and those who were killed in Iraq,” al-Zaidi had shouted at the time.

He was then sentenced to three years in prison and served nine months, before moving to Beirut and Europe. He only recently returned to Iraq.


12.05.2018 - Six Security Officals, Tribal Militia Die in Daesh Attack in Kirkuk - Reports
Six Security Officials, Tribal Militia Die in Daesh Attack in Kirkuk - Reports

An attack by the Daesh* terrorist group in Iraq's northern Kirkuk province killed six security officials and tribal militia, the Alsumaria broadcaster reported citing a source.

"The armed gunmen attacked checkpoints of the federal police near the village of Saadouniyah, 35 kilometers southwest of Kirkuk, killing four members of the federal police, two of Hashed Al Shaabi and wounding two others," Al Sumeria TV reported.

The attack comes on the day of the first parliamentary election in Iraq since the declared victory over Daesh. The vote has kicked off earlier in the day with as many as 320 political parties and coalitions running in the vote.

Earlier, the Daesh terrorist group reportedly claimed that it assassinated an Iraqi election candidate.

Security threats continue to be a key concern in Iraq's Northern and Sunni areas where Daesh remains to carry out attacks on civilians and members of the security forces.


May 11, 2018 - Iraqi Forces Arrest Five ISIL Commanders, Kills 40 Others in Special Operation in Syria
Iraqi Forces Arrest Five ISIL Commanders, Kills 40 Others in Special Operation in Syria

The Iraqi forces carried out a special operation in a border area within the Syrian territories against ISIL terrorists, arresting five commanders and killing 40 others.

Security sources reported that the Iraqi forces obtained important data from the arrested group, which enhanced an air raid on a meeting of the terrorist’ groups commander and led to the killing of the rest of the commanders.


Fri May 11, 2018 - Iraqi Forces Capture One of ISIL’s Top Commanders near Syrian Border
Farsnews

The Iraqi Armed Forces have captured one of the top commanders of the ISIL terrorist group after he and his personnel attempted to cross the border from Iraq to Syria.

According to Iraqi sources, the Iraqi intelligence forces seized ISIL Commander Saddam Al-Jamal, and four other commanders after they set a trap near the border-crossing the terrorist group were using to cross back-and-forth from Syria to Iraq, massdar news reported.

Jamal was the governor of the ISIL's Euphrates province and considered one of Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi’s most trusted commanders.

High ranking ISIL Commander Abu Saif Al-Shaiti also was arrested alongside Jamal, the news website said, adding that he was also believed to be a trusted advisor to Baghdadi.


30/04/2018 - US closes ground forces office in Iraq as major anti-Daesh combat ends
US closes ground forces office in Iraq as major anti-Daesh combat ends

US-led coalition forces have closed the Baghdad headquarters of the Combined Joint Forces Land Component Command Headquarters, signaling the end of major combat operations against Daesh terrorist group, Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve (CJTF-OIR) said in a press release on Monday.

“The Combined Joint Forces Land Component Command (CJFLCC) Headquarters was deactivated today at a ceremony in Baghdad, signifying the end of major combat operations against ISIS* [Daesh] in Iraq and acknowledging the changing composition and responsibilities of the Coalition,” the release said.

The responsibilities of the CJFLCC to train, advise, assist and equip missions supporting the Iraqi Security Force are now consolidated into a single headquarters under CJTF-OIR command, the release said.

The US-led coalition of more than 70 members is conducting military operations against the Daesh terror group in Syria and Iraq. The coalition’s strikes in Iraq are conducted in cooperation with Iraqi officials, but those in Syria are not authorized by the government of President Bashar Assad or the United Nations Security Council.
 
10/05/2018 - Iraqi forces capture one of ISIL’s top commanders near Syrian border
Iraqi forces capture one of ISIL's top commanders near Syrian border

The Iraqi Armed Forces have captured one of the Islamic State’s top commanders after he and his personnel attempted to cross the border from Iraq to Syria.

According to Iraqi sources, the Iraqi intelligence forces seized the ISIL commander, Saddam Al-Jamal, and four other commanders after they set a trap near the border-crossing the terrorist group uses to cross back-and-forth from Syria to Iraq.

Jamal was the governor of the Islamic State’s Euphrates province and considered one of Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi’s most trusted commanders.

Also arrested alongside Jamal was the high ranking Islamic State commander Abu Saif Al-Shaiti – he was also believed to be a trusted advisor to Baghdadi.


11/05/2018 - Turkey detained, deported wanted ISIS leader to Iraq – report
Turkey detained, deported wanted ISIS leader to Iraq - report

Turkey detained and deported one of the wanted Islamic State (ISIS) leaders that was mentioned by U.S. President Donald Trump yesterday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry stated, as quoted by RIA Novosti.

On Friday, Iraqi security officials revealed the identities of the ISIS leaders that their intelligence forces captured along the Syrian border.

Among the captured was Saddam Omar al-Jamal, who was responsible for security in the so-called “Euphrates Vilayte.”

Also detained by the Iraqi forces were field commander Mohammed Hussein Khodar, the head of the ISIS special forces division “el-Fath” Issam ‘Abdel-Qader al-Zobai, head of intelligence in the “Vilayete Euphrates” ‘Umar Shehab Al-Karbouli, and tIsmail Alwan al-Isawi – Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi’s personal assistant.

“We are pleased that international cooperation in the fight against ISIS has yielded impressive results. The Turkish intelligence and law enforcement forces in Sakarya (north-west Turkey) kicked off the operation to arrest the ISIS terrorists, including one of the leading members that was identified as Ismail Alwan al-Isawi. We subsequently deported him to Iraq after his identity was confirmed. We are pleased to note the success of the operation, the contribution to which was made by Turkey, “Aksoy said in a statement.


14/05/2018 - Iraqi Air Force eliminates ISIS command center in Syria (Video)
Iraqi Air Force eliminates ISIS command center in Syria

Amid the ongoing offensive against terrorists in Syria, Iraqi air forces have destroyed a Daesh command and logistics support center in the country, state media reported Monday.

The strike was ordered by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.

Last month, the Iraqi Prime Minister vowed that the country would “take all necessary measures if they threaten the security of Iraq,” referring to the militants.

The successful military advance comes in line with the recent achievements in the area: not so long time ago the Iraqi Air Force managed to strike the Daesh “military committee,” killing over 40 terrorist leaders as a result.

The military operation is held in coordination with the Syrian authorities, as well as Russia and Iran, peace guarantor states in the country.


Mon May 14, 2018 - ISIL Command Base in Eastern Syria Destroyed in Iraqi Airstrikes
Farsnews

The Iraqi Air Force pounded a command base of ISIL terrorists in Hasaka province in Eastern Syria on Monday, Iraq's Joint Operation Command announced in a statement.

The statement said that the Iraqi fighter jets bombed and destroyed an ISIL command base in Dashisha region in Southern Hasaka.

The statement further said that the air raid was ordered by Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces Haydar al-Ebadi and coordinated by Joint Operation Command, adding that Iraqi F16 jets struck ISIL's base in Southern Hasaka, destroying it completely.

In the meantime, the chairman of the Iraqi Parliaments' Foreign Affairs Committee underlined growing coordination between the intelligence services of Iraq and Syria is recent months, saying the coordination and cooperation paves the ground for killing or capturing tens of ISIL commanders at joint borders.

Iraq's Security Media Center reported on Saturday that five senior ISIL commanders that once participated in occupation operation of the town of Mosul and other regions in al-Anbar province were arrested in the Iraqi troops' operation on Syria's soil near the border with Iraq.

The center further said that the Iraqi forces captured Ferat Velayat (province) security Commander Saddam Omar Yahya al-Jamal nom de guerre Abu Roqiyeh al-Ansari, al-Mayadeen emir (commander) Mohammad Hossen Hazar nom de guerre Abu Seif al-Sha'eiti, Osam Abdul Qadir Ashour al-Zobei nom de guerre Abu Abdul Haq Araghi, Intelligence Commander in Ferat Velayat and Commander in al-Mayadeen region Omar Shahab Hamad al-Karbouli and Ismayeel Alwan Salman nom de guerre Abu Zeid Araghi, an aide to al-Baghdadi in an operation in Syria.

The center further said that the Iraqi forces interrogated the ISIL commanders and discovered the venue a meeting of ISIL commanders. The Iraqi Air Force later pounded the meeting, killing nearly 40 terrorist commanders.

ISIL's War Council Commander Omar Abd Hamed al-Fahdawi nom de guerre Abu Tarif al-Fahdawi, Chief of the Levant's governors Abu Walid al-Sinawi, Security Commander of the Levant Abu Islam al-Kurdi and Military Commander of Ferat Velayat Ahmad Yahya Zeidan nom de guerre Abu Hassan al-Askari were among the terrorist commanders killed in the Iraqi air raid.

14/05/2018 - Iraqi forces foil ISIS attack in southern Mosul
Iraqi forces foil ISIS attack in southern Mosul

The Iraqi security forces killed three Islamic State (ISIS) who attacked a military checkpoint in southern Mosul, Sunday, local journalists reported.

According to the Iraqi Ministry of Defense, the Islamic State militants attacked the military checkpoint that was manned by local police in the Wadi al-Hajr area, located in the southern suburbs of Mosul.

The three attackers, the Ministry noted, were killed on the spot by return fire.

On Saturday, parliamentary elections were held in Iraq for the first time since the country was liberated from the Islamic State terrorists. The turnout, according to initial calculations, was 44.52%, with 10.7 million people taking part in the voting.

As stated at the end of voting in the Supreme Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, during the elections, there were no recorded cases of violation of law and order.

It is expected that the official results of the vote will be announced on Sunday evening.


Mon May 14, 2018 - Post-ISIL Iraq Votes for a New Approach to Politics
Farsnews

Millions of Iraqis voted on Saturday to elect a new parliament and new prime minister in the first national election since the country declared complete victory over the terrorist group of ISIL and its affiliates.

Roughly 24.5 million voters were eligible to take part in Saturday's election, with initial results expected in three days. About 7,000 candidates from dozens of political alliances vied vying for seats in the 329-member parliament. Among major challenges facing the new Iraqi premier is ensuring security and reconstructing the war-torn country.

No doubt the elections – fourth since the US-led invasion of the country back in 2003 - was a turning point for those political parties anxious to see a prosperous Iraq that paves the way for US military’s final withdrawal from the war-torn country. That controversial invasion and occupation removed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, yet also plunged Iraq into years of bitter sectarian and ethnic conflict, ultimately paving the way for emergence of ISIL and its medieval caliphate that managed to destabilize the entire planet.

Now, though, hopes are high that this election may be a turning point, with Iraqis rejecting such divisions and voting for parties that are more than willing to shed their previous narrow religious or ethnic nationalist identities, in order to unite the country and ensure that it will be occupation-free.

It is now a telling yarn that Iraq is the victim of America’s New Middle East fantasies. These regional designs failed Iraq and some political parties, influenced by a new generation, are looking for something different. Yet, how far that desire for an Iraq free from occupation will go remains to be seen.

Despite this apparent diversity, three main groupings have traditionally dominated the political landscape: the Shiite and Sunni lists, and the Kurdish list, representing Iraq’s ethnic Kurds, who mainly live in the north.

Within the Shiite list, there are five main coalitions running this time, with the Nasr (Victory) Coalition, led by sitting-Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi. The ‘Victory’ referred to is that over ISIL, with al-Abadi trying to capitalize in the hustings on his leadership during that recent conflict. Nasr has also reached across the sectarian divide this time, and attracted some Sunni leaders, such as the cleric Abdul Latif Humeim.

Other Shiite lists include that of former-Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and his State of Law Coalition; the Fatah and Hikma coalitions, and the al-Sairoon Coalition. The last of these is led by Muqtada al-Sadr, a major Shiite religious leader. Yet, as an example of how the elections was different this time, al-Sadr has allied his movement with the Iraqi Communist Party.

Several other small non-sectarian and Sunni groups also joined with al-Sadr to campaign on an anti-corruption, anti-sectarian ticket. But that’s not the point here. All these lists are free to split into different coalitions to run the country; that’s what democracy is all about. But these efforts to field a united list should never be allowed to fail the post-ISIL country. Because failure to emphasize a civic and non-sectarian agenda means longer US military occupation and war.

Into the argument, further violence and longer occupation will likely impact all parties badly. That’s why movements such as Goran are now calling for Kurds to adopt a different attitude towards Iraq and the government in Baghdad. They argue that in order to secure the Kurdish region’s future prosperity, Kurds should work with Baghdad and other Iraqi parties, rather than try and break away from them.

The good news is that, this time around, Iraq’s political parties made an unprecedented shift away from the ethnic nationalism and religious sectarianism that have previously dominated. They are all in the know that they cannot repeat the mistakes of the past because since 2003, all the political parties have failed in their nationalism, sectarianism, and extremism agenda. Now, the political parties have to go beyond the old sectarian or ideological lines because large areas of the country lie devastated by years of war and occupation.

To cut to the chase, post-ISIL Iraq needs a new approach to politics. The war-torn country also needs about US$100 billion of investment to rebuild its ruined infrastructure. The winners of Saturday elections can only make this a reality if the other political parties join hands with the new government and shed their previous narrow religious or ethnic nationalist identities for good.
 
Monday May 14, 2018 - Terrorist guilty of Russian diplomat's murder in 2006 gets death sentence
Terrorist guilty of Russian diplomat's murder in 2006 gets death sentence

On June 3, 2006, a group of militants blocked and attacked a Russian Embassy vehicle carrying five people in Baghdad’s Al Mansour district.

An Iraqi Criminal Court sentenced a militant involved in the assassination of a Russian diplomat in 2006 to the death penalty, al-Sumariyah TV channel informed on Monday.

"The Central Criminal Court has imposed capital punishment on one of the terrorists charged with the murder of a Russian diplomat in Iraq in 2006," Supreme Judicial Council spokesperson Abdul Sattar al-Biraqdar stated. According to him, the suspect confessed to murdering four foreigners as part of an armed group, among them a Russian diplomat.

The court representative did not provide any other information concerning the incident and did not mention the name of the murdered Russian diplomat.

On June 3, 2006, a group of militants blocked and attacked a Russian Embassy vehicle carrying five people in Baghdad’s Al Mansour district, near the Russian Embassy building. Vitaly Titov, a security guard, was killed as a result of the attack. Four Russians - Third Secretary Fyodor Zaytsev and embassy employees Rinat Agliulin, Anatoly Smirnov and Oleg Fedoseyev - were sent to an unknown location and then killed.

A militant group with ties to the Al-Qaeda terrorist network (outlawed in Russia) claimed responsibility for the attack.
 
Sat May 19, 2018 - Iraq's Election Results Announced to Show Combination of Future Government
Farsnews

Iraq's electoral commission announced the Sa'iroun (Marchers) political bloc, cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's alliance with communists, as the winner of the country's parliamentary elections.

Sadr's alliance, which contested in Iraq's elections for the first time, captured 54 parliamentary seats, the commission said on Saturday, presstv reported.

Sadr's movement forms the backbone of the Sa'iroun alliance, but the senior Shia cleric himself, who enjoys a strong support, did not contest the elections.

The Conquest Alliance, led by former transport minister and secretary general of Badr Organisation Hadi al-Ameri, came in second with 47 seats and the Victory Alliance, headed by incumbent Prime Minister Haider al- Abadi, took the third place with 42 seats.

The Conquest Alliance is a new alliance that entered the elections for the first time. It consists of 18 political parties many of which are former factions of the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU). The PMU, more commonly known by its Arabic name as Hashd al-Sha’abi, was key in defeating Daesh (ISIS or ISIL) Takfiri terrorists last year. The main units have handed over their weapons to the state in order to enter the political process.

Iraqis voted last Saturday in the first national elections since the country declared complete victory over Daesh.

The electoral commission of Iraq announced that 44.5 percent of those eligible had cast their ballots in the elections.

Over 7,000 candidates contested the 329 seats in the parliament that will choose a new President, Prime Minister and government in Iraq.

This is the fourth such polls since the 2003 US invasion that led to a sharp rise in sectarian tensions and ensuing terror-related violence in the Arab country.

The next Prime Minster will face the huge task of rebuilding a country shattered by the war against Daesh and the US invasion.

Daesh unleashed a campaign of death and destruction in Iraq in 2014, overrunning vast swathes in lightning attacks. Iraqi army soldiers and allied fighters then launched operations to eliminate the terrorist group and retake lost territory.

Last December, Abadi declared the end of the anti-Daesh campaign in the Arab country. The group’s remnants, though, keep staging sporadic attacks across Iraq.
 
04/05/2018 - Iraqi journalist who threw shoe at Bush reveals why he’s running for office
Iraqi journalist who threw shoe at Bush reveals why he’s running for office

The Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at former US President George W. Bush in 2008 commented on his running for parliament in the upcoming elections in Iraq, during an interview in Baghdad on Wednesday.

Muntadhar al-Zaidi explained how he was forced into exile after the incident, then returning to Iraq where he was incarcerated and tortured with his brother, forcing him into exile again. “I thought, I had to change the miserable state of affairs in Iraq,” he said.

May, 19, 2018 - Iraqi Journalist Who Threw Shoes at Ex-US President Bush Elected as MP
Iraqi Journalist Who Threw Shoes at Ex-US President Bush Elected as MP - Tasnim News Agency

Muntadhar al-Zaidi, the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at former president George W. Bush during a 2008 news conference, has been elected as a member of the Arab country’s parliament.

Zaidi, who was running on the electoral list of the Iraqi cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, has managed to win the Arab country’s recent parliamentary elections.

During his campaign, he pledged that in his first move after winning the polls, he would reduce the budget of the Iraqi state television and close its foreign offices.

The Iraqi journalist gained global fame when he hurled his shoes at Bush during a Baghdad news conference with the then Iraqi prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, in December 2008.

Bush was not injured, while al-Zaidi was sentenced to three years in prison. He served nine months of the term before moving to Beirut.

Now, Zaidi is back in Baghdad and running against corruption, according to posts on his Twitter account.
 
Sun May 27, 2018 - US Conducts Heliborne Operations to Rescue ISIL Terrorists in Western Iraq
Farsnews

The US military forces continued heliborne operations to rescue the ISIL terrorists in Western Iraq near border with Syria, a media outlet reported on Sunday.

The Arabic-language al-Watan daily reported that the US army aircraft transferred a number of ISIL terrorists from Tal Safouk region near Iraqi's border with Syria.

In the meantime, Asia News reported that ISIL terrorists stormed several positions of the Iraqi popular forces of Hashd al-Shaabi in Tal Safouk.

Asia News further said that five American military helicopters started flying over Masaken al-Jabseh in al-Shadadi Eastward near border with Syrian as the ISIL terrorists stormed Hashd al-Shaabi's strongholds.

It further said that the US helicopters landed on Tal Safouk and transferred a number of ISIL terrorists to an unknown destination.

Field sources reported that an American personnel-carrying helicopters flew from Southern Hasaka towards Hasaka Central Prison and landed in the prison that is now used as a US-run military base.

On Wednesday, the US forces conducted four more airborne operations in Southeastern Hasaka to rescue a number of entrapped ISIL terrorists, a move done repeatedly by the American forces to provide back up for the terrorist group in Eastern Syria.

Four American military helicopters conducted four sorties of heliborne operations in the villages of al-Qeirawan, Haresat Sinjar, al-Ta'ef and aAbu Kabra, evacuating a group of ISIL terrorists to an unknown location.

The US military forces are carrying out airborne operation in ISIL-held regions once in a while.

On Monday, Russia's airbase in Lattakia province, known as Humeimim, complained that Washington supported the ISIL terrorists through the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, as the SDF continues pressures against civilians in Deir Ezzur.

Humeimim announced that it gained field reports disclosing that Washington is indirectly supporting and equipping the ISIL terrorists.

It added that Washington supports the ISIL through its illegally created allies, the SDF forces, who pursued disintegration of Syria.

Meantime, local sources in Deir Ezzur reported that the SDF forces detained tens of civilians in the province, including women, children and the elderly, en route from Damascus to the region and prevented their move to the province.


Sat May 26, 2018 - Iraqi Cleric Rejects Any Change in Anti-US Stance
Farsnews

Iraqi cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose coalition won the largest number of seats in Iraq's parliamentary elections, reiterated his anti-US policy, saying there has been no change to the position.

Sadr was asked on Saturday about Washington's indirect contact with his Sairoon (Marching Towards Reform) bloc through some of the alliance's members about the formation of a new Iraqi government, presstv reported.

The cleric responded that he had already addressed the issue in one of his tweets.

"We are a nation whose principles and positions have not changed and will not change," Sadr's official website quoted him as saying.

Iraq's parliamentary elections were held on May 12. Sadr's Sairoon bloc won 54 out of 329 seats in the Iraqi parliament. The Fatah (Conquest) alliance, led by secretary general of Badr Organization Hadi al-Ameri, and incumbent Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's Nasr (Victory) coalition finished second and third with 47 and 42 seats, respectively. Negotiations are underway between Iraqi parties to form the new government.


24/05/2018 - Turkish Army quietly carries out military operation in northern Iraq (photos)
Turkish Army quietly carries out military operation in northern Iraq (photos)

The Turkish Army has been quietly carrying out a military operation inside northern Iraq, despite not having approval from the government in Baghdad.

As shown in the photos below, the Turkish Army has been attacking the positions of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in the Kani Rash region, which is located near the Turkish border.

The Turkish troops have already setup several military bases around the Hakurk region and will be setting up more posts as they advance further south.

According to the Turkish General Staff, their forces have already ‘neutralized’ 131 PKK fighters within a 23 square kilometer area, while also seizing a large quantity of weapons and ammunition.
 
29.05.2018 - Russian Embassy in Iraq Appeals Against Sentences for Daesh Members
Russian Embassy in Iraq Files Appeals Against Sentences for Daesh Members

The Russian embassy in Iraq has filed several appeals against the sentences for Russian female members of the Daesh* terrorist group, but the time for consideration of appeals has not yet been set, the embassy's spokesperson said on Tuesday.

"We filed several appeals on several verdicts, the timing of their consideration has not yet been set. This issue is not a fast one in Iraq. Currently, the sentences are being delivered," the spokesperson told Sputnik.

According to the embassy, Iraqi courts passed more than 20 sentences to Russian female Daesh members.

"The verdicts are very different, depending on the degree of guilt of a woman: someone is charged with just an illegal border crossing, others — with participation in a terrorist group. They face up to 20 years in prison," the embassy official said.

Earlier in the day, Iraqi Ambassador to Russia Haidar Hadi said that the women convicted in Iraq for cooperation with terrorists could not serve their sentence in Russia due to lack of a relevant agreement between Moscow and Baghdad. At the same time, he stressed that the Russian embassy in Iraq could appeal verdicts for Russian women.

About 100 women and children have been already returned from Iraq and Syria back to Russia with the assistance of the Chechen authorities. The process was launched after the RT broadcaster filmed in August a Baghdad orphanage housing Russian children, whose parents smuggled them from the country and joined terrorists.

According to the representative of the Chechen leader in the Middle East and Northern African countries, Ziyad Sabsabi, many women were not engaged in terrorists' activities, were actually taken to Iraq and Syria by their husbands who had been supporting Daesh. *Daesh — a terrorist group banned in Russia.


29.04.2018 - Iraqi Court Sentences 19 Russian Woman to Life Imprisonment for Ties with Daesh
Iraqi Court Sentences 19 Russian Women to Life Imprisonment for Ties With Daesh

The Iraqi court has sentenced 19 Russian female nationals to life imprisonment over their links to the Daesh* terrorist group, the Al Sumaria broadcaster reported on Sunday.

A relevant ruling has been issued by the Central Criminal Court of Iraq, according to the media.

On April 17, three women, including two Russian citizens and one French national, were sentenced to life in prison over their membership in the notorious terror group. *Daesh (IS/ISIS/ISIL) — terrorist group outlawed in Russia.


29.05.2018 - SDF and Iraqi Forces Advance to Daesh-Controlled Area on Syrian-Iraqi Border
SDF and Iraqi Forces Advance to Daesh-Controlled Area on Syrian-Iraqi Border

Units of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are heading toward Syria’s border area of Dashishah, which is controlled by the Daesh terrorist group, with the support of the Iraqi Armed Forces, a spokeswoman of SDF’s Al-Jazeera Storm campaign Leilwa Abdullah told Sputnik on Tuesday.

"The operation will continue until the IS [Daesh] is ousted from regions east of the Euphrates and in the south of Al-Hasakah province. Now, the forces are heading to the region of Dashishah, which is located in the south of Al-Hasakah, in order to completely liberate it from the IS terrorists up to the Iraqi borders. This is happening in cooperation with the Iraqi armed forces in the joint operational headquarters," she said.

Abdullah added that upon completion of the operation in Dashishah, SDF units would storm the village of Hajin, considered to be one of the last Daesh strongholds near the Syrian-Iraqi border.

Earlier this year, Iraqi authorities reported on several occasions that the Iraqi Air Force was attacking Daesh-controlled border areas in Syria. *Daesh (also known as ISIS/ISIL/IS) is a terrorist group banned in Russia.
 
07.06.2018 - Iraqi Election Commission to Appeal Decision about Manual Recount of Votes
Iraqi Election Commission to Appeal Decision About Manual Recount of Votes

The Independent High Elections Commission of Iraq said in a Thursday statement obtained by Sputnik that it would lodge a complaint against the recent decision of the parliament on the manual recount of ballots cast during the recent election.

"The commission will exercise its constitutional and legitimate right to file a complaint against the third amendment to the updated law on election to the parliament… because it contains a number of breaches," the statement said.

On Wednesday, the Iraqi legislative body voted in favor of recounting all votes cast in the May parliamentary vote amid numerous reported irregularities registered during the election.

On May 12, the parliamentary election was held in Iraq for the first time since the country was liberated from Daesh*. Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr's Sairun alliance won the most parliamentary seats (54), with the Conquest (Fatah) Alliance led by Hadi Amiri gaining 47 seats, and incumbent Prime Minister Haider Abadi's Victory Alliance earning 42 seats in the 329-seat parliament.

After the votes were counted Abadi said that the checking revealed serious violations and recommended a partial recount. The election was held with the use of electronic vote counting devices. *Daesh — a terrorist group, outlawed in Russia


2018-06-08 - Erdogan threatens big invasion of northern Iraq if Baghdad can’t clear PKK forces
Erdogan threatens big invasion of northern Iraq if Baghdad can't clear PKK forces

Turkish forces will attack areas in Iraq if the government in Baghdad is unable to “clear” them of armed Kurdish groups, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in an interview with CNN Turk Thursday.

Qandil, Sinjar, and Makhmur will be targeted by Turkish forces should Baghdad not rid them of Kurdish forces, Erdogan said.

On Thursday, polling group Gezici said that Erdogan is unlikely to attain a first-round win in Turkey’s upcoming elections and that the president’s AKP Party is projected to lose its majority in Parliament when Turks go to vote on June 24. In April, the Turkish leader called for snap elections in order to expand the authority of the Turkish executive branch.

Erdogan also said that Turkey’s “state of emergency,” which was declared after an attempted coup in 2016, may be revoked after Turkish citizens go to vote later in June.

Despite a 15-year reign in the Turkish Parliament, the pollster said that the AKP Party and its allied nationalist MHP only have 48.7 percent support, which would end the majority rule by Erdogan’s party and its domestic allies.

The Turkish military has previously conducted operations against Kurdish forces in Syria and in the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq, officially known in the Iraqi constitution as the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.

Al Monitor reports that threats by Turkish officials to strike Kurdish militants arrive in “the midst of a heated election campaign dominated by nationalist bluster, raising questions about Ankara’s motive.”


2018-06-06 - Turkish military kills 6 PKK fighters in northern Iraq
Turkish military kills 6 PKK fighters in northern Iraq

The Turkish Armed Forces killed at least a half dozen fighters from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in northern Iraq this morning, the Turkish General Staff announced. According to the General Staff’s statement, their forces not only killed a half dozen PKK fighters, but also, destroyed at least 16 of their positions in northern Iraq.

The attack was carried out by their air force and ground troops in the Hakurk, Gara, Metina, Zap, and Qandil areas.

Turkey has recently mulled launching a large-scale operation to capture the strategic Qandil Mountains, which is believed to be the location of the PKK’s headquarters in Iraq.


2018-06-06 - Iraq showcases new T-90 arsenal after replacing US Abrams tanks
Iraq showcases new T-90 arsenal after replacing US Abrams tanks (video)

Iraq was one of the latest countries to receive the Russian-manufactured T-90 tanks, making them the second country in the region to put them to use.

Previously, the Iraqi military relied on the US-manufactured Abrams tanks, which were used throughout their four year long battle against the Islamic State (ISIS).

However, with a large arsenal of T-90 tanks, the Iraqi military may bolster some of the strongest armored divisions in the region.
 
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