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Iraq News & Discussions

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You just spoke my mind i feel the international community are not really doing enough to combat the ISIS militants.

I agree with that. Too many countries, in my opinion, are adopting a wait and see attitude. I think one thing that's sorely needed is to have an international conference on the matter. Let every country voice their thoughts on the matter. Let it be decided, once and for all, whether the Daesh is Islamic or whether the Daesh is a state or both or neither.
 

Peninha

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It's not pure conjecture anymore. There are already reports detailing how different actors in the Middle-East are fighting proxy wars through the use of these groups. It's very simple. He who pays the piper, calls the tune. Follow the money and it will lead back to the puppet masters.

So and no one does nothing about it? This is what, capitalism in the war format? If the countries selling weapons stopped doing the wars would stop right?
 
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If the countries selling weapons stopped doing the wars would stop right?

Business runs on supply and demand. There will never be an end to the demand for weapons so the supply of weapons will never stop. Even if the arms manufacturers do not sponsor wars or encourage wars, there will always be other people who will use violence and encourage violence as a solution to problems.
 

Kamarsun1

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They are spreading terror across the globe. Places that haven't seen terrorist attacks in years like Australia and now Canada are becoming targets. With the US crackdown after 9/11, Al Qaeda and other rogue groups have found it very difficult to carry out anything in the US. So instead they are now doing it in places where there is no system or infrastructure in place to guard against them.
I would agree with that. It is much harder for terrorist to carry out missions, but just be mindful that terrorist groups can do a great job of hiding, we also tend to overlook the fact that America was founded on terrorism, Ask a Native American Indian, if you can find one.
 

Peninha

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Business runs on supply and demand. There will never be an end to the demand for weapons so the supply of weapons will never stop. Even if the arms manufacturers do not sponsor wars or encourage wars, there will always be other people who will use violence and encourage violence as a solution to problems.

Yes, but with less powerful weapons the wars with not kill so many people I think and would have a less wide range. I think governments play a big role on this "free" market as well...
 

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Special security force arrests 4 accused of assassinating Sunni clerics in Basra



Representational file photo.

(IraqiNews.com) On Thursday, a security source in Basra province announced that a special security force of the Interior Ministry arrested four employees of the Sunni Endowment on suspicion of involvement in the assassination of four clerics working in the endowment last week.

The source said in an interview for IraqiNews.com “A special security force of the Interior Ministry arrested four employees in the Directorate of Sunni Endowment in the south, including two security guards, as a result of suspicion of involvement in the assassination of four clerics in the district of al-Zubayr last Thursday,” noting that, “The defendants were arrested during their stay within the Directorate, which is located in Tihsinia area.”

The source, who requested anonymity, added, “They are now under investigation in one of the security centers to find their connection with the crime,” adding that, “Security information led to the issuance of judicial arrest warrants against the accused.”


Special security force arrests 4 accused of assassinating Sunni clerics in Basra - Iraqi News
 

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Anbar Police Commander assures ability to liberate Anbar

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Anbar (IraqiNews.com) The police chief of Anbar Gen Kadhim Fahdawi assured “The Anbar police are able to protect the province and fully secure it.”

Fahdawi assured to IraqiNews.com “The police of Anbar are able to secure the province, but it needs further support from the central government, noting “the command is working on setting new security plans.””The IS group is experiencing considerable defeats following the large-scale military operations launched recently in the province,” he added. /End/

Anbar Police Commander assures ability to liberate Anbar - Iraqi News
 

revolution

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ahmed-hirsi.jpg

Ahmed Hirsi says his son Mahad's character changed after attending a mosque in Edmonton



Three Edmonton men believed to have been killed while fighting for ISIS had been identified by police as high-risk travellers before the trio left the city in 2013.

Although police knew the men had gone overseas, they were unaware of their apparent deaths until learning of CBC News reports Wednesday, said Deputy Chief Brian Simpson.

CBC reported that Mahad Hirsi and his two cousins Hamsa and Hersi Kariye were killed while fighting for ISIS, according to Ahmed Hirsi, the father of Mahad. A fourth cousin from Minnesota is also believed to have been killed.

Simpson said Edmonton police were not specifically investigating the trio.

"EPS, like other services across the country, work through the RCMP, who has a national mandate for any terrorist or extremist activities," he said. "We worked with the RCMP."

Simpson said the cases are among a growing number police have been investigating over the past year and a half.

"A year and a half ago, it would have been a rare thing," he said. "There’s a lot more today."

Son radicalized in city, father says
Ahmed Hirsi believes his son Mahad, 20, was radicalized in Edmonton.

In 2010, Mahad moved from Toronto to live with his aunt in Edmonton, where he finished high school and began working and regularly attending a mosque.

Hirsi said it was during that time that Mahad became devout.

mahad-hirsi-and-hamsa-kariye.jpg

Mahad Hirsi and Hamsa Kariye are two of three Edmonton men believed killed last fall while fighting for ISIS.

“Some people, I don’t know who he is, they make him brainwash and they change his mind,” he said.

Mahad eventually moved in with his cousins, Hamsa and Hersi Kariye, who also lived in Edmonton.

Hirsi believes they left together to go overseas in October 2013, but he didn’t even know his son had left the country at that time. He found out when Mahad called his brother from overseas.

Soon after, Hirsi said, police appeared on his doorstep and showed him a picture of his son. They said he was in Syria and asked if he had a Twitter account.

Hirsi begged police to bring his son home. He believed that even if his son ended up in a Canadian jail, at least he would still be alive.

Then, last October, someone phoned the mother of two of the cousins to tell her the three men had died, as well as a fourth cousin from Minnesota.

ONE
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family member insists the men did not go overseas to join ISIS. Hamsa and Hersi Kariye’s brother said the cousins went to Egypt to study their religion.



ISIS suspects known as 'high-risk travellers,' Edmonton police say - Edmonton - CBC News
 

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Canada special forces clash with IS in Iraq


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An Islamist flag flying in the fields in the area of Sayed Ghareeb, some 70 kilometres north of Baghdad, Iraq, on January 2, 2015 (AFP Photo/Mohammed Sawaf)​


Ottawa (AFP) - Canadian special forces exchanged gunfire with Islamic State fighters in Iraq in recent days, in the first confirmed ground battle between Western troops and IS, a senior officer said Monday.

The Canadians came under mortar and machine gun fire while training Iraqi troops near front lines and shot back in what Canadian special forces commander Brigadier General Michael Rouleau described as self-defense, killing the IS fighters.

Rouleau said the melee had taken place in the previous seven days and was "the first time we've taken fire and returned fire" in Iraq, where the extremists have overrun large areas.

"My troops had completed a planning session with senior Iraqi leaders several kilometers behind the front lines," Rouleau told a regular media briefing on the conflict.

"When they moved forward to confirm the planning at the front lines in order to visualize what they had discussed over a map, they came under immediate and effective mortar and machine gun fire."

The general said the Canadians used sniper fire to "neutralize both threats" and there were no Canadian injuries.

The United States has previously reported having launched an unsuccessful hostage-rescue operation against the IS group in neighboring Syria, but Western forces have not officially engaged in ground combat.

A US-led international coalition has been carrying out air raids on IS extremists in Iraq and Syria since last year. Canada is only involved in Iraq operations.

Canada sent some 600 air crew and other military personnel -- as well as six fighter jets and other military aircraft -- to the region in November to participate in the air strikes against the Islamic State.


The Canadian deployment is due to end in April, unless parliament votes to extend the mission.

There are also 69 Canadian special forces training and advising Iraqi troops on the ground, but theoretically not in combat.

Most of the instruction, a key plank of Western moves to defeat the emboldened IS group, takes place "well behind front lines," Rouleau noted.

The Islamic State group gained international notoriety last August when its fighters and those from other militant groups swept through the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, then overran swaths of territory north and west of Baghdad, threatening to overrun the capital.

Western governments fear IS could eventually strike overseas, but their biggest immediate worry was its gains in Iraq and Syria, and the likely eventual return home of foreign fighters.

US President Barack Obama has outlined plans for the broad international coalition to "significantly degrade" the group in Iraq and Syria.

The coalition air strikes in Iraq and Syria have targeted IS fighting positions, heavy weapons and buildings used to store weapons.

Lieutenant General Jonathan Vance said the Islamic State "has been stopped (in Iraq) and they are unable to mount broad offensive operations that would somehow change the situation dramatically."

But, he added, using another acronym for IS, "a large-scale reversal of ISIL's position in Iraq has yet to come."

Using aerial maps, he pointed out "relatively modest areas where the tide has turned and Iraqi forces are in control of the area."

Canada special forces clash with IS in Iraq - Yahoo News
 

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Scorpion

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How come this thread never updated!
 

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(Japan weighs ransom in ISIS threat to kill hostages)



An online video purports to show the Islamic State group threatening to kill two Japanese hostages unless it is paid a $200 million ransom in 72 hours.
 

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(Japan weighs ransom in ISIS threat to kill hostages)



An online video purports to show the Islamic State group threatening to kill two Japanese hostages unless it is paid a $200 million ransom in 72 hours.

We don't negotiate with terrorists....%-}
 

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Iraqi police: new ISIS commander in Anbar killed

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convoy of vehicles and fighters from the al-Qaida-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) fighters in Iraq's Anbar Province. (AP)

A newly appointed ISIS commander in Iraq's Anbar province has been killed, a police chief from Haditha told Al Arabiya News Channel on Thursday.

U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Stuart Jones earlier told the channel that theU.S.-led airstrikes have “taken more than half” of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group’s leaderships.

Jones described the airstrikes as having a “devastating” effect on ISIS, after Baghdad criticized Washington for doing “enough” to eliminate the Islamist group.

“We estimate that the airstrikes have now killed more than 6,000 ISIS fighters in Syria and Iraq,” Jones said.

The U.S. ambassador added that the airstrikes have “destroyed more than a thousand of ISIS vehicle inside Iraq.”

While he said the statistic were “not so important in themselves,” he said “they do show the degradation of ISIS.”

“They show ISIS inability to supply forces inside Iraq,” he said.

Meanwhile, Kurdish forces in northern Iraq said Wednesday that they had cleared ISIS insurgents from nearly 500 square kilometers of territory and broken a key ISIS supply line between the city of Mosul and strongholds to the west near Syria.

The Kurdish forces were assisted by air strikes that began the night before.

Last Update: Thursday, 22 January 2015 KSA 16:08 - GMT 13:08

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/New...police-New-ISIS-comander-in-Anbar-killed.html
 
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