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War against ISIS

Redheart

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Islamic State urges jihad against Russians, Americans: audio| Reuters

Islamic State called on Muslims to launch a "holy war" against Russians and Americans over what it called their "crusaders' war" in the Middle East, an audio message distributed by supporters of the ultra hardline group said on Tuesday.

"Islamic youth everywhere, ignite jihad against the Russians and the Americans in their crusaders' war against Muslims," the speech by Islamic State spokesman Abu Mohammad al-Adnani said.

The United States and Russia are carrying separate airstrike campaigns in Syria, which they say are targeting Islamic State.

Washington says Moscow's campaign has mainly targeted other insurgent groups including those that have fought Islamic State, a charge Russia denies.

The United States is also carrying out airstrikes in Iraq, where Russia has also become separately involved. A senior Iraqi parliamentarian said on Tuesday that Russian officials were part of a new Iraq-based intelligence center with staff from Iran and Syria.

The audio message also confirmed the death of Abu Mutaz Qurashi, which the SITE monitoring service said was a reference to a senior Islamic State official killed in an airstrike in Iraq in August and referred to then as Fadhil Ahmad al-Hayali.

The White House said at the time that a U.S. air strike in Iraq had killed Hayali, whom it described as the second-in-command of the group which has seized swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq.

The audio made no specific mention of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, whose health and whereabouts became a subject of speculation earlier this week when an Islamic State convoy was hit in Iraq.

Eight senior figures from Islamic State were killed in the Iraqi air strike while meeting in an Iraqi town on Sunday, but Baghdadi did not appear to be among them, residents of the town and hospital sources said.
 

BLACKEAGLE

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Iraqi forces gain more significant ground in Baiji
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Shiite fighters gather to fight against ISIS militants in Baiji. (Reuters)

AFP, Baiji
Friday, 16 October 2015

Iraqi forces defused booby traps and hunted down holdout jihadists in the strategic Baiji area Friday as part of their biggest advance against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group in months.

Baiji lies at a crossroads between several frontlines and control of the area is seen as the key to progress in other regions, including Anbar province where forces were also closing in on ISIS strongholds.

Iraq’s army, police and counter-terrorism services, as well as thousands of fighters from the Popular Mobilization (Hashed al-Shaabi), continued to gain significant ground in and around Baiji, officers said.

“Iraqi forces are moving deep into Baiji, they have retaken the industrial area and several other neighborhoods,” an army colonel told AFP.

“We control about 60 percent of the city, there are not so many Daesh fighters left and they are trapped,” he said, using an Arabic acronym for ISIS.

After retaking most of the refinery to the north of the city, security forces were sweeping the sprawling complex for bombs and die-hard jihadists.

“Inside the refinery, our forces are defusing booby traps and looking for the last Daesh terrorists we believe are still holed up in some buildings,” he said.

The refinery, which once produced 300,000 barrels per day of refined products meeting half of Iraq's needs, is said to have been damaged beyond repair and to no longer be of huge strategic interest.

At least six anti-ISIS fighters were killed at the refinery on Thursday, several officers said.

The bodies of at least 15 ISIS fighters were also found there and large numbers of wounded jihadists are reported to have been evacuated to the nearby ISIS strongholds of Hawijah and Sharqat.

The same officer also said that Iraqi forces had completely surrounded Sinniya, a town west of Baiji on the road leading to Anbar.

“We are firing large numbers of rockets and missiles, while Iraqi warplanes are also striking. This will prepare the ground for an operation to cleanse Sinniya,” he said.

The operation launched this week to secure Baiji, which has seen almost uninterrupted fighting since IS swept across Iraq’s Sunni Arab heartland in June 2014, appears to be spearheaded by the Hashed.

Hadi al-Ameri, the most visible commander of the Hashed and a leading member of the Tehran-backed Shiite militia Badr, has been omnipresent on the Baiji frontlines.

Qassem Soleimani, commander of the foreign wing of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards, was also reported in Iraqi media to have played a key role.

The U.S.-led coalition, which is more active on the Anbar front, said Friday it had carried out two strikes in the Baiji area the previous day.

It also said it had destroyed parts of another refinery, in Qayyarah between Baiji and main northern city of Mosul, that “was used by Daesh to produce oil for the black market to fund their terrorist activities.”

Last Update: Friday, 16 October 2015 KSA 16:43 - GMT 13:43
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2015/10/16/Iraqi-forces-in-huge-anti-ISIS-push-.html
 

Redheart

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Paris attacks: 'France will destroy IS' - Hollande - BBC News

France is committed to "destroying" the so-called Islamic State group after Friday's deadly attacks, President Francois Hollande has said.

He said he would table a bill to extend the state of emergency declared after the attacks for three months and would suggest changes to the constitution.

France's military campaign against IS in Iraq and Syria will also intensify.

IS says it carried out the attacks on bars, restaurants, a concert hall and a stadium in which 129 people died.

Speaking during a joint session of both houses of parliament, Mr Hollande said the constitution needed to be amended as "we need an appropriate tool we can use without having to resort to the state of emergency".

Mr Hollande said he would travel to meet US President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin in the coming days to discuss action against the group.

US Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Paris on Monday evening to show support for "America's oldest friend" against what he called "psychopathic monsters".

At a G20 summit in Turkey, world leaders promised tighter co-operation in the wake of the attacks.

Mr Obama said the US and France had made a new agreement on intelligence sharing but said US military advisers thought sending ground troops to combat Isis would be a mistake.
 

djordjem87

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Well, we all seen what 2015. brought to us. The real question now is what will 2016. bring and will the Earth have another global war. It has the potential and as someone said above in the comments. Fanaticism have no space to fear death so they have the advantage on that level and it is quite a leverage. My personal opinion is that wars are led either between two powerful sides that use small and gullible countries to do most of the work or between group of powerful countries with their second fiddle allies against some so called terrorists with fanatic religion dogmas. Wars are not for people's freedom or the just cause, pride or whatever. They are fought for the resources, raw materials and strategic sites.
 

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ISIS determined to produce chemical weapons: say officials
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ISIS recently moved its research labs, experts and materials from Iraq to “secured locations” inside Syria (File Photo: AP)

Baghdad, AP Thursday, 19 November 2015

The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group is aggressively pursuing development of chemical weapons, setting up a branch dedicated to research and experiments with the help of scientists from Iraq, Syria and elsewhere in the region, according to Iraqi and U.S. intelligence officials.

Their quest raises an alarming scenario for the West, given the determination to strike major cities that the group showed with its bloody attack last week in Paris. On Thursday, French Prime Minister Manuel Valls warned that Islamic extremists might at some point use chemical or biological weapons.

“Terrorism hit France not because of what it is doing in Iraq and Syria ... but for what it is,” Valls told the lower house of Parliament. “We know that there could also be a risk of chemical or biological weapons,” he added, though he did not talk of a specific threat.

U.S. intelligence officials don’t believe ISIS has the capability to develop sophisticated weapons like nerve gas that are most suited for a terrorist attack on a civilian target. So far the group has used mustard gas on the battlefield in Iraq and Syria.

But Iraqi officials expressed concern that the large safe haven the extremists control since overrunning parts of Iraq and Syria last year has left Iraqi authorities largely in the dark over the ISIS program.

“They now have complete freedom to select locations for their labs and production sites and have a wide range of experts, both civilians and military, to aid them,” a senior Iraqi intelligence official told The Associated Press.

The official, like others from the Iraqi and U.S. intelligence agencies who have first-hand knowledge of the ISIS chemical weapons program, spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive information.

So far, the only overt sign of the group’s chemical weapons program has been the apparent use of mustard gas against Iraqi Kurdish fighters and in Syria. In mortars that hit Kurdish forces in northern Iraq earlier this year, preliminary tests by the U.S. showed traces of the chemical agent sulfur mustard.

Iraqi authorities clearly fear the use could be expanded. Over the summer, Iraq’s military distributed gas masks to troops deployed west and north of Baghdad, one general told the AP. A senior officer in Salahuddin province, north of Baghdad, said 25 percent of the troops deployed there were equipped with masks.

More recently, Iraq’s military received from Russia 1,000 protective suits against chemical attacks, said Hakim al-Zamili, the head of the Iraqi parliament’s security and defense committee.

ISIS has set up a branch tasked with pursuing chemical weapons, according to a senior Iraqi military intelligence officer and two officials from another Iraqi intelligence agency. They wouldn’t give details of the program, including how many personnel it is believed to have or its budget.

But al-Zamili, citing intelligence reports he has access to, told the AP that the group has managed to attract chemical experts from abroad as well as Iraqi experts, including ones who once worked for Saddam Hussein’s now-dissolved Military Industrialization Authority. The foreigners include experts from Chechnya and southeast Asia, the Iraqi intelligence officials said.

ISIS recently moved its research labs, experts and materials from Iraq to “secured locations” inside Syria, al-Zamili added - apparently out of concern of an eventual assault on Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, captured by ISIS in the summer of 2014.

“Daesh is working very seriously to reach production of chemical weapons, particularly nerve gas,” al-Zamili said, using an Arabic acronym for the group. “That would threaten not just Iraq but the whole world.”

Still, U.S. intelligence officials say they don’t believe ISIS has the technological capability to produce nerve gas or biological agents, and that the militants were more likely to harm themselves trying to make them. A European official privy to intelligence on the extremist group’s programs agreed, saying so far even ISIS production of mustard gas was in small quantities and of low quality.

Retired Lt. Gen. Richard Zahner, who was the top American military intelligence officer in Iraq in 2005 and 2006 and went on to lead the National Security Agency's electronic spying arm, noted that al-Qaida tried for two decades to develop chemical weapons and didn't succeed, showing the technical and scientific difficulties.

However, he said, U.S. intelligence agencies have consistently underestimated ISIS, which has shown itself to be more capable and innovative than al-Qaeda and has greater financial resources. Given that and its inheritance of Saddam-era experts, he said, it could realistically reach a “limited” program for battlefield uses.

“Even a few competent scientists and engineers, given the right motivation and a few material resources, can produce hazardous industrial and weapons-specific chemicals in limited quantities,” Zahner said.

Developing chemical weapons has been an ambition of the group - and various other Islamist movements - for years.

In a 2013 report on ISIS’ weapons procurement efforts, a senior deputy of the militant group’s leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi wrote of “significant progress” toward producing chemical weapons, according to two senior officials who had access to the document after it was obtained by Iraqi intelligence.

In it, the deputy, Sameer al-Khalifawy, wrote that chemical weapons would ensure “swift victory” and “terrorize our enemies.” But, he added, what was needed was "to secure a safe environment to carry out experiments."

Al-Khalifawy was killed by rebels in Syria in early 2014, just months before ISIS overran Mosul and much of northern and western Iraq, linking that territory to the stretches of northern and eastern Syria it controlled and declaring itself a “caliphate.”

In May 2013, Iraqi security forces, acting on a tip from the Americans, raided a secret chemical weapons research lab in Baghdad’s Sunni-majority district of al-Doura, the Iraqi intelligence officials said. Security forces arrested two militants running the lab, Kefah Ibrahim al-Jabouri, who held a master’s degree in chemistry, and Adel Mahmoud al-Abadi, who has a bachelor’s degree in physics and worked at Saddam’s Military Industrialization Authority before it was disbanded in 2003.

The Iraqi officials said the two men were working with al-Baghdadi, citing ISIS correspondence they seized from al-Jabouri. Other international officials disputed this, however, saying the men were not connected with the group.

Iraqi officials complained of lack of cooperation from neighboring Syria.

They cited the case of a veteran Iraqi Islamist and weapons expert, Ziad Tareq Ahmed, who fled to Syria after Iraqi security agents raided his Baghdad home in 2010 and arrested members of his cell. The agents found large amounts of material that could be used for making mustard gas.

Ahmed, who has a master’s degree in chemistry and has worked with several Islamic militant groups without formally joining any, was arrested by the Syrians last year. The Syrian government allowed Iraqi officals to interrogate him in prison but refused to hand him over. Then last month, they released him, two Iraqi intelligence officials said.

“This is a very grave development,” said one of the officials, who heads one of Iraq’s top counterterrorism agencies. “His release adds significantly to our concerns.”

Last Update: Thursday, 19 November 2015 KSA 20:49 - GMT 17:49
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BLACKEAGLE

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Nearly 6,000 foreign militants on Interpol radar
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Interpol Secretary General Juergen Stock, pictured on May 19, 2015. (AFP)


AFP Thursday, 19 November 2015

Interpol has identified only 5,800 foreign fighters of the roughly 25,000 believed to have joined militant groups in conflict zones like Syria and Iraq, the head of the global police body said Wednesday.

He was speaking at an anti-terrorism conference in Seville just days after the Paris terror attacks which killed 129 people and a bomb threat in Germany which led to the cancellation of a football match between Germany and Netherlands.

“The organization currently holds records of some 5,800 suspected foreign terrorist fighters contributed by more than 50 countries,” Juergen Stock said in an address.

“But with some estimates putting the number of foreign terrorist fighters at more than 25,000 clearly a significant gap still exists between the number of foreign terrorist fighters we have identified and those estimated to have reached conflict zones.”

Stock said there had to be more information sharing between nations and improved access to the data they have for organizations like Interpol.

“Information is the lifeblood of police work... this information needs to be shared with Interpol,” he said.

Law enforcement and counter terrorism officials from around the world have gathered in Seville for a three-day conference to address ways to fight ISIS and other extremist groups.

“The so-called Islamic state has sent a clear signal that is bringing its fight to our doorsteps and to our capitals,” said Stock.

“We need to send an equally strong message that we are united in our efforts to protect citizens and combat this threat,” he added.

A 2015 U.N. report showed an increase in the number of foreign fighters from last year, with more than 25,000 foreign militants from more than 100 countries now involved in armed conflicts.

A large number of fighters were travelling from Tunisia, Morocco, France and Russia, but the report cited new flows of militants from the Maldives, Finland, Trinidad and Tobago, as well as from some countries in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Last Update: Thursday, 19 November 2015 KSA 11:37 - GMT 08:37
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/world/2015/11/19/Nearly-6-000-foreign-militants-on-Interpol-radar.html
 

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Pentagon targeting trucks, rigs in assault on ISIS oil funding
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Smoke rises from the site of U.S.-led air strikes in the town of Sinjar, Iraq November 13, 2015. (Reuters)

Reuters, Washington Wednesday, 18 November 2015

U.S.-led air strikes have hit at least 175 targets in the ISIS’s main oil-producing region over the past month, as Washington intensifies efforts to disrupt a key revenue source estimated to provide more than $1 million a day to the militant group.

Those strikes include 116 oil tanker trucks hit by coalition forces earlier this week as the United States targeted the vehicles for the first time in the wake of last Friday’s suicide and shooting attacks in Paris claimed by ISIS.

The stepped-up bombing campaign has also targeted oil rigs, pumps and storage tanks, according to a Reuters tally of air strikes provided by the Pentagon since Oct 22.

The campaign marks a more aggressive U.S. approach. Such targets had previously been considered off limits by the U.S.-led coalition as it sought to avoid civilian casualties and limit the damage to oil infrastructure that could be needed later by a new Syrian government.

The Pentagon said last Friday that its recent air strikes in Syria had inflicted “significant damage” to ISIS’s ability to fund itself. Dubbed “Tidal Wave II”, the strikes have been concentrated on oil facilities near Dayr Az Zawr and Abu Kamal, which provide an estimated two-thirds of ISIS’s oil revenue.

It remains unclear how far along the Pentagon campaign on ISIS oil infrastructure was toward achieving U.S. objectives and how much bigger the pool of potential targets might be. In the past, ISIS has been able to repair oil facilities damaged in air strikes in as little as 24 hours.

The goal this time is to knock oil fields out of commission for a year or more without destroying them completely. That would deprive the extremist group of revenues but allow oil resources to be accessed by other forces if and when ISIS is forced out of the territory it currently occupies.

“Nobody wants this to be another Baiji,” one U.S. official said, referring to the disputed Iraqi oil refinery that has been rendered unusable by U.S.-led strikes and bombings.

“Everything that we’re doing carries a timeline attached to it,” the official said.

Varied targets
The civilian fuel trucks hit this week are viewed as a crucial link for the extremist group’s oil business as they are used to transport oil across ISIS territory and sell it to residents who use it to power generators and vehicles.

“We finally blew up a bunch of oil trucks,” said former State Department counter terrorism coordinator Daniel Benjamin. “It’s not entirely clear to me what took so long.”

Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook, speaking at a briefing on Tuesday, said no civilians appear to have been hurt in the truck strikes.

The targets can vary. On Nov. 8, coalition forces hit three refineries and three pump sites. On Nov. 2, they hit 3 cranes, two construction vehicles, an oil pump and a pump truck.

Air strikes last year against targets such as mobile refineries had cut the group’s oil revenues from $3 million a day to under $1 million a day, according to several independent estimates.

But the group was able repair those facilities quickly, U.S. officials say. It may struggle to do after the most recent bombings.

“They don’t have the wherewithal, the skill set and the materials to repair the oil wells themselves,” said Matthew Levitt, a former U.S. Treasury Department official now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

The new strategy carries some risk. An aggressive bombing campaign may permanently disable oil wells and other facilities, rendering them useless for any future Syrian government.

“You’d want those to be available ultimately for the legitimate governments that could follow, but that’s just not on the horizon right now. And meanwhile the ISIS is making a lot of money,” Levitt said.

Coalition forces also run a greater risk of killing civilians who work in the oil trade. And because most of the petroleum is sold within the territory controlled by ISIS, rather than exported to other countries, any disruption in supply would likely make life harder for a population that already is struggling to make ends meet.

ISIS is believed to rely on multiple revenue streams to finance its activity.

Benjamin said some reports suggest ISIS still earns as much as $40 million per month from oil sales, a total that further strikes could significantly reduce.

But a February report by the Financial Action Task Force, an international anti-money laundering body, found that ISIS makes most of its money by taxing or extorting those who live in the area it controls, rather than selling oil. It also profits from kidnapping and the sale of antiquities.

Last Update: Wednesday, 18 November 2015 KSA 18:12 - GMT 15:12
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Lavrov urges unity on ISIS after Russia, France kill 33 militants
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Frame grab taken from a footage released by Russia’s Defence Ministry shows Russian long-range bomber dropping bomb at unknown location in Syria. (Reuters)


By Staff writer, Al Arabiya News Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov urged on Wednesday global powers to unite without any preconditions on the fate of Syria’s leader Bashar al-Assad after Russia and France killed 33 militants in 72 hours.

“It seems to me there are no longer any doubts that it is simply unacceptable to put forward any pre-conditions for joining forces in the fight against terror,” Lavrov told reporters.

Lavrov, who said there was still no agreement about Assad’s political fate after international talks in Vienna, said he had detected a change in the West’s position since the Paris attacks and the bombing of a Russian passenger plane.

Unlike the United States and other Western allies, Russia continues to say that Syrians need to decide in an election on whether Assad to stay or go.

U.S. President Barack Obama on Wednesday praised Russia’s role in talks to end the Syria crisis and offered the prospect of better ties if Moscow focused military strikes on the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group.

But, he said, there were still differences over the fate of Syrian ruler, and Moscow’s current military focus on defending him.

“I hope the change in the position of our Western colleagues -- which has unfortunately only come about as the result of terrible acts of terror -- will spread to other Western partners. That the stance that the real battle with ISIS can only be resolved once the fate of Assad is clear, that this position will put to one side,” said Lavrov.

“In my opinion there can now be no doubts that it is simply unacceptable to put forward any preconditions in order to unite in the battle against so-called Islamic State terrorists.”

Meanwhile, Syria’s foreign minister Walid al-Moualem will visit Russia next week for talks with Lavrov about his country's crisis and the struggle against terrorism.

Spain: Assad a ‘lesser evil’
Meanwhile, Spain’s foreign minister pleaded Wednesday in favor of engaging with Assad to deal with the terror threat in Europe, just days after deadly attacks in Paris.

“The lesser evil is to come to an agreement with Bashar al-Assad to begin a ceasefire allowing aid to reach the displaced... kickstart a political transition and above all attack our common enemy -- Daesh (ISIS),” Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo told TVE television.

“We have to replace the ‘Bashar yes or Bashar no’ discourse by one of peace or war. If you want peace, you are going to have get along with Assad at least on a temporary basis.”

He added: “(former US President Franklin D) Roosevelt was forced to come to an agreement with Stalin to finish with the Nazis, as it was a lesser evil at the time.”

Garcia-Margallo said there was still no sign of a concrete European action plan.

Russia, France strike ISIS
Lavrov’s statement comes after a monitoring group said on Wednesday that French and Russian air strikes in northern Syria have killed at least 33 ISIS jihadists with in the last 72 hours.

Dozens of ISIS fighters were also wounded in the raids on weapons depots, barracks and checkpoints in the jihadists’ de facto Syrian capital of Raqqa, said Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

France intensified strikes on Raqqa following last week’s attacks in Paris that left 129 dead, with warplanes carrying out dozens of raids on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday.

Russia also pounded Raqqa with long-range bombers and sea-launched missiles on Tuesday, after Moscow confirmed that a bomb attack brought down a Russian passenger jet over Egypt last month, killing all 224 people on board.

“The limited number of deaths can be explained by the fact that the jihadists had taken precautions,” said Abdel Rahman, who relies on a network of activists, medics and other sources inside Syria.

“There were only guards around the depots and barracks and most of those killed were at the checkpoints,” he said.

He said many families of foreign fighters had also left the city for Mosul in Iraq, another stronghold of ISIS, which has seized control of large parts of Syria and Iraq.

Russian jets ‘hunt’ ISIS oil tankers
Meanwhile, Russia on Wednesday said its planes were targeting oil tanker trucks belonging to ISIS in Syria.

“Today a decision was taken according to which Russian warplanes are now flying on a so-called ‘free hunt’ against tanker trucks carrying oil products belonging to terrorists in areas controlled by ISIS,” senior Russian military official Andrei Kartapolov was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.

Also read: Pentagon targeting trucks, rigs in assault on ISIS oil funding

The French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle will also be operational in the eastern Mediterranean “by the end of the week,” Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told parliament on Wednesday.

The Charles de Gaulle left the southern port of Toulon earlier on Wednesday to take part in intensified air strikes against ISIS targets.

With 26 fighter jets aboard -- 18 Rafale and eight Super Etendard -- France will have a total 44 aircraft in the area, including 12 based in the United Arab Emirates and six in Jordan.

Russia steps up intel gathering
Russia has stepped up all types of intelligence gathering in the Middle East, including satellite reconnaissance, a senior representative of the Russian Army’s General Staff said on Wednesday, Russian news agencies reported.


(With AFP, Reuters)

Last Update: Wednesday, 18 November 2015 KSA 20:09 - GMT 17:09
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Turkey ‘has plans’ for joint U.S. operation against ISIS
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Image taken from Islamic State video footage shows a man identified in the subtitiles as Al Karar the Iraqi gesturing as he speaks. (Reuters)


AFP, Istanbul Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Turkey’s foreign minister on Wednesday said Ankara “has plans” for a joint operation with the United States to end the presence of Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militants along any part of its border with Syria.

Foreign Minister Feridun Sinirlioglu told the state-run news agency Anatolia that ISIS militants still had a presence on some of Turkey’s border with northern Syria.

“We have certain plans to put an end to the control that ISIS is still exercising on a zone of our frontier,” he said, without specifying on the nature of the plans but saying they would be jointly implemented with the United States.

“When these plans are completed, our operations will continue with more and more intensity. You will see this in the days to come,” he added.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said in an interview with CNN late Tuesday that “we are entering an operation with the Turks” to shut off 98 kilometers (61 miles) of border still not secure from ISIS.

Their comments come amid growing momentum for coordinated international action against ISIS after the Paris attacks last week claimed by the extremist Islamist group which killed 129 and injured 350.

ISIS suspects arrested
Turkish police detained eight ISIS suspects, state media said Wednesday, adding they were planning to sneak into Europe posing as refugees.

Counter-terror police detained the suspects in Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport after they flew in from the Moroccan city of Casablanca on Tuesday, the official Anatolia news agency reported.

The police found a hand-written note on one of the suspects detailing a migration route from Istanbul to Germany via Greece, Serbia and Hungary, including smuggler boats across the Mediterranean Sea, as well as several train and bus journeys.

The eight men told police that they were just tourists who had been planning to spend a few days in Istanbul and had booked rooms at a hotel, but no reservations were found under their names.

Turkey is the main launching point for migrants coming to Europe, and currently hosts over two million Syrian refugees.

More than 650,000 migrants and refugees, have reached the Greek islands so far in 2015 using the eastern Mediterranean route, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said earlier this month.

The Paris attacks however threw a security spotlight on the migrant flow, after the discovery at the scene of one of Friday’s attacks of a Syrian passport registered in the Greek island of Leros on Oct. 3.

Turkey was long criticized by its Western allies for failure to take robust action to stem the flow of ISIS militants across its porous border.

But Ankara has stepped security measures in recent months after a series of deadly attacks blamed on the extremists, including a twin suicide bombing in Ankara that killed 102 people last month.

According to official data released to AFP last week, in the first half of 2015 over 700 foreign suspected jihadists were detained and deported from Turkey whereas for all of 2014 the figure was 520.

Last Update: Wednesday, 18 November 2015 KSA 15:28 - GMT 12:28
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U.S. strikes on ISIS oil supply initially only ‘minimally effective’
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Smoke rises from ISIS positions following a U.S.-led coalition airstrike. (File photo: AP)


AFP, Washington Thursday, 19 November 2015

U.S. air strikes have been only “minimally effective” in destroying oil infrastructure in the hands of militants, a military spokesman said Wednesday, explaining why tanker trucks in Syria are now being targeted instead.

The U.S.-led coalition that has been conducting drone and plane strikes in Iraq and Syria for more than a year has repeatedly hit ISIS oil equipment - only to see the militants quickly repair it.

ISIS militants reportedly rake in millions of dollars in revenue from oil fields under their control.

“We have been striking oil infrastructure targets since the very beginning of this operation,” Colonel Steve Warren told reporters in a video call from Baghdad.

“What we found out was that many of our strikes were only minimally effective.”

On Sunday, U.S. military planners tried a new tactic, attacking a large convoy of gas trucks that had massed in the desert in eastern Syria to collect “illicit oil,” Warren said.

About 45 minutes before the strike, which saw the destruction of 116 fuel trucks, warplanes conducted a low pass known as a “show of force” and dropped leaflets warning drivers to flee.

The leaflet states: “Get out of your trucks now, and run away from them.”

“A very simple message,” Warren said.

Though the trucks were being used to support the ISIS group, the drivers were not thought to be militants, he added. The strike was conducted near Albu Kamal, an IS-held town in Deir Ezzor province along Syria’s border with Iraq.

“They’re probably just civilians,” Warren said. “So we had to figure out a way around that. We’re not in this business to kill civilians, we’re in this business to stop” the ISIS group.

War-torn Syria is also being bombed by Russia, which claims it is targeting “terrorists,” but the United States says Moscow is trying to prop up President Bashar al-Assad.

Moscow used long-range bombers that flew in from Russia on Tuesday to target several areas in Syria including the ISIS stronghold of Raqa.

Warren said it would be “no surprise” if the bombs had resulted in civilian casualties and he blasted the Russian air force as outdated.

“Those are the type of tactics needed only if you don’t possess the technology, the skills and the capabilities to conduct the type of precision strikes that our coalition conducts,” he said.

The ISIS group has declared a self-styled caliphate in bands of territory it seized in Iraq and Syria, but has faced recent setbacks from Kurdish and Arab forces in Iraq’s Sinjar and parts of northeastern Syria

Last Update: Thursday, 19 November 2015 KSA 15:03 - GMT 12:03
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Russia hits ISIS oil assets, ‘ready’ to work with anti-ISIS coalition
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Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov addresses the media in Vienna. (File photo: Reuters)


By Staff writer, Al Arabiya News Thursday, 19 November 2015
Russia is ready to work with the Western coalition fighting ISIS and had its air force conducting mass strikes on terrorist positions and their oil assets Thursday.

Russia’s General Staff said the mass strikes hit oil refining assets under ISIS’s control, the RIA Novosti news agency reported.

Russian planes fired twelve cruise missiles at ISIS targets in the Aleppo and Idlib provinces, it added.

Meanwhile, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday Moscow is ready to work with the Western coalition fighting ISIS group if its members respect Syria’s sovereignty.

“We...are ready for practical cooperation with those countries which are part of the coalition and are ready to develop with them such forms of coordination that of course would respect Syria’s sovereignty and the prerogatives of the Syrian leadership,” Lavrov said in an interview with state-run Radio of Russia.

“I am convinced that such forms can be found if we take a pragmatic approach.”

Lavrov also said the Paris attacks have helped the West understand that the priority in Syria is to fight ISIS not to topple President Bashar al-Assad.

Lavrov reiterated Moscow’s position that there was no way to solve the Syria crisis peacefully without Assad, who he said represented the interests of a significant part of Syrian society.

Meanwhile, Syria’s Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem plans to visit Russia on Nov. 25, Sputnik news agency reported on Thursday, citing Syria’s embassy in Moscow.

Walid al-Moualem will visit Russia next week for talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov about his country’s crisis and the struggle against terrorism, RIA news agency reported on Wednesday.

France, Russia joint efforts
Russian and French military officials, meanwhile, held a phone call on Thursday to discuss joint efforts to fight ISIS in Syria, the RIA news agency reported.

Russia’s chief of general staff held talks with his French counterpart on Thursday on combating ISIS in Syria, in the first such contact since the start of the Ukraine conflict last year.

Valery Gerasimov and Pierre de Villiers “discussed on the phone the coordination of military troops’ actions against ISIS terrorists in Syria,” the Russian defence ministry said in a statement, adding that the conversation lasted an hour.

The two military chiefs “exchanged their evaluations of the current situation in the country” following calls to unite efforts against ISIS group by presidents Vladimir Putin and Francois Hollande.

“The terrorist acts in Paris and on board of the Russian passenger plane are links of one chain,” Gerasimov was shown by state television as saying on the phone to his French colleague.

“Our grief and our wrath must help join efforts of Russia and France in the fight against international terrorism.”

Russia first launched air strikes on Syria in September at the request of its long-standing ally President Bashar al-Assad, while a U.S.-led coalition of countries opposed to the Syrian strongman is conducting a separate air campaign against ISIS.

In the aftermath of the Paris attacks on Friday, French President Francois Hollande called this week for a broad anti-ISIS coalition, echoing an earlier call made by Putin made at the U.N. General Assembly in September.

Hollande said he would next week discuss his proposal with U.S. President Barack Obama and Putin, who has ordered his navy in the Mediterranean to establish contact with its French counterparts and work together “as allies.”

(With agencies)

Last Update: Thursday, 19 November 2015 KSA 19:26 - GMT 16:26
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Erdogan urges united Muslim front against terror
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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talks during a news conference at the end of the G-20 summit in Antalya, Turkey, Monday, Nov. 16, 2015. (AP)

AFP, Istanbul Thursday, 19 November 2015

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday called for a united front by Muslim leaders to fight extremism after the Paris attacks, warning that otherwise jihadists will commit further atrocities.

Erdogan warned that “calamities will happen again” if the rise of radical Islam is not halted in Europe, after the Paris attacks last Friday claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group which killed 129 people and suicide bombings in Ankara that left 103 dead in October 10.

“We are at a crossroads in the fight against terrorism after the Paris attacks,” Erdogan told a meeting of the Atlantic Council think-tank in Istanbul.

“I strongly condemn the terrorists, who believe in the same religion as me, and I am calling on all leaders of Muslim countries to put up a united front,” he said.

“If not, those who knocked on our door in Ankara, will knock on your door elsewhere, as they did in Paris.”

Erdogan, a pious Muslim whose Justice and Development Party (AKP) spearheaded the rise of political Islam in Turkey, has long angrily dismissed suggestions that Ankara colluded with ISIS in the Syrian civil war.

Turkey has supported rebel groups throughout the over four years of conflict in Syria in the hope they can help oust President Bashar al-Assad from power.
But Erdogan lashed out at any notion “that all Muslims are terrorists,” saying: “Bad people can be Muslims as well as Christians and Jews.”

“Those who demonise Islam by looking at Daesh are making a big mistake,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for ISIS. “Daesh has nothing to do with Islam.”

With momentum building after the Paris attacks in the long-stalled bid of the world powers to find a solution for Syria, Erdogan made clear Turkey would not budge from its insistence that Assad must leave power.

He accused Assad of supporting ISIS -- which is ostensibly fighting the Damascus regime -- and buying oil from the group.

“You would be blind not see it.”

“The chief reason for the humanitarian crisis and the rise of terrorism in the region today is Assad... Assad is waging state terrorism,” said Erdogan.
International efforts to find common ground on Syria have so far been thwarted by disputes with Russia, which has long insisted the Syrian people alone should decide the fate of Assad, a Kremlin ally.

Turkey, however, has argued there can be no solution in Syria unless Assad leaves power.


Last Update: Thursday, 19 November 2015 KSA 18:35 - GMT 15:35
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Kuwait busts cell working to back, finance ISIS
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Security forces and officials gather at a Shiite mosque after a deadly blast claimed by ISIS that struck worshippers attending Friday prayers in Kuwait City. (File photo: AP)

By AFP, Kuwait City Thursday, 19 November 2015

Kuwaiti security authorities have busted an international cell led by a Lebanese man that was sending air defence systems and funds to ISIS, the interior ministry said Thursday.

The cell’s chief, who was not named, confessed that he raised funds and provided logistical support for the group, which has carried out deadly attacks in Lebanon and France in the past week, the ministry said.

He acted as coordinator for the ISIS in Kuwait and arranged arms deals and FN6 portable air defence systems from Ukraine, which were shipped to IS in Syria through Turkey.

The ministry did not provide details about the size of the arms deals.

Besides the Lebanese mastermind, authorities arrested three Syrians, an Egyptian and a Kuwaiti and said four others were outside Kuwait -- two Syrians and two Australians of Lebanese origin.

Several suspected ISIS members and sympathizers were tried in the Gulf emirate for a suicide bombing in June claimed by the group.

A court sentenced seven men to death and jailed eight others to between two and 15 years for assisting the Saudi bomber.

An appeals court is to issue its verdict in the case on Dec. 13.
Earlier this month, the lower court sentenced five men to 10 years in jail each for raising funds for ISIS.

They were charged with raising about 400,000 Kuwaiti dinars ($1.3 million) and sending it to IS, which has seized control of large parts of Syria and Iraq and carried out attacks throughout the Middle East.

Over the past year, Kuwaiti courts have issued several rulings against ISIS supporters.

Last Update: Thursday, 19 November 2015 KSA 22:29 - GMT 19:29
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King of Jordan warns of ‘world war’ against humanity
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Jordan's King Abdullah inspects the honour guard in Pristina, Kosovo November 17, 2015. (Reuters)

AFP, Pristina Tuesday, 17 November 2015

King Abdullah II of Jordan warned Tuesday of a “third world war against humanity”, in the wake of the Paris attacks, describing the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group as “savage outlaws of religion.”

During an official visit to Kosovo, Abdullah said both Europe and Islam were under attack from the “scourge” of terrorism that could strike at any time.

“We are facing a third world war against humanity and this is what brings us all together,” he told a press conference.

“This is a war, as I’ve said repeatedly, within Islam,” he said, adding: “Groups such as Daesh (ISIS) expose themselves daily as savage outlaws of religion devoid of humanity respecting no laws and no boundaries.”

“So therefore we must act fast and holistically to tackle and respond to the interconnected threats whether it is in this region, Africa, Asia or in Europe.”

Jordan -- like France -- is a member of the U.S.-led coalition battling IS, which controls swathes of land in its neighbors Iraq and Syria.

Last Update: Tuesday, 17 November 2015 KSA 22:23 - GMT 19:23
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