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Author Topic: Iraqi Forces Fighting for Ramadi Make Their Way Toward City Center  (Read 538 times)
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December 22, 2015, 07:32:58 PM
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BAGHDAD — Iraqi soldiers began a fierce assault to wrest control of the city of Ramadi from the Islamic State on Monday night, and by midday on Tuesday they had battled their way toward the city center despite heavy resistance, an army commander said.

The operation was undertaken by a mixture of soldiers, police officers and Sunni tribesmen opposed to the Islamic State, with close air support from the United States, which conducted 12 strikes around Ramadi on Tuesday.

“I think the fall of Ramadi is inevitable,” said Col. Steven H. Warren, the United States military spokesman here. “The end is coming.” But he added: “That said, it’s going to be a tough fight.”

The Iraqis ran into stiff resistance from the Islamic State, including booby-trapped buildings and improvised explosive devices. Around 300 Islamic State fighters are believed to be hunkered down in the northern reaches of the city.

If Iraqi forces manage to reassert control over Ramadi — the capital and largest city in Iraq’s western Anbar Province — it will be the latest in a series of military setbacks for the Islamic State. President Obama said recently that the militant group had lost 40 percent of the Iraqi territory it had seized in the middle of last year, as the United States and its allies have intensified their aerial bombardment against the group. In October, Iraqi forces and Shiite militias retook control of the northern city of Baiji and its oil refinery, and last month, Kurdish and Yazidi forces expelled the Islamic State out of the northern city of Sinjar.

Ramadi fell to the Islamic State in May, in a sudden collapse after a five-month battle. Since July, there have been a number of reports about efforts by the Iraqi Army to retake the city, but the latest offensive has been the most serious and sustained so far. Over the last month or so, Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters have encircled the city; two weeks ago, they seized a large neighborhood, Tamim, on its southwestern outskirts.

“We went into the center of Ramadi from different axes, and we started clearing residential areas,” Gen. Sabah al-Numani, a spokesman for the army counterterrorism unit in charge of the offensive, said in a statement on Tuesday. He predicted that “the city will be cleared within the coming 72 hours.”

Six hundred to a thousand Islamic State fighters were in Ramadi when the offensive began two weeks ago, but several hundred of them have been killed in heavy fighting since then.

Those remaining did not appear to be giving up easily. They destroyed three bridges over the Euphrates River to prevent security forces from entering the city, according to Gen. Ahmed al-Belawi, the leader of a battalion of Sunni tribal fighters.

Colonel Warren said that Iraqi forces had crossed the river by deploying “floating bridges” capable of moving fighters and heavy equipment across the water, as American troops had trained them to do.

Al Jazeera reported that 14 soldiers and 17 tribal fighters were killed by a suicide car bomber in Albu Diab, northwest of the city center, and that at least 12 militants had been killed. MSNBC released a video that it said showed an Islamic State counterattack on the eastern edge of the city, and it quoted a tribal fighter as saying that at least seven Islamic State militants had been killed. Those casualty numbers could not be independently confirmed.


Iraqi airplanes dropped leaflets on Sunday urging residents of Ramadi to evacuate within 72 hours, warning of an impending operation, and suggesting two evacuation routes. On Monday, Lt. Gen. Othman al-Ghanimi, the acting army chief of staff, said that “Iraqi forces will start the operation to retake Ramadi soon.” Colonel Warren estimated that thousands or even tens of thousands of civilians were still in the city; hundreds of thousands of others have fled.

In a telephone briefing on Tuesday, Colonel Warren said that coalition forces had recovered Islamic State leaflets in the nearby city of Falluja urging its fighters — if they lose control of the city — to impersonate Iraqi security forces and commit atrocities. “Some acts that they’re instructed to do on this document include blowing up mosques, killing and torturing civilians and breaking into homes while dressed as I.S.F. fighters,” Colonel Warren said, referring to Iraqi security forces. “They do all this to discredit the I.S.F.”

Colonel Warren called the instructions in the leaflets “the behavior of thugs, behavior of killers, the behavior of terrorists.”

A security official in Anbar Province said in a phone interview that “ISIS are preventing the people of Ramadi from leaving and using them as human shields.”

The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss military operations, added that the Iraqi forces, entering from the southeast of Ramadi, were within two miles of the city center, where the local government compound is. The official added that the suburb of Bakir had been “completely devastated” from airstrikes and shelling.

Since the middle of 2014, the Islamic State has controlled perhaps one-third of the territory of Iraq, including the northern city of Mosul. But it has lost several towns in recent months since the government in Baghdad and in the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq have begun to fight back.

On Monday, Iraq’s prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, said that he had agreed to the deployment of 200 American ground forces in Iraq to help with the operations against the Islamic State.

Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter had offered Apache attack helicopters to the Iraqi government to aid the effort, but so far, Mr. Abadi, under pressure from Shiite groups and Iran to keep the United States at a distance, has not accepted the offer.

To make gains in Anbar Province, which is a Sunni stronghold, the United States has urged Mr. Abadi’s government to reach out to Sunni tribal fighters trained and equipped by the United States. Although the Shiite fighters are among the most effective of Iraq’s military forces — playing a crucial role in retaking northern cities like Tikrit and Baiji — they have been kept out of the Ramadi fight for fear of alienating the local population.

Even if the Iraqi military finally does reclaim Ramadi from the Islamic State, regional experts warn, the Sunni city will not take kindly to being overrun by the Shiite-dominated Iraqi military. The Pentagon has been training Sunni tribal fighters to make up a “hold” force for the city if and when the Islamic State is fully routed.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/23/world/middleeast/iraqi-army-isis-ramadi.html?ref=world&_r=0

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December 23, 2015, 02:26:15 AM
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I don't know WTF is wrong with the Iraqi army. Some 30,000 soldiers are not able to defeat a small group of 300 Islamic State fighters? Had this been the Syrian Army, then the battle would have been over in a matter of hours. Either these people doesn't have any of the qualities needed for a soldier, or the training handed out by the Americans was not up to the standard.
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December 23, 2015, 02:35:34 AM
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Either these people doesn't have any of the qualities needed for a soldier, or the training handed out by the Americans was not up to the standard.

Maybe both, maybe lack of equipments/courage, besides fighting in the streets is harder especially when the civilians are still there, of course the Syrian army doesn't care a lot about them so yeah, it may take many destroyed streets/building in a matter of hours with a blood river. I don't hate the Syrian army, they are doing their job but from what i see they don't give a shit to the human life...

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December 23, 2015, 10:37:29 AM
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This is the reason why ISIS is lashing out against Western nations: They're losing in the Middle East to the local forces, almost universally Muslims opposed to them. The leaders of Daesh know that the sales pitch of "Be a jihadist, get killed by other Muslims for no good reason" is not a good one to make...
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December 23, 2015, 01:06:04 PM
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I don't know WTF is wrong with the Iraqi army. Some 30,000 soldiers are not able to defeat a small group of 300 Islamic State fighters? Had this been the Syrian Army, then the battle would have been over in a matter of hours. Either these people doesn't have any of the qualities needed for a soldier, or the training handed out by the Americans was not up to the standard.

Maybe they want to keep the buildings in more or less one piece. A massive carpet bombing and then sending in flame thrower tanks and self propelled guns with a lot of infantry support would be quicker, but after that there wouldn't be city there any more. The SAA is much better trained, equipped and determined. In addition Iraq had to rebuild it's army after ater it was routed by IS, while the SAA made a fighting retreat into defensible positions and it's just got more tough and battle hardened after the hammering.

BTW on the military academy I've seen plenty of Iraqi and Syrian officers on post-gradual trainings and the difference between them is like the difference between theology and geology Smiley.  Syrians were much more disciplined and determined.
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December 24, 2015, 02:17:45 AM
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Syrian army doesn't care a lot about them so yeah, it may take many destroyed streets/building in a matter of hours with a blood river. I don't hate the Syrian army, they are doing their job but from what i see they don't give a shit to the human life...

If the civilians don't want to get caught up in the cross-fire, then they should move to safer locations. More than half of the original population in the ISIS controlled territories of Syria are now living as refugees in various IDP camps within the regime controlled area. Most of the remaining are ISIS sympathizers, so I don't care what happens to them.
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December 24, 2015, 03:35:10 PM
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Most of the remaining are ISIS sympathizers, so I don't care what happens to them.

No. Back to the Ukrainian crisis, many people kept leaving in their towns controlled by the rebels even if they don't support them and vice-versa.
Back to Iraq, they simply cannot leave because the killer group is threatening them, it is like escaping from prison, you will get shooted if you try. This is 1 reason among others.
If you have friends stucked in Ukraine/Syria/Iraq...etc your opinion will change and you will care about their lives.
People nowadays care more about a sick dog of a celebrity than millions of refugees and hundreds of innocents killed everyday. Unbelievable...

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December 25, 2015, 03:12:09 AM
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I don't know WTF is wrong with the Iraqi army. Some 30,000 soldiers are not able to defeat a small group of 300 Islamic State fighters? Had this been the Syrian Army, then the battle would have been over in a matter of hours. Either these people doesn't have any of the qualities needed for a soldier, or the training handed out by the Americans was not up to the standard.

They are not mentally up for it I suppose. This is what happens when training is insufficient, and loyalty is scarce.

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December 25, 2015, 03:36:07 AM
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People nowadays care more about a sick dog of a celebrity than millions of refugees and hundreds of innocents killed everyday. Unbelievable...

Yes, and they never tire of gloating about how tolerant and compassionate they are. I guess they learn the double standards from the amoral leadership they vote into office. Like seeks like.

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December 25, 2015, 04:37:09 AM
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They are not mentally up for it I suppose. This is what happens when training is insufficient, and loyalty is scarce.

I don't think that there was any issues regarding the training. The training was directly given by the United States Armed Forces. And also, I would not doubt their loyalty, as most of the recruits were Shiite. I don't think that they would defect to ISIS under any condition, as the latter has threatened to exterminate every single Shiite individual.
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December 25, 2015, 01:57:12 PM
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FORSSA, Finland — War in Syria and Iraq seems distant from the incongruously named Villa Eden Care, a glum former hotel now housing some 300 refugees on the edge of this tidy, snow-swept town of 18,000.

But the largest atrocity attributed to Islamic State fighters washed right up in Forssa this month. The local and national police swept in and detained two refugees, 23-year-old twin brothers from Iraq, suspected of shooting 11 people during the massacre of as many as 1,700 unarmed Iraqi Army recruits near Tikrit in June 2014.

As hundreds of thousands of refugees have marched their way onto Europe’s agenda this year, so, too, have fears that past, present and future jihadists are among them.

Even as security services confront evidence that some of the participants in the Paris attacks of Nov. 13 might have entered Europe via the migrant trail, and as they struggle to assess the threat from thousands of European citizens who have traveled to fight in Syria and then returned home, they are starting to encounter another issue: holding Europeans and non-Europeans to account for killings and other atrocities carried out on the battlefields of the Middle East.

Two recent cases in the northernmost reaches of Europe have highlighted the complexities of pursuing prosecutions in such cases, even when the authorities are aided by the penchant of Islamic State fighters to document their acts on camera.

Jari Raty, who heads the investigation of the brothers, said the two were suspected in 11 counts of “murder committed with terrorist intent.” The main evidence, he said, was a video showing at least part of the massacre at Camp Speicher, Saddam Hussein’s old palace complex outside Tikrit that was later used as an American Army base.

In the southern Swedish city of Goteborg this month, a court handed life sentences to two Swedish nationals found guilty of assisting in the beheading of two civilians in Syria in the summer of 2013, an act also caught on video. The video was discovered at the home of one of the men during a routine police search last summer, when he was a suspect in a fraud case, according to the prosecutor, Agnetha Hilding Qvarnstrom.

In both cases, assembling evidence is challenging and is hampered by the difficulty or impossibility of contacting witnesses. The legal process is made that much more complicated by questions about whether accusations involve war crimes, terrorism or crimes subject to national laws.

The Finnish police say the Iraqi brothers implicated in the massacre near Tikrit entered Finland in September, when refugees surged across central and northern Europe. More than 30,000 asylum seekers — many of them Iraqis, since Syrians tend to stop in neighboring Sweden — have arrived this year in Finland, a nation of 5.5 million.

Mr. Raty, a detective chief inspector with Finland’s National Bureau of Investigation, said he first received a tip about a month ago to watch the Iraqi men, who were living in Forssa, about 50 miles southwest of Finland’s third-largest city, Tampere.

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The police watched the Iraqis for about three weeks, acting on information that had come from inside Finland, though not necessarily from Finns, Mr. Raty said in an interview at the Tampere police building, where he indicated that the brothers were being held.

In a spare office decorated with three pennants depicting the national flag and police organizations, Mr. Raty would say only that the police had used “tactical and technical means” to determine that they should detain the men.

While Finnish news reports have suggested that the Iraqis fell under suspicion from other refugees after an altercation between Sunni and Shiite Muslims at Villa Eden Care, no one in authority confirmed this. A woman involved in running the facility declined to comment, and no refugees there were willing to discuss the case.

The police told the district court that the twins should be held because of “probable grounds” that they had committed 11 terrorist-related killings.

Mr. Raty declined to give any details about the video, except to say that it was the key evidence for holding the Iraqis, and “there is no reason to doubt it is authentic.”

Kaarle Gummerus, a Tampere lawyer representing one of the brothers, said he had not seen the video. His client, he added, insisted that he was innocent, and was upset at being held at a facility where he could not smoke indoors.

Meetings with officials, lawyers, analysts and writers in Tampere, Forssa and the capital, Helsinki, suggested that Finland was carefully weighing how to handle the case. The authorities have offered no explanation as to why the Iraqi brothers came to Finland, but appear to suspect they might have been trying to flee prosecution by the Iraqi authorities.

One major question is whether, if Iraq requests extradition, Finland would even consider, as a member of the European Union, sending the brothers to a country with the death penalty.

The only trial held so far in Iraq in connection with the Camp Speicher massacre was in July and lasted just one day. Death sentences were handed down for 24 of the 28 defendants. They appeared in court in a giant cage, with relatives of the victims bursting in to hurl insults and objects at them. The sentences have not been carried out, and all of the convicted men are appealing.

In the Finnish case, there is another wrinkle: Rumors abound that the twins are identical, although neither Mr. Raty nor others involved in the case would confirm this. If so, it could prove close to impossible to prove which of them appears at points on the video or whether both of them do. The two appeared to be of slight build when they made their brief appearance in court on Dec. 11, their faces concealed under dark jackets pulled over their heads.

Finnish authorities say they are proceeding cautiously as they try to work their way through the legal issues that come from trying to prosecute, in a European justice system, an act that took place in the chaos of the Middle East.

“Looking at what is happening in the world today,” Mr. Raty said, “it is very possible that in the future there might be another of these kinds of incidents.”

So the police must take extra care on this case, he said, even as they navigate entirely new legal territory.

Gathering evidence is difficult at best, said Jarkko Sipila, head of crime reporting for MTV3, the Finnish channel that first reported the Iraqis’ arrests on Dec. 10.

“The main point is that these crimes happened in a place where the Finnish police has no access,” said Mr. Sipila, who is also a well-known crime novelist here.

The prosecutor in the Swedish case, Ms. Hilding Qvarnstrom, said the videos used to convict the two men were found on a USB stick in the home of one of the defendants, Al-Amin Sultan.

Both he and the other man, Hassan al-Mandlawi, had traveled to Syria in the spring of 2013. Mr. Sultan returned to Sweden later that year, while Mr. Mandlawi returned in early 2014 after being wounded in Syria and treated in Turkey, Ms. Hilding Qvarnstrom said.

Mr. Sultan’s lawyer, Mia Sandros, said her client denied that he was present at the beheading and would appeal. Mr. Mandlawi’s lawyer, Lars Salkola, said his client, who is in a wheelchair, had been unfit to stand trial and should be freed on appeal.

“He doesn’t remember anything from one moment to the next,” he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/25/world/europe/finland-iraq-refugees-isis.html?ref=world&_r=0

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