Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

‘ISIS Cancer’ 300 Americans fighting in Syria, Iraq threaten US security – Video


#39;ISIS Cancer #39; 300 Americans fighting in Syria, Iraq threaten US security
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'ISIS Cancer' 300 Americans fighting in Syria, Iraq threaten US security - Video

(HD) Obama administration denies ‘mission creep’ in Iraq as US force size grows Fox News – Video


(HD) Obama administration denies #39;mission creep #39; in Iraq as US force size grows Fox News
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(HD) Obama administration denies 'mission creep' in Iraq as US force size grows Fox News - Video

– Kobani’nin batsnda D’e kar YPG operasyonlar YPG operation against ISIS w – Video


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Iraq Approves New Unity Government, Sets the Stage for Combatting ISIS

TIME World Iraq Iraq Approves New Unity Government, Sets the Stage for Combatting ISIS Iraq's new Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, right, and Ammar al-Hakim, left, the leader of the Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq, during the session to approve the new government in Baghdad on Sept. 8, 2014 Hadi MizbanAP U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry hails the new administration as a "major milestone"

Iraqs parliament has approved a new government, setting the stage for expanded U.S. military support to battle the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS).

The new cabinet was sworn in amid mounting international and domestic pressure to end a weeks-long political deadlock between the nations Shiite majority and its Sunni and Kurdish minorities. Incoming Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, a Shiite, will be flanked by Sunni and Kurdish deputies, both of whom have also been appointed key ministerial posts.

Al-Abadi released a statement, in which he vowed to work with all communities in Iraq. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called the new government a major milestone.

Yet the power-sharing deal wasnt reached until a stormy Monday parliamentary session spilled well into the night, just barely staving off the Wednesday constitutional deadline. Several key posts were also left vacant, including those of Defense and Interior Minister. Al-Abadi has promised to fill those positions within a week.

The new government arrives at a precarious juncture. Over the past few months, ISIS militants have taken control over vast swaths of Iraqs northern territory and continue to pose a serious threat to the central authorities.

Many Sunni rebels have been recruited into the extremist groups swelling ranks after becoming estranged by a government seen to support indiscriminate attacks against Sunnis. There is also a long-standing conflict between Baghdad and Kurds over oil revenues, the nonpayment of which has weakened the Kurdish resistance against the extremists.

Al-Abadis predecessor Nouri al-Maliki resigned in August amid accusations from the Sunni and Kurdish communities that he was bolstering sectarianism. The new Prime Minister touched on these tensions by praising Shiite militias and citizens who stopped ISIS fighters from reaching Baghdad this summer, but also declaring that any armed formation outside the authority of the state is banned, Reuters reports.

The new cabinet sets the stage for U.S. President Barack Obamas expected announcement Wednesday of a wider battle strategy against ISIS that would hinge on inclusive reforms in Iraq.

Now is the time for Iraqs leaders to govern their nation with the same vision and sense of purpose that helped bring this new government together in the first place, Kerry said in response to the new government. In that effort they should know that the United States will stand shoulder to shoulder with Iraqis as they implement their national plan.

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Iraq Approves New Unity Government, Sets the Stage for Combatting ISIS

Tough road ahead for Iraq leader after government forms

Sept. 8, 2014: Vice President Nouri al-Maliki, attends the Parliament session to submit his government in Baghdad, Iraq. (AP)

BAGHDAD Iraq's new prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, has a daunting task ahead of him: With the world watching, the Shiite politician must unify a deeply divided country against Sunni militants who have seized much of its territory.

First, though, he must find officials to run the defense and interior ministries who will be acceptable to Iraq's parliament, which approved his Cabinet late Monday except for those positions along with a few lesser posts.

The Islamic State group's lightning advance across much of northern and western Iraq has driven hundreds of thousands of people from their homes since June, and prompted the U.S. to launch aid operations and airstrikes in hopes of boosting the waning efforts of Iraqi and Kurdish forces looking to regain control of lost territory.

The success of outreach efforts to Iraq's alienated Sunni minority will be a key part of international efforts to beat back the Islamic State militants, who also control parts of neighboring Syria.

Addressing lawmakers, al-Abadi said the central government, which includes all major religious and ethnic groups in Iraq, must make sure that cities and provinces have enough money to deliver basic services. He also emphasized the need to provide housing and education to more than a million people displaced by the militants' advance.

Like many positions in the Iraqi government, the job of defense minister has, in recent years, traditionally been assigned to a Sunni, while the interior minister has been a Shiite. Some lawmakers say the country is at too critical a juncture to put so much emphasis on sect.

"I have fears that the vacant posts, mainly the defense and interior, will be run without ministers or be given to persons affiliated with political parties instead of to people who are independent and professional," Hamid al-Mutlaq, a Sunni lawmaker from Anbar province, told

Al-Mutlaq called on al-Abadi's government to "prove its credibility and good intentions."

Salim al-Muslimawi, a Shiite lawmaker from Babil province, said any further delay in filling the defense and interior posts risks making the government appear weak and divided. He called the generally rapid selection of other Cabinet ministers "a positive step in tackling the many problems facing the country."

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Tough road ahead for Iraq leader after government forms