Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

How the Islamic State Feeds on Coronavirus – POLITICO

On March 19, citing the virus, coalition and NATO training missions both suspended operations for two months. By March 29, Australia, Spain, France, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Portugal and the Netherlands had withdrawn almost all of their trainers.

In parallel, the U.S. withdrew from its frontline operating bases at Mosul, Al-Qaim, Qayyarah, Kirkuk and Taqaddum in the last week of March. Most U.S. forces were redistributed inside fewer, better-protected Iraqi bases such as Al-Asad and Erbil airport, both of which are now protected by newly installed U.S. missile defenses, to prevent a recurrence of the Jan. 8 Iranian missile attacks that left more than 100 U.S. troops with mild traumatic brain injuries.

The Iraqi military are meanwhile distracted by disaster relief, enforcing a nationwide curfew, and looking after their own health and that of their families. (Officially, the virus had sickened over 1,100 and killed 65 Iraqis as of Tuesday, but lack of testing means the real number is likely significantly higher.) Rural clearance operations have almost ceased and the pace of special forces raids has slackened, in part because of the severe disruption to intelligence, planning and air support provided by the U.S.-led coalition.

For the Islamic State, this is all a godsend. In its view, the pandemic is a literal act of divine intervention as it reached its lowest ebb. Terrorism expert Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi noted that IS newsletter, Al-Naba, called coronavirus Gods torment upon the Crusader nations, and urged fighters to take advantage of the distraction and disruption caused by the virus.

In many ways the Islamic State is quite well adapted for operations during a pandemic. Its cells are isolated, avoiding the risk of contamination by performing extreme social distancing long before the rest of us. Its leadership issued early instructions to its cadres to limit their exposure to the virusfrom the CDC-approved recommendations (washing hands and covering up coughs and sneezes) to Koranic verses involving lions and leprosy.

IS are somewhat self-contained, living in remote hideouts and underground shelters, drawing on independent food and water caches, and powering electronic devices with solar battery chargers. In every sense of the phrase, the thousands of members of this millenarian terrorist cult are the ultimate doomsday preppers.

On the ground, there have been small signs of Islamic State recovery at the tactical level, probably due to the cessation of counterinsurgency operations targeting them.

The four Iraqi military clearance operations undertaken in March were half as many as in April, and they lacked the coalition intelligence and air support that can focus such operations more effectively, instead falling into the less efficient category of unearthing arms caches but not catching enemy fighters.

Whereas U.S. and Iraqi special operations forces did a minisurge of joint raids in Februarydropping in by U.S. helicopters or tilt-rotor Osprey aircraft to raid caves and stop vehicles driven by IS membersthere were no such raids in March.

Left to operate without being pressured and chased from hideout to hideout, Islamic State has been getting more ambitious at local level. In Khanaqin District, close to the Iran-Iraq border, IS quadrupled its average number of mortar and rocket attacks in March and combined the bombardments with sustained machine-gun fire and ground assaults on security force outposts.

Over a five-day period beginning March 17, insurgents fired 15 mortar rounds into heavily populated neighborhoods of cities such as Tuz Khurmatu and Amerli, a type of attack that has not been seen for more than two years.

Islamic States next steps are easy to guess. It will increase rural assassination raids on local village leadersso-called mukhtarsand use intimidation to increase its ability to raise funds. Disruption to security force clearance operations will increase IS ability to make advanced roadside bombs in its hideouts and use these weapons, and other harassment tactics, to keep the security forces buttoned down in their bases.

If left unchecked, this kind of aggressive patrolling allows insurgents to gain psychological dominance over the local military garrisons and civilian populations. Before long, the insurgents will become the local power brokers, and it will no longer be possible to claim that IS days of territorial control are over. This is how the caliphate knits itself back together, one village at a time. This is exactly how it happened in 2012-14, after the previous U.S. withdrawal.

The only way to stop an IS resurgence, still in its infancy but now facing an improved outlook, is to reinvigorate an effective counterterrorism raiding campaign. This requires ongoing partnership between U.S. and Iraqi special forces, and between Iraqs commandos and the local Sunni populations in IS strongholds. Unlike 2011, the U.S. should not leave Iraq entirely, but should rather lower its visibility.

In all likelihood, non-U.S. military forces will never return to Iraq in the numbers that were recently withdrawn, with the virus providing a way to justify withdrawal even though Iraqi security forces are arguably not prepared to restrain an Islamic State resurgence. U.S. forces may also dwindle in terms of raw numbers in Iraq, where Iran-backed factions are promising long-term armed resistance to the open presence of U.S. advisers.

This does not have to be the end of an effective counterterrorism fight, however.

In places as diverse as Yemen, Somalia, Mali and Syria, the U.S. Special Operations Command has employed quiet partnerships with local special forces and paramilitary proxies to take on terrorist cells in a more targeted and effective manner than the large-scale train-and-equip program that appears to be eroding in Iraq. The coalition mission in Iraqdue to turn 6 years old in Septembermight expire, but the effort to prevent another IS comeback cannot afford to take a break, whether as a result of coronavirus, Iran-backed militias or a devilish combination of the two. The answer may be to take the war underground and back into the shadows.

More here:
How the Islamic State Feeds on Coronavirus - POLITICO

Iraq Iraq’s Kurdish region issues arrest warrants over funeral linked to surge in COVID-19 cases – Al-Monitor

Iraq's Kurdistan Regional Governmentwill prosecute the organizers of a prohibitedfuneral service that infected dozens of people with the coronavirus in the Kurdish region of Iraq, officials told a local news organization.

Arrest warrants have been issued for five people who organized a mourning ceremony on March 21 which led to the infection" of a number ofpeople with COVID-19,a spokesperson for Erbil's crisis task forcetold Rudaw.

Some of those wanted for arrest are themselves hospitalized with the virus, the Erbil-based news outlet reported. Their arrests will be delayed until they have recovered.

Despite a ban on funerals and other large gatherings, mourners gathered last month in Erbil's Karezan neighborhood for two separate services that infected at least 72 people, Health Minister Saman Barzanji said. On Sunday, the ministry announced 18 new cases in Erbil, each of whom came in contact with an infected person during one of the funerals.

The infected mourners now make up 35%of all cases in Erbil, according to the citys health directorate, which announced plans to sue the two families who broke the rules by holding the funerals. Rudaw quoted Barzanji as sayingtoday that Karezan and 10 other neighborhoodshave been placed under quarantine.

The Kurdistan region is in grave danger and is facing a humanitarian catastrophe, Barzanji said earlier this week.

Iraq's Kurdistan region has reported a total number of 288 cases and three deaths. The central government in Iraq today announced 1,122 cases and a death toll of 65. Health care workers on the front lines have told Reuters the number of infected persons in Iraq is likely much higher than what has been publicly reported.

Also today, an Iraqi delegation arrived in China to bring back medical supplies and preventative equipment, the countrys air force said on Twitter. The pandemic, which first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, has killed more than 81,000 people worldwide.

Read the rest here:
Iraq Iraq's Kurdish region issues arrest warrants over funeral linked to surge in COVID-19 cases - Al-Monitor

WHO commends efforts of Iraq Supreme Seminary and urges citizens to follow health measures to save lives [EN/AR] – Iraq – ReliefWeb

Baghdad, Iraq, 9 April 2020: The World Health Organization (WHO) commends the call by the religious Supreme Seminary in Iraq to postpone religious gatherings and its commitment to ensuring prevention measures recommended by WHO and local health authorities in Iraq.

The exponential spread of the new Coronavirus (COVID-19) around the world and the global rise in the number of infections and associated deaths necessitates limiting all social events and mass gatherings, including religious pilgrimages to holy sites. In this respect, WHO is disseminating clear recommendations to governments and the public to temporarily halt these activities in order to limit transmission of the disease.

The Seminaries, mainly in Najaf, Kerbala, and Kadimiya are in full support of WHO and MOH recommendations. We stress the importance of staying home, avoiding gatherings, and consider social distancing to avoid the unintentional harm caused by transmitting the disease, said Dr. Adham Ismail, WHO Representative in Iraq. WHO thanks the response of the esteemed Seminaries in Iraq and appreciate their support to health authorities efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19 in Iraq, he added.

Iraq was expecting millions of pilgrims to head to the holy city of Kerbala on 8 April 2020 in one of the biggest religious ceremonies. Fearing this would widen the range of infection, WHO and Federal Ministry of Health in Baghdad made a series of visits to these areas and met with religious seminaries in Najaf, Kerbala, and Kadhimiya in Baghdad to mobilize support for postponing all religious gatherings and advising people to perform religious rituals from their homes until the COVID 19 outbreak in the country is stabilized.

The Supreme Seminary in Najaf, earlier called upon Iraqis to follow the Ministry of Health's directives and not to underestimate the repercussions of this virus and its dangers. It also obligated people to respect the lockdown and to support national health staff by staying home to limit the spread of infection, ease the burden on health facilities, and minimize morbidity and mortality.

For more information, pls contact:

Ajyal Sultany, WHO Communications Officer, sultanya@who.int, +964 7740 892 878Baraa Shaba, Communications Officer, shabab@who.int, +964 7800 010 244

Read more:
WHO commends efforts of Iraq Supreme Seminary and urges citizens to follow health measures to save lives [EN/AR] - Iraq - ReliefWeb

Iranian press review: US accused of reinforcing military presence in Iraq – Middle East Eye

US troops reinforce bases in Iraq

The United States has allegedly deployed new military personnel to theAin al-Asad air base in Iraq, which was targeted by an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) missile attack in early January, Irans official news agency IRNAreported, quoting Iraqi sources.

IRNA quoted Qusay al-Anbari, a high-ranking member of the Iraqi Hashd al-Shaabi paramilitary group, as saying thatUS withdrawal from al-Qaim base was only a tactical move to increase the number of American forces in Ain al-Asad base.

Coronavirus: Are US sanctions hurting Iran's response to the pandemic?

Anbari also claimed that the US had increased the number of its troops in Iraq after two rocket attacks on Camp Taji, north of Baghdad, killed two Americanand one British soldiers inearly March.

In another report, IRNA claimed that US forces were secretly preparing to build a new base in theUmm Samij area in Iraqs al-Anbar province.

Irans official news agency also quoted Karim Alawi, a member of the Iraqi parliaments security and defence committee, as saying that the US military has already started to deploy the Patriot missile defence system in Iraq.

Meanwhile, on WednesdayIRNAs Baghdad bureau reported that a number of US forces in Iraq were infected by the coronavirus. IRNA did not provide any further detail about the number of allegedly infected soldiers.

The report also claimed that the officially released numbers indicating that between 5,000 and 6,000 US troops are in Iraq were incorrect, and that there were about 20,000 US forces and military contractors in the country, who, it said, were perceived to be a possible threat to spread the coronavirus among Iraqis.

A new political standoff between Iranian hardliners and members of President Hassan Rouhanis government has ended with the rejection of an offer by health NGO Doctors Without Borders (MSF) to set up a 48-bed field hospital in Irans third-largest city,Isfahan.

On 22 March, the official Twitter account of the Iranian embassy in France announced that the MSF had transferred medication, masks, special gowns and facilities in a charter flight from the French city of Bordeaux for a field hospital in Iran to contain the fast-spreading coronavirus.

Coronavirus in the Middle East: What you need to know so far

Iran is the worst infected countryby the virus in the Middle East, recording 2,234 deaths and 29,406 infected COVID-19 cases as of Thursday.

The Iranian embassy, in appreciation of the MSFs move againstUS sanctions on Iran, wrote: In the worlds current situation, which is inflamed by the coronavirus, it is necessary to strengthen international unity.

However, hardliners in Iran immediately reacted to the news by bringing up the scandal of HIV-contaminated blood products imported from France to Iran in the early 1980s. The products had infected over 900 haemophilia patients in Iran and created the first wave of AIDS in the country.

It is important to remember that France sent contaminated bloodto Iran during the climax of the Iran-Iraq war, and in a time when they [France] provided the most modern weapons of mass destruction to Iraq, Hossein Shariatmadari, the managing editor of ultra-conservative Kayhan daily, toldFars news agency.

During the eight years of the Iran-Iraq war, the US and its Western allies provided military and intelligence assistance to the then-president of Iraq, Saddam Hussein.

In an interview with Fars, Iranian conservative legislator Abolfazl Aboutorabi voiced his doubts about the true reasons for the presence of an MSF team in Iran, while European countries adhere to US sanctions that have pushed Irans economy into a deadly spiral.

What good does it do to us, a 45-bed field hospital inside the compound of Amin Hospital [in Isfahan]? Aboutorabi toldFars news agency, referring to the MSF field hospital.

Iranian economists have estimated that the annual inflation rate for Irans current fiscal year (started on 20 March) could stand between 35 and 40 percent, as a result of new US sanctions and the economic impacts of the coronavirus outbreak.

The new assessments were released despite an earlier report from the governments Statistical Centre of Iran, which announced that the inflation rate for the first three months of the Iranian year (20 March to 30 June) would be below 30 percent.

Iranian economist Ali Dini Torkamani told Shargh daily that the Statistical Centres numbers were based on the studies which were carried out before the coronavirus outbreak in Iran.

When the coronavirus epidemic ends in the country, we will see the [real] impact of the virus outbreak and the US new sanctions on Irans petrochemical, gas and metals exports, Torkamani told the daily.

According to the economist, Iran will experience an inflation rate of 35 to 40 percent in the current Persian year and the countrys economic might shrink by 1 to 2 percent.

Fellow economist SiamakGhassemi has also predicted the same numbers for economic growth in Iran, and predicted that a new wave of unemployment would hit Iran in coming months.

A report by ILNA news agency has described the dire economic situation of residents of Irans most poorest province, Sistan and Baluchestan, which has been hit hard by the economic impact of the coronavirus.

The southeastern provinceis heavily dependent on domestic tourists visiting during the two-week Nowruz holiday. But this year, the coronavirus and measures to ban non-essential travelhave seriously damaged the tourism industry in the country.

Coronavirus: Activists launch digital protest to end US sanctions on Iran

ILNA has reported that in provincialcapital Zahedan, unofficial petrol vendors have no customer, as well as shops selling second-hand Western clothing brands.

Unemployment is evident at every corner of the city, the news agency wrote. The citym which already had many poor and unemployed residents, is now drowning in unemployment.

According to the ILNA, Sistan and Baluchestan hadIran's highest unemployment rate in 2019 at 15.2 percent. Some 70 percent of its population lives under the poverty line.

While the coronavirus death toll in Sistan and Baluchistan has not been not as high as in other provinces in Iran, provincial officials are worried about the long-term economic impact of the pandemic on lives of the provinces residents.

As of Tuesday, Sistan and Baluchistan had registered 150 Covid-19 cases and nine deaths, according to the Fars news agency.

* Iranianpress review is a digest of reports that are not independently verified as accurate by Middle East Eye

Read more from the original source:
Iranian press review: US accused of reinforcing military presence in Iraq - Middle East Eye

Iraq Is another economic crisis looming in Iraq, with dropping oil prices? – Al-Monitor

Political and security crises in Iraq have been escalating, and the coronavirus outbreak has recently been added to the list. Meanwhile, news about thedropping oil prices has added fuel to the fire, andIraqis are all at risk. According to Mazhar Mohammad Saleh, economic affairsadviser to the Iraqi government, 93% of Iraq's budget relies on oil exports.

On March 14, Saleh said, Iraq has lost half of its financial revenues, with oil prices dropping to $30[per barrel].

According to the 2020 budget draft that the government proposed and awaits voting on in the parliament, the budget is $135 billion, and the deficit amounts to $40 billion. What's worse, the numbers were calculated based on a selling price of $56 per barrel of oil. Butthis price has been almost halved.

Most of the Iraqi budget goes to the salaries of the 7 million employees as operating expenses. The drop in oil prices will directly affect them, and their only income will be government salaries.

Salam Smeisim,former economic adviser to the Ministry of State for Civil Society Affairs,told Al-Monitor, The dropping oil prices are directly affecting the situation of Iraqis because oil accounts for 93% of the Iraqi budget. Besides, Iraq has a rentier and consumption budget rather than a developmental one. All revenues from oil and other resources feed salaries.

She added, The dwindling revenues lead to dropping salariesand this is a new disaster for Iraqis, in addition to the deficit reaching $51 billion. All these are signs that the Iraqi budget does not follow a financial and economic logic. The salaries and privileges of high-ranking employees range between $7 and $8 billion. The government must cancel these privileges and reduce the salaries so that lower-ranking employees do not bear the brunt.

In an attempt to weather the impact of dropping oil prices, the Iraqi parliamentary Economic and Investment Committee proposed March 12 a series of steps, including halting investment spending and curbing operational spending; making agreements with creditors to delay the settlement of Iraqs local and foreign debt until the financial situation improves; and collecting state debt from the cellphone and telecommunication companies.

The government also proposed halting payment of money to investors in the electricity sector; working on boosting government revenues; supporting the Treasury with the value of the regions exports of crude oil and border outlets;and reviewing exchange rates of the Iraqi Central Bank to secure prices that do not affect citizens and that ensure the salaries of state employees.

Issam al-Jalabi, oil expert and minister of oil in1987-1990,said in press statements March 9, Iraq will lose billions of dollars because of its loss of huge oil revenues, which will impact the provision of services, medication and food, while the country needs all available funds to face the COVID-19 outbreak.

Outgoing Prime MinisterAdel Abdul Mahdi called for measures that can alleviate the impact of dropping oil prices on Iraq. However, his government did not announce these measures or their mechanisms, as it has its hands full with the coronavirus crisis, which has not been allocated an emergency budget. Iraq has been facing an economic crisis since the first day oil prices dropped.

Abdul Mahdi has been trying to reassure Iraqis regarding the dropping oil prices, saying, This is just a bump in the road,and it does not mean our economy is collapsing or that the state is going bankrupt. Buthis reassurances do not match the warnings ofeconomic experts.

News about dropping oil prices shocked many Iraqis mostly state employees whose salaries depend on oil revenues whovoiced their concerns on traditional and social media.

State employees and experts in Iraq expect the 2020 financial budget to suffer hugely, and they expressed their concerns about the governments inability to pay salaries in the coming months. This in itself constitutes a new challenge for the Iraqi government, in addition to the political, security and social crises, especially those related to the US-Iranian conflict, the coronavirus outbreak and the ongoing protests in southern Iraq.

The financial revenues that entered Iraq in February amounted to $5 billion, when the selling price of oil was$51 per barrel. Butthis figure will not enter the Iraqi state budget for March, because of the collapse of theOPEC-Russia agreement to reduce supply.

Iraqis might be in the eye of the storm in the coming months, unless oil prices rise again and the current or transitional government meant to be formed finds solutions forthe crisis.

See original here:
Iraq Is another economic crisis looming in Iraq, with dropping oil prices? - Al-Monitor