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Iraq
ISIL Seizes Iraq's Mosul, Other Areas as Govt. Says Will Arm Citizens Willing to Fight Militants
2014-06-11
Jihadists overran Iraq's second city of djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
, the surrounding Nineveh province, parts of Kirkuk and areas in Salaheddin on Tuesday, in a major blow to a government apparently incapable of stopping bad boy advances.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki responded by asking parliament to declare a state of emergency and announcing the government would arm citizens to fight the bad boys.

"All of Nineveh province fell into the hands of bad boys," parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi told journalists in Storied Baghdad, adding the gunnies were heading south towards neighboring Salaheddin province.

An army brigadier general told Agence La Belle France Presse hundreds of turbans from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
... the current version of al-Qaeda in Iraq, just as blood-thirsty and well-beloved as the original...
(ISIL) launched a major assault on the security forces late on Monday.

An interior ministry official said Mosul, the scene of deadly festivities on Friday and Saturday, was "outside the control of the state and at the mercy of the bad boys".

Soldiers and police had stripped off their uniforms and fled, and the turbans used loudspeakers to declare they had "come to liberate" the city of some two million people.

An AFP journalist, himself fleeing with his family, said shops were closed, a cop shoppe had been set ablaze and security forces vehicles had been burned or abandoned.

Hundreds of families were seen fleeing. Some were on foot, carrying what they could, others in vehicles with their belongings piled on the roofs.

In the Kurdish north, another AFP journalist said thousands of Mosul residents had fled for the safety of the autonomous region.

Dozens of cars and trucks stretched out from one checkpoint on the boundary of the region, as people with plastic bags, suitcases and a pram waited to enter, some with young children in tow.

"The army forces threw away their weapons and changed their clothes and left their vehicles and left the city," said Mahmoud Nuri, a displaced Mosul resident.

"We didn't see anyone fire a shot".

The assailants seized the provincial government headquarters and the Nineveh Operations Command as well as the airport, the army general said.

They also freed hundreds of prisoners from three jails.

The Turkish consulate in Mosul said ISIL fighters had captured 28 Turkish truck drivers, while a foreign ministry official said Ankara hoped they would be released once they finished unloading fuel oil at a power station.

Maliki said the cabinet had decided to arm citizens to fight the bad boys.

It has "created a special crisis cell to follow up on the process of volunteering and equipping and arming", he said in televised remarks.

Maliki said the cabinet also decided to reorganize the security forces, and to ask parliament to impose emergency rule.

State television said parliament had received a joint request from Maliki and the president's office to declare a state of emergency.

Later on Tuesday, jihadists seized two areas of the Salaheddin province, officials said.

The turbans moved into Salaheddin's Siniyah and Sulaiman Bek, both located north of Storied Baghdad, after security forces withdrew, an army brigadier general and a local official said.

Predominantly Sunni Mohammedan Nineveh province has long been a bad boy stronghold and one of the most dangerous areas of Iraq.

ISIL, the most powerful bad boy group in Iraq, is also a key force in the rebellion against Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Terror of Aleppo ...
in neighboring Syria.

In April, it launched a campaign in Syria's Deir Ezzor province, which borders Nineveh, aimed at carving out an Islamic state.

The group said it was behind operations in Nineveh in messages on Twitter, though other turbans may have been involved as well.

Mosul is the second city to fall from government control this year. Anti-government fighters also control Fallujah,
... the City of Mosques, which might have somthing to do with why it's not called Center of Prosperity or a really nice place to raise your kids...
west of Storied Baghdad.

ISIL turbans also took six different areas of Kirkuk province, which shares a border with part of southeastern Nineveh, police Colonel Ahmed Taha said.

Taha said security forces abandoned their posts in one of the areas, while a local official said soldiers were ordered to depart another, allowing turbans to move in.

Violence also struck other areas of Iraq.

In Baquba, north of Storied Baghdad, two bombs killed 20 people near a funeral procession for a slain teacher.

And in the capital, nine people died in attacks.

Gunmen have launched major operations in Nineveh, Salaheddin, Anbar, Diyala and Storied Baghdad provinces since Thursday, killing scores and highlighting both their long reach and the weakness of security forces.

Violence is running at its highest levels since 2006-2007, when tens of thousands were killed in festivities between Iraq's Shiite majority and Sunni Arab minority.

Officials blame external factors for the rising bloodshed, particularly the Syrian war.

But analysts say widespread Sunni Arab anger with the Shiite-led government has also been a major factor.
Posted by:trailing wife

#26  Calm down, this ISIS thing is a Saudi thing to kick Iranian butt (i.e. Maliki and Assad).

There is no harm in letting them police their own neighborhood. Just let the Saudis know that their minions need to leave our people alone.
Posted by: rammer   2014-06-11 23:41  

#25  Meanwhile, not to be outdone by the ISIS ...

* FREEREPUBLIC > [Last Days Watchman] COMING SOON? A MORE ISLAMIC, BUDDHIST, HINDU LESS CHRISTIAN AMERICA.

D *** NG, do the Hare Krishnas know???

* JAPAN TIMES > PUTIN GAMBLES ON CULTURE WAR WID WEST.

Which apparently America is losing, but Amerika is winning.

* TOPIX > [American Thinker] RUSSIA + CHINA ARE EXECUTING A PLAN WE [US, West] IGNORE AT OUR PERIL.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2014-06-11 23:11  

#24  I think the only thing between the ISIL and the Gulf is the Saudi Army.

It is time for KSA to man up with all of those billions of dollars of fancy equipment and DO SOMETHING. If they don't, they are toast and Iran wins.

Thank you Democrats a war that could have been won and a country that could have been whole and functioning is pissed away to your darling revolutionaries...err fanatics. Why does the left love fanatics and anarchists? Why do the libs think nothing is worth fighting for?

When I was in Iraq, I personally say men standing in line to enlist and we know the Anbar resurrection was due to tribal leaders fighting AQ...all of that is gone, I guess the assassinations and the murders finally gutted the adult supervision.

We cannot ever be trusted again. We abandoned Iraq, we abandoned Libya and we are abandoning Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.

What on earth is this administration doing?
Posted by: Bill Clinton   2014-06-11 22:47  

#23  They're headed toward Kuwait and the Gulf. This is getting very, very ugly.
Posted by: Besoeker   2014-06-11 21:30  

#22  It's the technology transfer I'm worried about. How much Tech advantage did we lose? How many more STA did we lose? It's a disaster any way you look at it. What they can't use they'll strip or sell.
Posted by: Charles   2014-06-11 21:27  

#21  I wouldn't worry about the equipment. It needs maintenance and spares -- they're too stuck on themselves to do the first and the second will quickly run out.
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2014-06-11 20:53  

#20  I wonder what the hell happened to those guys in the dark green with those steely eyes that were so damned tough fighting the bad guys two years ago...I find it hard to believe those guys who stood in line for hours and risked suicide bombs, snipers, and threats to the family to enlist turned tail and ran. What the hell happened????

Sometimes we say nice things about our allies in hopes they'll eventually live up to the hype we've generated.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2014-06-11 19:38  

#19  I wonder what James Carville and Karl Rove would say to each other over a bottle of scotch after this one?

That aside, Iraq, thanks to the Democrats who never saw a war they couldn't lose have finally turned Iraq into 1975. They always said Iraq was going to become another Viet Nam, well thanks to their malfeasance, it has. Well at least the ARVN didn't drop trousers and run like the Iraqis did. I wonder what the hell happened to those guys in the dark green with those steely eyes that were so damned tough fighting the bad guys two years ago...I find it hard to believe those guys who stood in line for hours and risked suicide bombs, snipers, and threats to the family to enlist turned tail and ran. What the hell happened????
Posted by: Bill Clinton   2014-06-11 19:27  

#18  I wonder if ISIL hopes to open a second front against Iran to take pressure off of Syria?

Iran-Iraq war, round two.
Posted by: Squinty   2014-06-11 18:09  

#17  DaveD was is a indeed a helluva engineer, he invented a very sophisticated digital give-a-shit meter that is still occasionally brought out of the back room hereabouts. Can a Mod maybe lay hands on that sucker to illustrate talent?

Also a pretty damn good photographer.

Posted by: Shipman   2014-06-11 13:16  

#16  That would be a very, very bad sign for the Iraqi government forces.

I would want to know if those soldiers who stripped their uniforms were running down the road in their skivvys or had a set of civi clothes with them.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2014-06-11 12:52  

#15  I'm thinking NONE, #13 swksvolFF. :-(
Posted by: Barbara   2014-06-11 12:10  

#14  And what will the Kurds and Turks have to say about this?
Posted by: AlanC   2014-06-11 11:54  

#13  I wonder how many thought about spiking their equipment before leaving, and how many effectively did.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2014-06-11 11:47  

#12  Iraqi government will arm citizens to fight militants? How are they going to determine that they are not arming AQ?

Thought the same thing, then I saw the video from Mosul whereby the Iraqi military completely abandoned their posts, and dropped their uniforms, weapons and even abandoned US-provided Humvees and other vehicles. IOW, it probably doesn't matter now (at least in Mosul) as ISIL now has US-made weapons/vehicles, as well as Iraqi uniforms.
Posted by: BA   2014-06-11 11:25  

#11  I should note that the Annual Haj migration is beginning... and MERS has killed for the first time in Algeria. (The other patient appears to be recovering.) Also, the Pakistani polio virus has been isolated in Syria and Israel. Israel immediately commenced on a vaccination campaign.

Darwin is riding along with the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse in the Muslim world these days. Pounding themselves into dust, indeed. Is this the cultural suicide David P. Goldman wrote about?
Posted by: trailing wife   2014-06-11 11:02  

#10  much of the islamic (not arab) world pounds itself into dust

Somalia for many years now (not arab)
Syria
Iraq
up next, Pakistan (also not arab)
Posted by: lord garth   2014-06-11 10:29  

#9  A good deal of Detroit and parts of Cleveland need to be pounded into rubble - for entirely different reasons.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418    2014-06-11 09:32  

#8  I'm not sure I disagree, Besoeker, and I weep over all the stray kittens I can't rescue (the real reason, Mr. Wife admits, that he never let me join him in India. He firmly believes I would be devastated that I wouldn't be able to help all the poor people there -- and we haven't enough spare bedrooms.)

But nothing is going to happen in that direction until January, 2017... or at least nothing constructive.
Posted by: trailing wife   2014-06-11 09:06  

#7  Thanks TW. With all due respect to Burg poster Dave D. and his assessment, I believe the justification for "pounding the entire Arab world into rubble" has now been clearly established and is entirely defendable.

Posted by: Besoeker   2014-06-11 08:55  

#6  You remember the term. Some called it... "nation building." Anyone who has actually been to the region knew we were simply disturbing the natural order of Islam.

I think it's before your time, Besoeker, but Dave D. early on laid out our possibilities for the the War on Terror in proper engineer analysis. One of the points he made, that has coloured my view of events ever since, was that we had to try nation building, so that when it didn't work (like many engineers, Dave D. had faith in the space widgets he designed, but a dark view of people in general to do the right thing right) we could look our grandchildren in the eye as we explained why we pounded the entire Arab world into rubble.

He still pokes his head in the the 'Burg very occasionally, which always makes me happy.
Posted by: trailing wife   2014-06-11 08:44  

#5  You remember the term. Some called it... "nation building." Anyone who has actually been to the region knew we were simply disturbing the natural order of Islam.

Lessons learned anyone ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2014-06-11 07:47  

#4  Iraqi government will arm citizens to fight militants? How are they going to determine that they are not arming AQ?

This debacle is a failure of our walking, talking, gum-chewing hero's policies. We will see the same thing in Afghanistan when we leave.
Posted by: JohnQC   2014-06-11 07:38  

#3  Is is okay to be a culturalist now?
Posted by: AlanC   2014-06-11 07:27  

#2  Say there, does anyone miss me yet ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2014-06-11 07:21  

#1  I know why they stormed the compound in Libya now! Watch Al Jizzera the Iraqi airforce needed office supplies for their airforce the idiots are running around with paper airplanes on their heads! Paperclips on nose end get it!
Posted by: Whulet Shavins7256   2014-06-11 06:31  

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