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2014-08-04 Iraq
ISIS inflicts easy defeats on Kurdish forces
[Beirut Daily Star] ISIS fighters seized control of Iraq's biggest dam, an oil field and three more towns Sunday, state TV reported, after inflicting their first major defeat on Kurdish forces since sweeping across much of northern Iraq in June.

Capture of the electricity-generating djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
Dam, after an offensive of barely 24 hours, could give the Sunni hard boyz the ability to flood major Iraqi cities or withhold water from farms, raising the stakes in their bid to topple Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
... Prime Minister of Iraq and the secretary-general of the Islamic Dawa Party. Maliki imposed order on Basra wen the Shiites were going nuts, but has proven incapable of dealing with al-Qaeda's Sunni insurgency. Reelected to his third term in 2014...
's government.

"The terrorist gangs of the Islamic State have taken control of Mosul Dam after the withdrawal of Kurdish forces without a fight," said Iraqi state television
... and if you can't believe state television who can you believe?
However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
Jabar Yawer, the front man for the Kurdish peshmerga troops, said late Sunday that Kurdish forces were still in control of the dam, emphasizing that ISIS had not been successful in an attempted takeover.

But two people who live near Mosul Dam told Rooters Kurdish troops had loaded their vehicles with belongings, including air conditioners, and fled.

The apparent swift withdrawal of the peshmerga was a severe blow to one of the only forces in Iraq that until now had stood firm against the fighters who aim to redraw the borders of the Middle East.

ISIS seized the Ain Zalah oil field Sunday — adding to four others already under its control that provide funding for operations.

Initially strong Kurdish resistance evaporated after the start of a weekend offensive to take the town of Zumar.

ISIS fighters attacked Zumar from three directions in pickup trucks mounted with weapons, defeating Kurdish forces that had poured reinforcements into the town, witnesses said. The Islamists then hoisted their black flags there.

The group later also seized the town of Sinjar, where witnesses said residents had fled after Kurdish fighters put up little resistance. It was not immediately clear why the Kurds, usually known as formidable fighters, pulled back without a fight.

On its Twitter site, ISIS posted a picture of one of its masked fighters holding up a pistol and sitting at the abandoned desk of the mayor of Sinjar. Behind him was the image of a famous Kurdish guerrilla leader.

In a statement on its website, the jihadists said they had killed scores of peshmerga. Those deaths could not be independently verified.

"Hundreds fled leaving vehicles and a huge number of weapons and munitions and the brothers control many areas," the Islamic State statement said. "The fighters arrived in the border triangle between Iraq, Syria and Turkey."

Sinjar had sheltered thousands of people who were displaced when the huge ISIS offensive was launched nearly two months ago. Among them are many of Iraq's minorities, such as Turkmen Shiites who fled the city of Tal Afar, about halfway between Sinjar and Mosul, when jihadist fighters swept in.

Sinjar is also a historical home for the Yazidis, a Kurdish-speaking minority that follows a pre-Islamic faith rooted in Zoroastrianism, and has been repeatedly targeted.

"A humanitarian tragedy is unfolding in Sinjar," the top U.N. envoy in Iraq, Nickolay Mladenov, said. Its capture prompted thousands of families — up to 200,000 people, according to the U.N. — to flee, many of them into the neighboring mountains.

"The United Nations
...a formerly good idea gone bad...
has grave concerns for the physical safety of these civilians," Mladenov said, as they risk being stranded with no supplies in roasting temperatures and surrounded by jihadists.

A Kurdish official and several other sources also said ISIS fighters had destroyed the Shiite shrine of Sayyeda Zeinab after taking control of Sinjar.

Witnesses said ISIS fighters were also trying to take control of the town of Rabia near the Syrian border and were engaged in festivities with Syrian Kurds who had crossed the frontier after Iraqi Kurds withdrew.

Iraq's Kurds had expanded areas under their control in recent weeks, while avoiding direct confrontation with ISIS, even as Iraqi central government troops fled. But the towns lost on Sunday were in territory the Kurds had held for many years, undermining suggestions that ISIS' advance helped the Kurds.

By calling into question the effectiveness of the Kurdish fighters, Sunday's advances may increase pressure on bickering Iraqi leaders to form a power-sharing government capable of countering the Islamic State.

The latest gains have also placed ISIS fighters near Dahuk Province, one of three in the autonomous Kurdish region that has been spared any serious threat to its security while war raged throughout the rest of Iraq.

Meanwhile Sunday, military front man Lt. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi said festivities were continuing between Iraqi security forces and hard boyz to retake the town of Jurf al-Sakhar, which fell to Sunni forces of Evil last week.

Moussawi said a number of Arclight airstrikes had hit the hard boyz in the center of the town, though he did not offer casualty figures. Dozens of hard boyz and nine troops were killed Saturday in festivities in Jurf al-Sakhar, located some 50 kilometers south of the capital.
Posted by Fred 2014-08-04 00:00|| || Front Page|| [10 views ]  Top
 File under: Islamic State 

#1  It was not immediately clear why the Kurds, usually known as formidable fighters, pulled back without a fight.

Considering the corrupt Shia bigots in the Maliki government Obama trusted has not allowed weapons or ammunition to be shipped to them in over a month, refuses to fly supplies up there, and refuses to allow supplies sent there...

Considering that the US is not supporting our former best allies in the region, not even covertly...

And considering that other nations will not sell to the Kurds due to Obama and US State Dept policy of a "United Iraq" (at the price of disarming Kurdistan) and US pressuring all other nations to NOT sell arms to the Kurds...

I would say the Peshmerga had no choice but to retreat. Out of Ammo, short on armament, low on supplies, and not a damned bit of support. Not even our CIA is helping -- when they can and should.

This reminds me of the fate of the Hmong after Viet Nam. I am beyond pissed at that motherfucker Obama and the suits at State repeating history, and screwing over good people and our only solid ally in the area formerly known as Iraq.

Posted by OldSpook 2014-08-04 02:39||   2014-08-04 02:39|| Front Page Top

#2 Times like these, I wish Obama and the entire state department leadership would just drop dead.
Posted by OldSpook 2014-08-04 02:39||   2014-08-04 02:39|| Front Page Top

#3 OldSpook, I have assumed the Kurds were far too resourceful (and hardly w/out resources, ahemm, black gold, Texas T, bubblin' crude) to be in a logistics jam? $$$$ talks, and it's hard to imagine the Kurds of all outfits not being able to put their $$$ to work. Israel if nobody else (not that Kurdistan has ever seen, say, robust Israeli business activity and certainly not an intelligence presence, ahemm).

Have to regard all reports of Kurdish wimp outs with a grain of salt for now. For now. Man, if the KURDS are unable to man up, then we really are on a different planet than just recently.

Posted by Verlaine 2014-08-04 02:56||   2014-08-04 02:56|| Front Page Top

#4 Last week there were reports that a tanker loaded with Kurdish oil was forced to make circles in the Atlantic as the US would not let the ship dock in the USA. The State Department has done everything in its power to halt the movement of Kurd oil because it interferes with the process of shipments of Iraqi oil from the south -- whose funds for a decade have been banked at JPMorgan in New York.
Posted by Beldar Sloque3832 2014-08-04 09:56||   2014-08-04 09:56|| Front Page Top

#5 Vietnam II coming up.
Posted by KBK 2014-08-04 10:32||   2014-08-04 10:32|| Front Page Top

#6 Verlaine,
I have assumed the Kurds were far too resourceful (and hardly w/out resources, ahemm, black gold, Texas T, bubblin' crude)

Maliki has leaned on the international community to prevent the Kurds from withdrawing money from their accounts. They can still sell the oil, they just can't use the funds. This is in addition to freezing their accounts 6 months before the fall of Mosul.
Posted by Frozen Al 2014-08-04 10:34||   2014-08-04 10:34|| Front Page Top

#7 Thanks, Frozen Al. My gawd. This passeth the imagination. WTF is Baghdad doing? And after all these years, I'm surprised the Kurds don't have work-arounds and back-up plans at the ready. Further, if Baghdad has ramped up the "war" to this level, time for the Kurds to return the favor (beyond doing the easy things like completing the takeover of key areas in Kirkuk). Time for the pesh to do a little expditionary work, directly disrupt "Iraqi" oil activities not under their control?
Posted by Verlaine 2014-08-04 11:34||   2014-08-04 11:34|| Front Page Top

#8 How much of a stake do the Kurds have in that dam? I'm wondering if maybe they didn't think it was their fight. The oil fields, yes, the dam maybe not so much.
Posted by Ebbang Uluque6305 2014-08-04 11:51||   2014-08-04 11:51|| Front Page Top

#9 Israel if nobody else (not that Kurdistan has ever seen, say, robust Israeli business activity and certainly not an intelligence presence, ahemm).

Israel is a bit preoccupied at the moment, it seems to me.
Posted by trailing wife 2014-08-04 12:15||   2014-08-04 12:15|| Front Page Top

#10 The treatment of the Kurds by our country is another dark blot on our type of popular politics.

Feckless and short sighted.
Posted by DarthVader 2014-08-04 12:26||   2014-08-04 12:26|| Front Page Top

#11 If that dam was to fail under ISIS, lots and lots of Suni and Shia would die. I don't believe there are lots of Kurds downstream.
Stability Analysis of Mosul Dam
Posted by 3dc 2014-08-04 12:43||   2014-08-04 12:43|| Front Page Top

#12 Fascinating replay. The Goths who occupied Spain upon the end of the Roman Empire engaged in petty fights and squabbles among themselves. Then the Moors invaded with their jihad, the whole place collapsed like a house of cards, only the topography in the north allowed what remain of the Goths to hold out around Bilbao and Santander.
Posted by Procopius2k 2014-08-04 13:40||   2014-08-04 13:40|| Front Page Top

#13 Kurds ran out of ammo. You can't fight if you don't have ammo.

Curiously, the one thing Champ won't do is arm the Kurds...
Posted by Steve White 2014-08-04 13:46||   2014-08-04 13:46|| Front Page Top

#14 Maliki orders air force to help Kurds against the Islamic State
Posted by Anguper Hupomosing9418  2014-08-04 15:11||   2014-08-04 15:11|| Front Page Top

#15 Looks like the "ISLAMIC STATE" [ISIS aka ISIL] is now threatening the defeated Kurds wid more attacks into the KAR = Kurdish-held areas in northern Iraq.

To wit,

* HURRIYET NEW > IRAQ JIHADISTS [ISIS/ISIL = "Islamic State"] THREATEN KURDS AFTER BATTLEFIED VICTORIES.

Thereby leading to .. ...

* DEFENCE.PK/FORUMS > [Rudaw.net] KRG ASKS US [POTUS Obama] FOR [Direct[ MILITARY HELP: ITS "TIME FOR ACTION".

Given the Bammer's kighty defense of his own "red lines, THIS WILL NOT END WELL FOR THE US OR THE ISIS/ISIL-EMBATTLED KURDS.

* DEFENCE.PK/FORUMS > PAKISTANI [ + Egyptian] TROOPS TO DEFEND JITTERY SAUDIS | THE TIMES.

--------------

OTOH ADNKRONOS > SYRIA: AL-QAEDA SPLINTER GROUP [ISIS/ISIL] ROUTED FROM EASTERN PROVINCE, of Deir el-Zoir.

Inter-QAEDA fighting between the ISIS/ISIL + AL-NUSRA-ALLIES.
Posted by JosephMendiola 2014-08-04 22:26||   2014-08-04 22:26|| Front Page Top

#16 Hoping and expecting these are simply tactical moves by the Kurds. They are proven strategic experts, and certainly have the experience needed in their neighborhood. Reports of the cut in their communication routes to Syria are disconcerting, but recall that the Syrians are not disturbing them. They seem to have secured their flanks and perimeters, and barring something colossally stupid from Turkey, this should be tactically sound. They need to let the arabs settle this between themselves before they commit.

Our position is only slightly less incomprehensible than the Iraqi government's. Still, that's no excuse.
Posted by Halliburton - Mysterious Conspiracy Division 2014-08-04 22:36||   2014-08-04 22:36|| Front Page Top

01:03 DooDahMan
01:00 DooDahMan
00:58 Grom the Reflective
00:35 Uleremp and Company7042
00:34 3dc
00:32 Uleremp and Company7042
00:14 DooDahMan









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