The Iman Foundation
PROMOTING DIALOGUE • CHALLENGING EXTREMISM • BRINGING CHANGE

IMAN Chairman welcomes American humanitarian support in Iraq

Monday, 11 August 2014 President Obama has provided limited support to Iraq

Iraq crisis: Troops swell in Baghdad amid ISIS threat, humanitarian nightmare

CNN

A crisis so dire that families are fleeing to Syria. A militant threat so strong that U.S. forces are striking from the sky. And political strife so tense that it could derail hopes for government stability.

As Iraq's political and humanitarian crises escalate at the same time, foreign countries are getting more deeply involved.

Iraqi forces and tanks surged into some Baghdad neighborhoods Sunday as a wave of troops swarmed Baghdad's Green Zone -- the secure area where many government buildings, the military headquarters and the U.S. Embassy are located, two Iraqi police officials said.

Exactly what led to the surge remains unclear. But some believe the beefed up military presence is part of a power struggle between second-term Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and newly elected President Fuad Masum.

"You've got Nuri al-Maliki refusing to step down. Now he's mobilized not just security troops loyal to him, but now he's mobilized army units to put tanks in the streets,"said retired Lt. Col. Rick Francona, a CNN military analyst.

"Some of the bridges have been closed. It looks like he's trying to lock down the city in some sort of confrontation with the President, so this does not portend well."

Choosing a prime minister is a key next step for Iraq's leaders. Critics of al-Maliki have called for him to pull his name out of the running, but he's repeatedly refused.

Al-Maliki has accused Masum of violating the country's constitution by extending the deadline for Iraq's biggest political coalitions to nominate a candidate for prime minister.

But there could be another reason for more troops in the capital. Retired U.S. Marine Gen. James Williams said the stepped up security could be a response to advances by militants from ISIS, the Sunni Muslim extremist group that has now declared itself the Islamic State.

"It could be a show of force. If you're talking about protecting government buildings, there may be a sense that ISIS forces may be closer than everybody thinks at this point," Williams said.

American aircraft struck five targets within five hours Sunday, including armed vehicles and a mortar position, U.S. Central Command said.

Iraqi officials said U.S. airstrikes Saturday killed 16 ISIS fighters, and an Iraqi airstrike in Sinjar killed an additional 45 ISIS fighters, Iraq state media reported.

Last week, U.S. President Barack Obama authorized targeted attacks not only to protect Iraqi minorities from ISIS' killing rampage, but also Americans stationed in the Kurdish regional capital of Irbil.

In their effort to create a caliphate across parts of Iraq and Syria, ISIS fighters have slaughtered civilians as they take over cities in both countries.

In Syria, the group put some of its victims' severed heads on poles. In another instance caught on camera, a man appears to be forced to his knees, surrounded by masked militants who identify themselves on video as ISIS members. They force the man at gunpoint to "convert" to Islam, then behead him.

In Iraq, one of the most dire humanitarian nightmares is unfolding on Mount Sinjar, where tens of thousands of Yazidis have been trapped.

Yazidis are part of one the world's oldest monotheistic religious minorities and have been targeted by ISIS. Their religion is considered a pre-Islamic sect that draws from Christianity, Judaism and the ancient monotheistic religion of Zoroastrianism.

Dozens of people including 60 children, have died on the mountain, where the Yazidis are battling extreme temperatures, hunger and thirst. On Sunday, Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights spokesman Kamil Amin said it was possible that as many as 500 Yazidis had been killed. The ministry had also heard reports -- but had not confirmed -- that some had been buried alive.

Who are the Yazidis? Why does ISIS want to kill them?

"It's difficult to be accurate about these numbers, but initially we have reported 500 Iraqi Yazidis have died from either ISIS direct killings or from starvation and dehydration," Amin told CNN. "We have heard some reports from activists and local journalists that some families were buried alive."

CNN is unable to authenticate reports regarding the Yazidi death toll or the allegation that some were buried alive.

Amin said Kurdish forces were able to break the siege by ISIS and help thousands of stranded Yazidis board trucks, which drove them to the Syrian border town of Hasaka near Iraq. They were then driven north along the Syrian-Iraqi border to Dohuk, a region in northern Iraq's Kurdish region.

On Sunday night, the U.S. military made a fourth airdrop of food and water to Iraqis stranded on Mount Sinjar, according to U.S. Central Command. In total, U.S. military aircraft have delivered more than 74,000 meals and more than 15,000 gallons of fresh drinking water, Centcom said.

Britain and France have said they will join the United States in the airdrops. A British C-130 cargo plane delivered aid to Iraq on Sunday, a Ministry of Defense spokesman said.

Iraqi security forces have been able to airlift about 100 to 150 people a day off Sinjar Mountain, said Marzio Babille of UNICEF, the United Nations' children's agency. But time is running out for many who cannot reach airdropped supplies.

ISIS seizes Iraq's Mosul Dam, capable of creating 65-foot wave that could flood cities

DAILY NEWS

The Islamist fanatics who have seized Iraq’s largest dam don’t have to blow it up to wreak havoc on the millions of Iraqis who live downstream.

Engineers say the Mosul Dam is so poorly built that just failing to properly maintain it could cause a catastrophic failure.

David Petraeus, then-commanding general of the U.S. Army, and Ryan Crocker, then-U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, warned of the dam’s deficiencies in a 2007 letter to Iraq’s prime minister.

The structure sits on "a foundation of soluble soils that are continuously dissolving, resulting in the formation of cavities and voids underground that place the dam at risk,” they wrote.

A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers report said that "extraordinary engineering measures" were needed to fill in those cavities and "maintain the structural integrity and operating capability of the dam."

Militants from the Islamic State group seized Iraq's largest hydroelectric dam on Thursday, giving them control of enormous power and water resources and...

By capturing the dam, the jihadist fighters with the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria control the water and power used by millions of Iraqis.

The dam’s destruction would unleash a 65-foot wave that could inundate Mosul, 31 miles away, and even cause flooding in Baghdad, 200 miles downstream. As many as 500,000 people could die, according to the Army Corps of Engineers Analysis.

Some analysts say ISIS likely would prefer to keep the structure intact, to further their goal of creating an Islamic state.

“With the dam in its control, the Islamic State can use water as a coercive tool in creating dependency or as a deterrent threat hovering in the background,” Ramzy Mardini, of the Washington-based Atlantic Council, told the Associated Press.

Welcoming the news, Chairman of IMAN, Ribal Al-Assad said:

"I welcome the humanitarian support and assistance provided by the United States, these actions will no doubt save lives the lives of those innocent people who do not share the same perverted ideology of the ISIS militants.

I also welcome the strategic air intervention against the Islamist rebels, these people are terrorists who are reigning terror over unarmed civilians in their attempt to found an extremist Islamic Caliphate.

However much more needs to be done, not only by the United States, but the international community more broadly.

If these militants are not stopped, then not only is the security of the region at risk, but the whole free world. Whatever the outcome is in Iraq will have serious global repercussions.

I call on the international community to put an end to this reign of terror; extremism has no place in any society and immediate action must be taken to confront these terrorists before they have the chance to slaughter yet more innocent people."

Welcoming the statement, IMAN Chairman, Ribal Al-Assad said:

"I welcome the humanitarian support and assistance provided by the United States, these actions will no doubt save lives the lives of many who do not share the same perverted ideology of the ISIS militants.

I also welcome the strategic air intervention against the Islamist rebels, these people are terrorists who are reigning terror over unarmed civilians in their attempt to found an extremist Islamic Caliphate.

However much more needs to be done, not only by the United States, but the international community more broadly.

If these extremist Islamists are not stopped, this will have serious global repercussions on the region and the whole world. The international community must understand this.

I call on the international community to put an end to this reign of terror; extremism has no place in any society and immediate action must be taken to confront these terrorists before they have the chance to slaughter yet more innocent people."

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