Friday, 30 June 2017

Iraq Declares the End of the Islamic State Caliphate, The New Daily, 30 june, 2017.



Iraq declares the end of the Islamic State caliphate


Iraqi forces have retaken the area of Mosul where Islamic State officially declared its reign of terror. Photo: Getty
John Stapleton


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The Iraqi government has announced the end of the caliphate after capturing the Al-Nuri Mosque in Western Mosul, the place where Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announced the formation of the caliphate and unleashed a reign of terror on the world.

“Their fictitious state has fallen,” an Iraqi military spokesman, Brigadier General Yahya Rasool, told Iraqi state television.

Only an estimated 350 Islamic State soldiers remain in an area of less than one square kilometre in the ancient city.

Experts warn that the brutal nature of the Mosul occupation is fuelling extremism around the world. While the exact numbers are concealed in the rubble of the ancient city, the mujahideen soldiers of Islamic State, civilians and Iraqi personnel have died in their many hundreds.

As streams of Sunni muslims flee from the pulverised ruins of their neighbourhoods they pass bodies rotting in the intense heat.

More than 860,000 people have fled the city since the Iraq Army, backed by Coalition airstrikes, including from Australia, began pounding the city last October.

Eight months of gruelling combat later Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city and encompassing the ancient Assyrian city of Nineveh, and whole districts of what the Bible refers to as the “Great City”, look like scenes from an apocalypse.

Back then, Army officers boasted it would be mere days before they retook the city where al-Baghdadi declared an Islamic Caliphate in 2014.

While some of the civilians being “liberated” from the city display gratitude, or ingratiate themselves with their new conquerors, it is clear from footage of the frontline that the civilian Sunni population are as terrified of the Coalition-backed Shias of the Iraqi Army as they may once have been of Islamic State.

Human Rights Watch says thousands of Sunni Muslims have been tortured, killed or disappeared.

There are numerous concerns over the behaviour of the conquering Iraq Army, which is backed by both America and Australia. Footage from French television shows officers laughing at dead Islamic State soldiers.

Belkis Wille, Senior Iraq Researcher with Human Rights Watch, told The New Daily the civilian population is “extremely traumatised”.

“The civilians are highly traumatised. Mosul is the largest urban war in modern history. The west of the city and the neighbourhood still under ISIS control are extremely densely populated,” she said.

“Every direction you look you have hundreds of civilians packed into buildings. People who come out don’t complain about the horrific three years under ISIS, they complain about the airstrike that killed their family, despite them having made it through those three years.

“People have lost entire families, their homes, their livelihoods. They are coming out with absolutely nothing.”

Ms Wille said the Iraqi Army had also perpetrated abuses against the Sunni minority with impunity – the exact same conditions which led to the formation of the Islamic State.

“This battle is going to have very negative long term consequences for the country. If it’s not ISIS today, then it’s ISIS 2.0 tomorrow.”

All sides talk of God, from the Islamic State ‘martyrs’ to the conquering army to the devastated civilians.

“I have lost five children, there is no God but Allah,” says one shellshocked woman as she stumbles across the frontline, recorded by French television.

Dr Clarke Jones, terror expert at the Australian National University, told The New Daily the Coalition might trumpet the fall of Mosul as a symbolic triumph over terrorism, but it had not made the world safer.

“Many can see that military conflict is a greater driver of militancy than the military victory itself,” he said.

“It is all very well for the West to say it has won against Mosul. The West forgetting the back channels of reporting of the death of innocent civilians.

“That has a far greater impact and is fuelling the ideology of Islamic State and the narrative of the persecution of Muslims.”

Martin Chulov, one of the world’s leading experts on Islamic State, told The New Daily: “The genie is out of the bottle in the sense that the virulent ideology that ISIS fosters by tapping into grievances of the disenfranchised – in their case ‘persecuted’ Sunnis – will be fed by their ousting.

“They have given up, for now, on controlling geography, in favour of controlling populations – through terror attacks abroad. These will continue, even after they are chased from their last strongholds in Syria.”

Wednesday, 21 June 2017

Australian War Planes Dropping More bombs on Iraq than ever, The New Daily, 22 June, 2017.

http://thenewdaily.com.au/news/national/2017/06/21/australian-military-iraq/

Australian warplanes dropping more bombs on Iraq than ever


Australia has temporarily halted air operations over Syria. Photo: Australian Defence Force: Sgt Pete
John Stapleton
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At the same time as Australia has withdrawn from Syrian airspace under threat of being bombed out of the sky by Russia, the Australian Defence Force is dropping historically high numbers of bombs on Iraq.

Australia is the second-largest contributor to the American-led coalition efforts to defeat Islamic State in the increasingly controversial quagmire of the Middle East.

This week Australia suspended flights over Syria as a “precautionary measure”.

The US shot down a Syrian military jet on Sunday and Russia has threatened retaliation. It declared Australian jets a target and has threatened to shoot down any coalition planes flying west of the Euphrates River.

The latest figures just released by the ADF show that so far this year Australian FA/18 Super Hornets have dropped 390 bombs on Islamic State positions in Iraq, 119 in the month of May alone. This is the highest number since Tony Abbott took the country into the conflict in September 2014.

The most recent fortnightly update of the conflict issued by the ADF shows virtually all the activity in Iraq is centred around Mosul, where the last of the Islamic State forces are holed up. Mosul is a major city in northern Iraq, located on the Tigris River opposite the ancient Assyrian city of Nineveh.

Worldwide condemnation of civilian deaths from coalition bombs in the narrow, medieval streets of West Mosul is blighting the war effort.

The Defence Department and Defence Minister Marise Payne have repeatedly ignored questions from The New Daily on the size of the bombs Australia is dropping and any available estimates of civilian casualties.

However, a report from Human Rights Watch this month documents evidence of bombs between 500 and 2000 pounds.Islamic State’s stronghold in Mosul is being surrounded by US-led coalition forces.

The report, titled Iraq: Civilian Casualties Mount in West Mosul, states: “Munitions of this size can pose an excessive risk to civilians when used in populated areas, given their large blast and fragmentation radius. The … attacks may have caused disproportionate civilian harm in comparison to the military advantage gained, in violation of international humanitarian law.”

More than 600,000 civilians have fled Mosul this year, but 200,000 remain.

There are fears civilian deaths will rise rapidly in the final days of the conflict.

The Iraq army, backed with coalition airstrikes, are claiming to control more than 90 per cent of the city.

Military experts have told The New Daily civilian casualties are almost inevitable.

Melbourne-based medic Derek Ross, who has just returned from working with the group Global Outreach Doctors in Mosul, told The New Daily: “I treated civilians for the same bullet and blast injuries as the soldiers on the front line. We would often treat multiple members of the same family who were all injured by the same mortar attack.

“The uninjured children that were brought to the trauma centre with their injured family members were numb and silent.”

Former secretary to the Department of Defence Paul Barratt told The New Daily: “In an urban environment civilian casualties are almost inevitable. If you don’t want to have pictures of dead children on the evening screens you have to avoid operations that involve killing children.”

Dr Clark Jones, a terrorism expert at the Australian National University, told The New Daily there was an extremely high chance of civilian casualties.

“The public does not have much appetite for pictures of dead children, women and older people.”