Showing posts with label Nuri al-Maliki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nuri al-Maliki. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2014

Iran Strongly Rejects Deploying Troops in Iraq.


Iran Strongly Rejects Deploying Troops in Iraq.(Fars).
Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian categorically rejected a Wall Street Journal report alleging that the country has dispatched military forces to Iraq to fight against the Al-Qaeda-backed militants in there.
Amir Abdollahian's remarks came after the American newspaper, the Wall Street Journal, in a report claimed that Tehran has sent two elite units of its Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) to Iraq to fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) terrorists - an Al-Qaeda offshoot.

"The dispatch of Iranian military forces to Iraq is not true," Amir Abdollahian stressed in remarks to FNA on Friday.

The Iranian deputy foreign minister also stressed Iraq's strong military capabilities, and reiterated that Iraq's armed forces are powerfully fighting against the ISIL militants.

Iraq's Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari did not confirm the WSJ report when asked if Iran's Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) was entering the fight."Frankly I have no idea about that. I am in London now," he told the WSJ in a phone interview.

In Tehran, Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marzieh Afgham had already stressed that Iran is not involved in the clashes in Iraq, saying, "Until now we haven't received any requests for help from Iraq. Iraq's army is certainly capable in handling this."

Political analyst Seyed Mostafa Khoshcheshm told FNA on Friday that "such reports are aimed at provoking the Sunni population in the region to rush into Iraq to escalate the present clashes into a Sunni-Shiite Armageddon."

Elaborating on why the US and its media, including the WSJ, are striving to fabricate reports on Iran's military presence in regional clashes, the political analyst said, "While the western states, including the US, have condemned the ISIL terrorist moves in Iraq, their main allies in the region have not only voiced support for the terrorist groups, including the ISIL, but provided it with financial and logistical backups and much more".

"There is a strong body of evidence to prove such regional supports for the ISIL, including Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki's recent complaints in this regard. Just yesterday, the daughter of Iraq's executed dictator Saddam Hussein declared that she has joined the ISIL and appreciated Saudi Arabia and Qatar for their fervent and non-stop supports for the ISIL," he added.Read the full story here.

Related:  

Iranian analyst: "Iraqi generals hand over Mosul to ISIS to create instability and discontent with the Iraqi Shia-led government."

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Iranian analyst: "Iraqi generals hand over Mosul to ISIS to create instability and discontent with the Iraqi Shia-led government."





Iranian analyst: "Iraqi generals hand over Mosul to ISIS to create instability and discontent with the Iraqi Shia-led government." HT: Brookings.

In an interview with Tasnim News Agency, Iranian political analyst Hassan Hanizadeh was asked why Iraqi military forces fled Mosul.

According to Hanizadeh, “This issue is connected to the Iraqi generals whose goals were to hand over the city to terrorist groups and create instability and discontent with the Iraqi Shia-led government. The generals want to organize the fleeing forces and reconstruct them with remnants of the Baath Party under the pretext of combating the terrorist groups, and stage a coup to overthrow the government of Mr. Maliki.”

In an article entitled, “Mosul under the Control of American and Saudi Arabian Terrorists,” hard line Resalat News suggests “the Islamic State of Iraq in Syria (ISIS) has been supported by the U.S. and Saudi Arabia over the years,” and that in response to ISIS’s takeover of Mosul, the Iraqi government should “mobilize military forces around the country, declare a state of emergency, request that Iraqi tribes join military and militia forces,” and a number of other measures.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham condemned the ISIS takeover of Mosul calling it “a blatant example of the transnational threat of terrorism.”

Hard line Javan Online published an editorial entitled, “The growth of the cancer of terrorism reaches Mosul,” and argues, “Influential individuals that have penetrated the police, security, and military forces have been the source of many disasters in Iraq, including Mosul.”

The article goes on to dispute how “two to three thousand ISIS fighters could take over a large city such as Mosul quickly.” Read the full story here.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Video - Iraq Residents flee Mosul after ISIS fighters seize control




Hmmmm.....Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!

Iraqi city of Mosul falls to ISIS jihadists.


Iraqi city of Mosul falls to ISIS jihadists.(BBC).

Iraq's prime minister has asked parliament to declare a state of emergency, after Islamist militants effectively took control of Mosul.

Nouri Maliki acknowledged "vital areas" of the northern city had been seized.

Overnight, hundreds of men armed with rocket-propelled grenades and machine-guns seized the Nineveh provincial government's offices in Mosul.

They also destroyed several police stations before overrunning the airport and army's operations headquarters.

Elsewhere, a double bomb attack in the central town of Baqouba killed at least 20 people, police and medics said. The blasts, targeting a funeral procession in the capital of Diyala province, also wounded 28 people.

In the past week, the jihadist Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) and its allies have carried out major attacks on cities and towns in western and northern Iraq, killing scores of people.

The BBC's Jim Muir in Beirut says militants from ISIS have been informally controlling much of Nineveh province for months, imposing tolls of the movement of goods and demanding protection money from local officials.

After five days of fighting, they took control of key installations in Mosul, Iraq's second largest city with an estimated population of 1.8 million.

On Monday, Nineveh Governor Atheel al-Nujaifi made a televised plea to the city's residents, calling on them to "stand firm in their areas and to defend them against the strangers".

But Mr Nujaifi fled shortly before the provincial government's headquarters fell to the onslaught late on Monday night.

On Tuesday, several residents told the Associated Press that black flags associated with jihadist groups were flying from buildings and that the militants had announced over loudspeaker that they had "come to liberate Mosul and would fight only those who attack them".

"The situation is chaotic inside the city and there is nobody to help us," said Umm Karam, a government employee. "We are afraid."Read the full story here.

Hmmmm.....Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!

Update: Unconfirmed report that ISID captured 28 Turkish truck drivers in Mosul

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Iraqi women protest against draft law to permit child marriage.


Iraqi women protest against draft law to permit child marriage.(NCRI).
A group of Iraqi women have demonstrated in Baghdad against a draft law approved by the Iraqi cabinet that would permit the marriage of nine-year-old girls. The draft now goes to parliament..
The group's protest was on International Women's Day on Saturday and a week after the cabinet voted for the legislation.
"On this day of women, women of Iraq are in mourning," the protesters shouted."We believe that this is a crime against humanity," said Hanaa Eduar, a prominent Iraqi human rights activist."It would deprive a girl of her right to live a normal childhood."
The United Nations's representative to Iraq, Nickolay Mladenov, also condemned the legislation.
The legislation recognizes girls at nine fitting for marriage.

The draft was put forward by justice minister Hassan al-Shimari, a member of the Shiite Fadila party, and approved by the cabinet on February 25.

Religious parties with close ties to the Iranian regime first attempted to pass a version of the law in 2003 under United States occupation, angering secular Iraqis and prompting protests.Hmmmm.......Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!.........Yup coming soon 'Succes' story II....Afghanistan.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Statement : Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr quits politics.


Statement : Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr quits politics.(HD).

Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, leader of a powerful political movement, commander of a once-feared militia and a fierce critic of the U.S.-led invasion, has announced his exit from politics.

In an unexpected hand-written note pictured on his website, Mr. Sadr said, he will not hold any Government position or have any representatives in Parliament. The statement also said, he is shutting down all his offices except for some charity.

"I announce my non-intervention in all political affairs and that there is no bloc that represents us from now on, nor any position inside or outside the government nor parliament," Sadr said in a written statement received by AFP on Sunday.

Moqtada al-Sadr, 40, is the son of a prominent Shiite leader, Ayatollah Mohammad Sadeq al-Sadr, who was murdered presumably by the regime of Saddam Hussein in 1999.

Succeeding his father's career, al-Sadr became the head of the al-Sadr group. He was also enrolled at the Najaf Hawza Seminary and then in Iran's Qum Hawza Seminary.

After the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime, al-Sadr and his supporters took control of Saddam City, a Shiite slum in Baghdad, and renamed it as Sadr City in memory of his father. 

Sadr's group currently holds six cabinet posts as well as 40 seats in the 325-member parliament.
     
He also said his movement's political offices will be closed, but that others related to social welfare, media and education will remain open.
     
It was not immediately clear if the decision was temporary or permanent, with Sadrist officials surprised by the announcement not in a position to clarify.
      
One official from Sadr's office told AFP that no one wanted to discuss the issue "because it was a surprise decision."

"I do not think it will be reversed... because it is a very strong decision," the official added however.
      
If confirmed as permanent, Sadr's announcement brings to a close a political career spanning more than a decade.
      
Sadr's widely-feared Mahdi Army militia also repeatedly battled American forces, and played a major role in the brutal sectarian conflict between Iraqi Sunnis and Shiites in which tens of thousands of people died.
      
Sadr suspended the militia's activities in 2008 following major battles with Iraqi and U.S. security forces.
      
Sadr said the decision to leave politics was taken from the standpoint of Islamic law and of "preserving the honourable reputation of Sadr, especially of the two Sadr martyrs," referring to his father and another relative who were killed during Saddam Hussein's rule.
      
The move also aims to "end all the corruptions that occurred or which are likely to occur" that would harm the Sadr reputation, he said.Hmmmm.....With Maliki now completely an Iranian clone who needs 'opposition'.More here and here.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Human Rights Watch - Iraq: Security Forces Abusing Women in Detention.


Human Rights Watch - Iraq: Security Forces Abusing Women in Detention.HT: HRW.
(Baghdad) – Iraqi authorities are detaining thousands of Iraqi women illegally and subjecting many to torture and ill-treatment, including the threat of sexual abuse. 
Iraq’s weak judiciary, plagued by corruption, frequently bases convictions on coerced confessions, and trial proceedings fall far short of international standards. Many women were detained for months or even years without charge before seeing a judge.

The 105-page report, “‘No One Is Safe’: Abuses of Women in Iraq’s Criminal Justice System,”documents abuses of women in detention based on interviews with women and girls, Sunni and Shia, in prison; their families and lawyers; and medical service providers in the prisons at a time of escalating violence involving security forces and armed groups. Human Rights Watch also reviewed court documents and extensive information received in meetings with Iraqi authorities including Justice, Interior, Defense, and Human Rights ministry officials, and two deputy prime ministers.

“Iraqi security forces and officials act as if brutally abusing women will make the country safer,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “In fact, these women and their relatives have told us that as long as security forces abuse people with impunity, we can only expect security conditions to worsen.”

In January 2013, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki promised to reform the criminal justice system, beginning with releasing detained women who had judicial orders of release. A year later, the brutal tactics of security forces remain essentially the same and hundreds of women remain in detention illegally.

Many of the 27 women who spoke with Human Rights Watch described being beaten, kicked, slapped, hung upside-down and beaten on their feet (falaqa), given electric shocks, and raped or threatened with sexual assault by security forces during their interrogation
They said security forces questioned them about their male relatives’ activities rather than crimes in which they themselves were implicated. Security forces forced them to sign statements, many with fingerprints, which they were not allowed to read and that they later repudiated in court, they said.

One woman entered her meeting with Human Rights Watch in Iraq’s death row facility in Baghdad’s Kadhimiyya neighborhood on crutches. She said nine days of beatings, electric shocks, and falaqa in March 2012 had left her permanently disabled. The split nose, back scars, and burns on her breast that Human Rights Watch observed were consistent with the abuse she alleged.
She was executed in September 2013, seven months after Human Rights Watch interviewed her, despite lower court rulings that dismissed charges against her following a medical report that supported her alleged torture.

Human Rights Watch found that Iraqi security forces regularly arrest women illegally and commit other due process violations against women at every stage of the justice system. Women are subjected to threats of, or actual, sexual assault, sometimes in front of husbands, brothers, and children. Failure by the courts to investigate allegations of abuse and hold the abusers responsible encourages the police to falsify confessions and use torture, Human Rights Watch said.

The vast majority of the more than 4,200 women detained in Interior and Defense ministry facilities are Sunni, but the abuses Human Rights Watch documents affect women of all sects and classes throughout Iraqi society.

Both men and women suffer from the severe flaws of the criminal justice system. But women suffer a double burden due to their second-class status in Iraqi society. Human Rights Watch found that women are frequently targeted not only for crimes they themselves are said to have committed, but to harass male family or members of their communities. Once they have been detained, and even if they are released unharmed, women are frequently stigmatized by their family or community, who perceive them to have been dishonored.

Iraq’s broken criminal justice system fails to achieve justice for victims either of security force abuses or of criminal attacks by armed groups, Human Rights Watch said. Arrests and convictions Human Rights Watch documented appeared often to have been predicated on information provided by secret informants and confessions coerced under torture.

“We don’t know who we fear more, Al-Qaeda or SWAT,” said one Fallujah resident, referring to the special forces unit that carries out counterterrorism operations. “Why would we help them fight Al-Qaeda when they’ll just come for us as soon as they’re done with them?”

Human Rights Watch reviewed a video in which a man representing himself as a leader of Al-Qaeda asks a crowd of onlookers in Ramadi,What are we supposed to do when the army is raping our women? What are we supposed to do when they’re imprisoning our women and children?” Peaceful protesters posed these same questions to Iraqi authorities in mass demonstrations that began over a year ago, but Maliki’s promises to address these issues remain unfulfilled.

Women detainees, their families, and lawyers told Human Rights Watch that security forces conduct random and mass arrests of women that amount to collective punishment for alleged terrorist activities by male family members. Authorities have exploited vague provisions in the Anti-Terrorism Law of 2005 to settle personal or political scores – detaining, charging, and trying women based on their association to a particular individual, tribe, or sect, Human Rights Watch said.

In the vast majority of cases Human Rights Watch examined, women had no access to a lawyer before or during their interrogation, contrary to Iraqi law when security forces presented them with statements to sign, or at trial, either because they could not afford one or because lawyers feared taking on politically sensitive cases.

In every case Human Rights Watch documented in which women told the investigating or trial judge about abuse, the judges did not open an inquiry. Some dismissed the allegations, saying that they observed no marks on the defendant’s body or that the woman should have made the allegations earlier.

Iraqi authorities should acknowledge the prevalence of abuse of female detainees, promptly investigate allegations of torture and ill-treatment, prosecute guards and interrogators responsible for abuse, and disallow coerced confessions, Human Rights Watch said. They should make judicial and security sector reform an urgent priority as a prerequisite for stemming violence that increasingly threatens the country’s stability.

The abuses of women we documented are in many ways at the heart of the current crisis in Iraq,” Stork said. “These abuses have caused a deep-seated anger and lack of trust between Iraq’s diverse communities and security forces, and all Iraqis are paying the price.”Hmmmm......Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!


Sunday, January 26, 2014

Senior Euro MP: Iraqi executions "like sheep being slaughtered in an abattoir"


Senior Euro MP: Iraqi executions "like sheep being slaughtered in an abattoir" (NCRI).

A senior Euro MP has called the current spate of mass executions in Iraq as “like sheep being slaughtered in an abattoir”.

Struan Stevenson, a Conservative MEP from Scotland who chairs the European Parliament’s important Delegation for Relations with Iraq says the executions are being carried out on “an industrial scale.”
Speaking from the European Parliament in Brussels, Struan Stevenson said:
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is waging war on his own people. His Shia-led government, with the backing and encouragement of his puppet-masters in neighbouring Iran, is engaged in a genocidal military campaign against the Sunni population whom Maliki has branded as terrorists.
Men, women and children are being massacred in cities like Fallujah and Ramadi in relentless bombing raids, rocket attacks and tank battles, under the pretext that these people are all members or supporters of Al Qaeda. The Americans have fallen for this ruse hook, line and sinker and are rushing in supplies of automatic weapons, tanks, aircraft and rockets to help Maliki’s killing machine.
“Captured prisoners are being herded to the gallows in batches of 10 or 12, like sheep being slaughtered in an abattoir.
There seems to be no formal judicial process. Branded as terrorists, these people are neither defended nor tried in proper courts. What were their crimes? Where are the witnesses? This is capital punishment on an industrial scale. Maliki has set in motion a conveyor belt of death to terrorise the Sunni population into submission.

The UN, US and EU cannot simply stand aside and watch this horror unfold. We have helped enforce an Iranian puppet state on the Iraqi people. It’s time we put a stop to this murderous brutality and restored freedom, democracy and human rights to the beleaguered people of Iraq.”

Struan Stevenson MEP President of the European Parliament's Delegation for Relations with Iraq.Hmmm......Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!



Monday, January 13, 2014

The “Rise” of Al Qaeda in Iraq and the Threat from Prime Minister Maliki.


The “Rise” of Al Qaeda in Iraq and the Threat from Prime Minister Maliki. HT: CSIS.


Like all extreme neo-Salafi movements, al Qaeda is also an economic and social dead end. It does not offer any practical way of operating and competing in a global economy, it is too dysfunctional to allow meaningful education and social interaction, and it finances itself largely through extortion in ways that cripple the existing local economy. Moreover, it does not tolerate competition even from other Islamist fighters. In Syria, it has provoked its own civil war with other hardline Islamist movements – a civil war it now seems to be decisively losing to other Sunni rebel factions.

It is precisely that type of behavior, however, which should lead U.S. officials, analysts, and media to do a far, far better job of reporting on exactly what has really happened in Anbar, and in cities like Fallujah and Ramadi. 
Bad as Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) is, far too much of the evidence points to Prime Minister Maliki as an equal threat to Iraq and to U.S. interests. 
Ever since the 2010 election, he has become steadily more repressive, manipulated Iraq’s security forces to serve his own interests, and created a growing Sunni resistance to his practice of using Shi’ite political support to gain his own advantage.

He has refused to honor the Erbil power-sharing agreement that was supposed to create a national government that could tie together Arab Sunni and Arab Shi’ite, and he has increased tensions with Iraq’s Kurds.

As the U.S. State Department human rights reports for Iraq, Amnesty International, and the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) make all too clear; Maliki’s search for power has steadily repressed and alienated Iraq’s Sunnis on a national level.

It has led to show trials and death sentences against one of Iraq’s leading Sunni politicians including former Vice President Taqris al-Hashimi, who has been living in asylum in Turkey since being convicted nad sentenced to death in absentia by an Iraqi court. It has shifted the promotion structure in the Iraqi Security Forces to both give the Prime Minister personal control and has turned them into an instrument he can use against Sunnis.Read the full story here.

Monday, December 30, 2013

"CHANGE" A New Dictator Takes Iraq to the Brink!


"CHANGE" A New Dictator Takes Iraq to the Brink! (NCRI).By: Struan Stevenson, President of the European Parliament’s Delegation for Relations with Iraq.

The violent arrest in Iraq of a leading Sunni MP – Ahmed al-Alwani – marks yet another step in that country’s rapid descent into sectarian anarchy and civil war. Alwani is chairman of the Iraqi parliament’s important Economics Committee. More significantly, he is also a leading critic of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and an arch opponent of the spread of Iranian influence in Iraq.

He led recent demonstrations in Ramadi against the sectarian oppression of the Shiite-led government and wrote to the EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs – Catherine Ashton – bewailing Iraq’s appalling human rights record, citing the massacre of defenceless Iranian dissidents in a refugee camp near Baghdad as evidence of Maliki’s malign rule. 

The almost inevitable reaction from the increasingly despotic prime minister was a trumped-up charge of terrorism against Alwani and a large contingent of heavily armed troops, with 50 armoured vehicles and a military helicopter were sent to arrest him at his home in a village in Anbar Province, at dawn on Saturday 28th December. 

The ensuing carnage saw Alwani’s brother and 8 other family members and bodyguards shot dead and the MP himself dragged off to a prison in Baghdad.

Alwani’s immunity from prosecution as an Iraqi MP was conveniently ignored by Maliki, who says charges of terrorism override any such constitutional niceties. This is becoming routine for the Iraqi prime minister.

Almost exactly a year ago, Iraq’s Sunni finance minister - Rafie al-Issawi – had his home and offices raided by security forces. 150 of his bodyguards and staff were arrested on charges of terrorism, setting off widespread protests and demonstrations in the six predominantly Sunni provinces throughout the country. 

This event followed the attempted arrest of Iraq’s Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, the day after U.S. troops pulled out of Iraq on 19th December 2011. Hashemi, the most senior Sunni in the Iraqi government, was also a fierce critic of Maliki and an opponent of Iranian meddling in Iraq. His 13 bodyguards were arrested, tortured and sentenced to death. Hashemi himself has been sentenced to death in absentia no fewer than five times and now lives in exile in Turkey.

The crackdown on leading Sunni politicians by the overtly Shia prime minister seems to follow a clear pattern. Each time Maliki visits Tehran he receives instructions from his puppet-master Ayatollah Khamenei. This always involves ordering the arrest of another Sunni political leader when he returns to Baghdad.

He also almost invariably initiates a military assault on the 3,000 Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK or PMOI) refugees, held in a prison-like camp near Baghdad. The MEK are feared and loathed by the Iranian regime as their main political opponents and the mullahs repeatedly demand action from the Iraqi PM to annihilate them. 

So far the resulting bloody assaults by Iraqi forces have led to over 130 deaths of these defenceless men and women, in repeated armed massacres and rocket attacks. Seven hostages, including six women, were abducted by Iraqi SWAT teams on 1st September and are still being held in secret locations in Baghdad. One of the hostages was killed in Iraqi custody, Iranian media reported last week. The US, EU and UN who signed over protection of these people to Iraq, refuse to intervene.

The most recent attack on the MEK took place December 27th only days after Maliki returned from a visit to Tehran. Three refugees were killed and 71 wounded as a barrage of dozens of Katyusha rockets and ground-to-ground missiles rained down on Camp Liberty, near Baghdad airport. Iraqi government has meanwhile prevented the 3,000 MEK refugees from taking delivery of their hard hats and armoured vests, which were left behind in their previous home, Camp Ashraf.

More than 17,500 protective concrete T-walls were deliberately dismantled by Iraqi forces, to ensure the 3,000 refugees are sitting-ducks for future bloody assaults.

Ominously and clearly also acting on instructions from Tehran, Maliki has allowed the free-flow of Iranian and Hezbollah military personnel and equipment through Iraq to bolster the dictatorship of Bashir al-Assad in neighbouring Syria.

The payback for Maliki’s slavish submission to the mullahs’ demands will be Iranian support for his re-election to a third term as Iraq’s prime minister. Elections are due on 30th April, although the increasing insurgency, sectarian conflict, abuse of human rights, corruption, torture, secret prisons and mass executions point to Maliki’s defeat, unless, as is more than likely, he and his Iranian allies orchestrate massive electoral fraud. The West, meanwhile, which stupidly supported Maliki, stands impotently on the sidelines as Iraq spirals towards civil war.

It is time the U.S., EU and UN re-discovers its collective backbone. They have lamely spawned a new dictatorship in Iraq and are wringing their hands in frustration as that country becomes a failed state, with Iran poised to be the sole beneficiary.

Struan Stevenson is a Conservative Euro MP from Scotland and president of the European Parliament’s Delegation for Relations with Iraq.

Hmmm......... Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!......Yup and a success it is : Taliban back in the saddle in Afghanistan by 2017

Friday, December 27, 2013

Video - Missile attack by Al-Mukhtar Army on Camp Liberty, December 26, 2013.



Video - Missile attack by Al-Mukhtar Army on Camp Liberty, December 26, 2013. HT: NCRI.

Hmmm......Anyone believing these 'Mad Mullahs' wouldn't do the same to Israel or the US need his head examinated!

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Iranian dissidents Baghdad camp attacked with Rockets by the al-Mukhtar Army militia, leaves Two killed - 50 + wounded.

Many trailers and facilities of Camp Liberty destroyed in fourth missile attack

Iranian dissidents Baghdad camp attacked with Rockets by the al-Mukhtar Army militia, leaves Two killed - 50 + wounded.(NCRI).

A large number of trailers and facilities at Camp Liberty were destroyed as the result of the fourth attack with dozens of different types of missiles at 9:15 pm local time tonight.

Mohammad Javad Saleh Tehrani is one of the victims of this missile attack and another martyr has not yet been identified due to the severity of his wounds. A number of those wounded are in critical condition.

By this criminal attack, [Iraqi Prime Minister] Nuri al-Maliki and [the Iranian regime’s Supreme Leader] Ali Khamenei are attempting to cover up the disgrace over the September 1st execution-style massacre at Camp Ashraf. The missile attack on Camp Liberty came after the trip to Tehran by Maliki and his security officials.

As of 10:00 pm Baghdad ocal time, two martyred during the missile attack on Camp Liberty.

At 9:15 pm local time, on 26 December 2013, Camp Liberty was attacked with dozens of missiles of different types. The attack occurs after Nuri al-Maliki’s trip to Tehran and is payback to the religious fascism ruling Iran to enlist the mullahs’ support for Maliki’s third term as Prime Minister.

At 21:15 local time, Camp Liberty was targeted by dozens of missiles of different types. The number of those slain and wounded will be announced subsequently.

This is the fourth missile attack on Iranian dissidents in Camp Liberty (Iraq) in 2013, while the Iraqi government has not yet delivered the bodies of those massacred during the September 1, 2013 attack on Camp Ashraf, to Liberty residents for burial.

According to Reuters The Al-Mukhtar Army militia claimed to be resposible for the cowardly attack:
In a rare claim of responsibility for attacks on the MEK, Wathiq al-Batat, commander of the al-Mukhtar Army militia, told Reuters his group had fired 20 Katyusha rockets and mortar rounds at the camp.

"We've asked (the government) to expel them from the country many times, but they are still here," he said, accusing the group of communicating with Sunni and Shi'ite politicians he claimed were linked to al Qaeda.

Al-Mukhtar Army is a relatively new Shi'ite militia, which has said it is supported and funded by Iran. Batat is a former leader of the more well-known Kata'ib Hezbollah militia.

Shahriar Kia, another spokesman for MEK who lives in the camp he said houses about 3,000 Iranian dissidents, said two men were killed when a rocket fell near their caravan.

Related:

Iranian Resistance reveals: Iraq's Maliki agrees to conditions set by mullahs for his third term. 


Hmmmm........ Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!If feel already for the people in Afghanistan with this kind of Success



Iraqi official acknowledges killing of one of the hostages and their presence in Iraq


Iraqi official acknowledges killing of one of the hostages and their presence in Iraq.(NCRI).

Mullahs’ regime official news agency (IRNA) reported from Baghdad on Wednesday, December 25, quoting an Iraqi “knowledgeable official” that the body of Niknam (Mohammad Ratebi), one of the seven hostages abducted in Ashraf on September 1, is in Baghdad and in the hands of Government of Iraq and among other victims. The said official described “Niknam” as PMOI strategist.

This is a clear acknowledgement by Government of Iraq to this reality that the hostages are in Iraq and are threatened with torture and death. Previously, the Iranian Resistance had declared in numerous statements in detail that the hostages are in Iraq and held by forces under Maliki’s command.

This is while a senior State Department official, declared in a hearing at the House Middle East Subcommittee of Foreign Affairs Committee on November 13 that “We can’t pinpoint where the people are... the 7 people, they are not in Iraq.”

Foreign Policy of December 17 wrote on this matter that “U.S. intelligence officials believe… Iranian commandos and fighters from the country’s Iraqi proxies also abducted seven MEK members and smuggled them back to Iran.

The missing MEK supporters haven’t been seen or heard from since the attack.” Foreign Policy that was quoting three intelligence officials emphasized that “Iraqi soldiers didn't get in the way of what was happening at Ashraf” and noted that intelligence officials “say at the missing MEK members might have been executed shortly after being brought into Iran or imprisoned in secret facilities for interrogation”.

Iraqi official’s acknowledgement today (Wednesday, December 25) on the killing of one of the hostages is irrefutable evidence on the presence of hostages in Iraq. To save the lives of the other hostages, it is now very essential and vital that the U.S. government and its intelligence organizations provide all their information and discoveries on the hostages and on the attack on Ashraf with complete transparency and not allow the truth to be sacrificed for political considerations as in cases such as the terrorist attack on the U.S. representation in Benghazi.

Once again, the Iranian Resistance underlines the imperative for an independent and thorough investigation by the United Nations and the introduction of the perpetrators of crime against humanity and their referral to the International Criminal Court.Hmmm.....Somehow i don't think pres Obama wants anything to come between his 'Turkish bazaar deal' with Iran.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran.


Friday, December 20, 2013

Iranian Resistance reveals: Iraq's Maliki agrees to conditions set by mullahs for his third term.


Iranian Resistance reveals: Iraq's Maliki agrees to conditions set by mullahs for his third term.(NCRI).
As the Iranian Resistance has previously declared, Nouri al-Maliki’s principal objective in his trip to Tehran was to gain full support of the clerical regime for his third term as Prime Minister. Support from Iran is of added importance for Maliki after his miserably failed U.S. visit.
According to the latest reports obtained from inside the Iranian regime that, in this trip, Maliki agreed to all conditions set by the Iranian regime to support his third term as Prime Minister and accepted further obligations to serve the religious fascism ruling Iran. Some of these conditions are:
1. Absolute liberty of the Intelligence Ministry and the Qods Force in Iraq to conduct their intelligence, reconnaissance and espionage activities against the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI /MEK) in Camp Liberty.
2. Providing continuous and regular reports of the situation in Camp Liberty to mullahs’ regime embassy in Baghdad by the Ashraf Committee in the Prime Ministry and Iraqi intelligence agents.
3. Establishment of a Qods Force Headquarters near Camp Liberty and providing daily reports on movements and intelligence related to PMOI (MEK) to this headquarters.
4. Intensification of pressures and suppressive measures by Iraqi forces against the PMOI (MEK) in Camp Liberty.
5. Pressure by Iraq on U.S. and European countries’ embassies for expulsion of PMOI (MEK).
6. Creation of a joint national security committee by the Iranian regime and the Iraqi government, made up of the two countries’ foreign ministries, embassies and security apparatuses to speed up expulsion of PMOI (MEK).
7. Taking into account all viewpoints and interests of the Iranian regime in the next cabinet and for forces and elements of Iranian regime to have the upper hand in the cabinet.
8. Iraq should not enter into any coalition against Bashar al-Assad or in any coalition in support of the Syrian opposition and should avoid any alignment with Saudi Arabia and Qatar stances on the regional issues.
9. Give an absolutely free hand to the Iranian regime to send weapons and manpower to Syria with Iraq introducing no hindrances; support of Government of Iraq for Assad’s regime and destruction of Syrian Free Army centers in areas near the Iraqi border.
10. Absolute liberty of the terrorist Qods Force in Iraqi territory, including total freedom of movement and transport of force and weaponry.
11. Revolutionary Guards would be given priority in Iraq's principal economic projects.
12. Continuing and expanding facilities and means to the Iranian regime to skirt international sanctions, especially sanctions on oil, banking and import of important items.

Hmmmm........ Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!

Friday, October 18, 2013

Russia begins shipping primarily weapon shipments to combat terrorism to Iraq.


Russia begins shipping primarily weapon shipments to combat terrorism to Iraq.(PressTV).
Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!
Russia has begun shipping arms to Iraq under a historic multi-billion-dollar contract signed between Baghdad and Moscow last year.

Ali al-Musawi, top media advisor to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, told Russia Today on Thursday that the agreement “entails primarily weapon shipments to combat terrorism.”

Baghdad and Moscow signed the $4.3-billion contract in October 2012, making Russia Iraq’s largest arms supplier after the US, but Iraqi authorities announced a month later that the deal had been annulled over Maliki's concerns about "corruption" within his own team.

However, Anatoly Isaykin, the director general of Russia’s state-run arms trader Rosoboronexport, said in February that the agreement was not canceled, but it has not come into effect yet.

Musawi went on to say, “We really did have suspicions about this contract,” adding, “But in the end the deal was signed. We have currently started the process of implementing one of the stages of this contract.”

The Iraqi official also stated that Baghdad does not have any plan to acquire “offensive weapons” and said, “Bagdad only strives for securing its own sovereignty, defense of its wealth and fight against terrorism.”

Reports at the time of inking the deal indicated that it involved Iraq’s purchase of 30 Mi-28 attack helicopters and 42 Pantsir-S1 surface-to-air missile systems.

Musawi said Iraq was primarily interested in possessing helicopters in an effort to enable its army to hunt down the terrorists staging attacks across the country.

Iraq has been grappling with a spike in bombings and shooting attacks over the past months.


Sunday, February 10, 2013

Report: Iraq PM 'Invites' Iran to Seize US Embassy in Baghdad.



Report: Iraq PM 'Invites' Iran to Seize US Embassy in Baghdad.(INN).
Obama: "If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!"
Iraq allegedly has agreed to allow 50,000 Iranian Basij militia troops into the country to help suppress riots against the government and seize Arab and other foreign embassies, including that of the United States. The two leaders allegedly agreed to allow the Basij forces to attack and occupy the foreign embassies considered hostile to Iran in Baghdad, and to detain their staffs.
Iraq’s Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Iranian military commander Qassaem Soleimani, head of Iran's Al Qods Force, allegedly shook hands on the plan over the weekend at a meeting in Baghdad. Pledging 50,000 Basij military troops to help al-Maliki put down the nationwide riots against his government, Soleimani was quoted as saying "the Iraqi Front is the last front to defend the security of Iran."
The report, which appeared Saturday on the Voice of Iraq website and that of the Nashwan News, apparently offered enough evidence to create concern among analysts in the United States. “Even if there is a slim chance that the report is true, it should be published immediately,” commented U.S.-based Middle East strategy expert Mark Langfan.
The current alleged Iranian-Iraqi plot has been hatched against the backdrop of a greater strategy to put down Sunni-led popular protests against the Shi'ite-led government run by al-Maliki, who heads the Shi'ite Islamic Dawa Party. A source quoted by Nashwan News reported, “after control of the embassies and the detention of its staff, go some Iranian forces (Basij) to the north and west of Iraq for the purpose of suppression of the demonstrators by force.”
At least six people were killed and 100 others wounded, including women, in a dawn attack on the Camp Liberty transit camp west of Baghdad that once was a U.S. Army base near Baghdad International Airport. At least 40 Iranian Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK) members were among the wounded, along with a number of Iraqi police officers.Hmmmm.......Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!Read the full story here.
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