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IRAQ WARS
ISIL Iraq onslaught aids Syria regime, jihadists: analysts
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) June 14, 2014


Iraqi leaders to blame for army's collapse: US
Washington (AFP) June 13, 2014 - Iraqi leaders failed to strengthen and support the nation's military after US troops withdrew despite billions of American dollars poured into training and equipping the army, officials said Friday.

State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf also dismissed criticism from Republican lawmakers that a residual US force would have stopped the Iraqi army from collapsing in face of this week's militant assault.

"When we left Iraq, after years of sacrifice and American taxpayer money, and certainly our troops felt that sacrifice more than anyone, the Iraqis had an opportunity," Harf told reporters.

"We had helped their security forces. We had helped their army," she insisted.

"We had gotten them on their feet and helped build their capacity, and quite frankly, they did not take advantage of that opportunity."

Instead, Iraqi leaders "created a climate where there were vulnerabilities when it came to the cohesion of the Iraqi army," Harf said.

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant captured Iraq's second city Mosul in a lightning offensive Tuesday, before advancing south toward Baghdad.

And despite billions spent on training Iraqi security forces, US officials said they were disappointed to see them just melt away in the face of ISIL's onslaught.

"Iraqi security forces have proven unable to defend a number of cities, which has allowed the terrorists to overrun a part of Iraq's territory," US President Barack Obama said.

Harf also took issue with angry criticism from Republican John McCain who renewed his call for the entire US national security team, which includes the State Department, to be replaced.

"If we'd had had a residual force there to stabilize the country, as we have in Bosnia after that conflict and all the other ones like Germany and Japan, Korea, I think it would have had a dramatically different effect" on the behavior of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, McCain said on MSNBC television.

Washington withdrew all its forces in 2011, when Iraqi leaders refused to sign a deal to provide legal protections for US troops.

But McCain insisted that any "residual force left behind in Iraq was not in danger of any casualties of any significance because we had the conflict won, for all intents and purposes."

Harf hit back however, saying: "It's in some ways naive to think that the United States, by having a few thousand noncombat troops, could have prevented the political leaders from contributing to this climate that we've seen."

"If people argue that that would have been the magic bullet, I think they need to take a hard look at the facts on the ground," she added.

Shelling kills 10 in north Iraq town: officials
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) June 15, 2014 - Shelling targeting the largest town not seized by militants in a north Iraq province killed 10 people on Sunday, police and a local official said.

The shelling in Tal Afar, a Shiite Turkmen town that is one of the few in Nineveh province not overrun by a major militant offensive, also wounded 40 people, the sources said.

The shelling was carried out by militants who launched an assault on the Tal Afar area on Sunday that was ultimately repulsed, with 18 militants killed.

Militants unleashed a major offensive, spearheaded by jihadists from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) but also including supporters of ousted dictator Saddam Hussein and other groups, overrunning Nineveh province and seizing major parts of three others.

The offensive began in Nineveh's capital Mosul late on Monday, and later swept into Kirkuk, Salaheddin and Diyala provinces.

Security forces initially performed poorly, in some cases abandoning vehicles and positions and shedding their uniforms in their haste to flee.

Both Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and jihadist groups battling to oust him stand to benefit from a lightning offensive by militants across the border in Iraq, analysts believe.

Fighters from the powerful jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant began an offensive in Iraq on Monday, taking a swathe of mostly Sunni Arab territory in the north.

The attack led by ISIL, which operates in both countries, has brought Iraq's army to the brink of collapse.

Analysts say their advance could deliver not just a military boost to jihadists in Syria, but also political gains for Assad.

ISIL's brutal tactics and reputation for abuses against civilians and rival rebels may force Western governments to reconsider their support for Syrian insurgents.

"Washington and London are going to find themselves on the same side as Damascus, facing what appears to be a threat to the region, the West and Europe," said Frederic Pichon, author of "Syria: Why the West was Wrong".

Since the Syrian conflict started in March 2011, Assad has become the "bete noire" of the Western governments who opposed him.

With some 162,000 killed in the more than three-year-long conflict and fighting still raging, Assad won a third, seven-year term in office earlier this month in an election dubbed a "parody of democracy" by opponents.

- Western policy change? -

But for Bassam Abu Abdullah of the Damascus Centre for Strategic Studies, which is close to the regime, ISIL's advances could alter Western policy.

He said the change may come "because there is an imminent threat to the security and stability of the whole region".

Events in Iraq have bolstered Damscus' claims that the threat posed by "terrorists" in the region requires a regional and international response, he said.

"Particularly when you consider that there are Europeans and Americans among the jihadists' ranks," he said.

The Damascus government labels all rebels as "terrorists" and has repeatedly accused the West, Turkey and Gulf Arab states of backing insurgents financially and militarily.

But the jihadist push on Baghdad could also increase pressure on Assad's troops, other analysts said.

Firas Abi Ali, of London-based risk analysts IHS, said the Iraqi army's withdrawal from the border is a major "problem for the Syrian government because they need that border to be open to get supplies from Iraq".

If not enough volunteers can be found to tackle the militant advance in Iraq, it is possible Iraqi Shiite militiamen fighting alongside Assad's troops could be recalled.

This, Abi Ali says, could dent the Syrian government's battlefield strength.

For ISIL, which is currently fighting other rebels in Syria, including their fellow jihadists in the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Nusra front, their advances in Iraq are a huge military and financial step forward.

- Boosting ISIL prestige -

"The seizure of Mosul is going to increase ISIL's prestige around the world, but especially in Syria," said Romain Caillet, an expert in radical Islamism in the region.

ISIL's successes in Fallujah, Ramadi and Mosul could persuade people "it could also take cities in Syria, which the revolution, for all its outside support, is unable to do," he added.

The jihadist group and its tribal allies brought Iraq's armed forces close to collapse, with many troops shedding their uniforms and abandoning positions and equipment.

"It may not necessarily be a game changer altogether for Syria, but ISIS will come out of all of this significantly strengthened and emboldened with confidence," said Charles Lister of the Brookings Doha Centre.

ISIL "has already transferred captured weaponry and new recruits into parts of northern and eastern Syria, and it seems likely this will serve to bolster their counter offensives in Deir Ezzor and farther west towards Aleppo," he added.

The Syrian Observatory for Human rights, a Britain-based monitor, also said weapons seized in Iraq are being taken into Syria.

Some in Syria's armed opposition welcomed ISIL when it first emerged there in spring 2013.

But its systematic abuses and quest for dominance prompted a backlash that escalated into open hostilities between ISIL and a coalition of moderate and Islamist rebels backed by Al-Nusra Front.

The fighting inside Syria pitting ISIL against the rebels and Al-Nusra is estimated to have killed 6,000 people since January.

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