by Arnold Ahlert
Iraq’s disintegration may be imminent, as the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki appears incapable of stopping the advance of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS). The terrorist offshoot of al Qaeda now has its sights set on the capital city of Baghdad. Adding to the chaos, the city of Kirkuk was overtaken by Kurdish soldiers absent any resistance by government forces. After having ignored the prescient warnings of Iraq’s fragility post-U.S. abandonment, the Obama administration and Democratic Party’s determination to end America’s involvement in Iraq irrespective of events on the ground is rapidly approaching its inevitable—and disastrous—conclusion.
Those events on the ground are changing
dramatically and quickly. On Tuesday, after only five days of
resistance, the city of Mosul fell into terrorist hands as ISIS seized
government buildings, the airport, and large quantities of U.S.-supplied
weaponry, when Iraqi security forces and police reportedly abandoned their posts and joined the 500,000 refugees fleeing the city of 1.8 million residents. ISIS fighters also freed up to 2,400 prisoners from jails in the northern Nineveh province, reprising the
successful raids they conducted against the Abu Ghraib and Taji prisons
last July. On Wednesday the Turkish consulate was also taken and its
diplomatic staff was kidnapped, precipitating an emergency gathering of Turkish officials by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to discuss their options.
Yet by far the most daunting aspect of Mosul’s seizure are reports that
the terrorist organization gained access to $500 billion Iraqi dinars,
or $425 million, making it one of the richest, if not the richest, terrorist organization in the world. Gunmen initially looted Mosul’s central bank, and according to
Atheel al-Nujaifi, the governor of the Nineveh province, they garnered
additional funds from numerous banks across the city as well as a “large
quantity of gold bullion.” Regional analyst Brown Moses tweeted that
such a windfall will “buy a whole lot of Jihad,” further noting that
“with $425 million, ISIS could pay 60,000 fighters around $600 a month
for a year.”
In Kirkuk, Kurdish security forces known as
the “Peshmerga” took control Tuesday of the oil-rich city that has been
the focus of a long-running dispute between the central government in
Baghdad and the Kurds. The Kurds have autonomous control of their own
region in the northern part of the nation, and while Kirkuk sits just
outside of that area, the Kurds have long considered it
to be their historical capital. And once again, government security
forces fled without a fight. “The whole of Kirkuk has fallen into the
hands of peshmerga,” said Secretary-General of the Ministry of
Peshmerga Jabbar Yawar. “No Iraqi army remains in Kirkuk now.”
Maliki, who in an earlier televised
conference called a national emergency while urging the public and
government to unite “to confront this vicious attack, which will spare
no Iraqi,” alluded to the fact that military was disloyal. He also
called for a 10 PM curfew in Baghdad and the surrounding towns, while
Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr called for
the formation of “peace units to defend the holy sites of both Muslims
and Christians in Iraq, in cooperation with the government.” Other
Shi’ite leaders reported that four brigades known as the Kataibe
Brigade, the Assaib Brigade, the Imam al-Sadr Brigade and the armed wing
of the Badr Organization had been hastily assembled to protect Baghdad
and the government. Each group contains 2500-3000 fighters.
Wednesday also saw the capture of Tikrit, Saddam Hussein’s former hometown, by ISIS forces, but by yesterday, state-run Iraqiya TV claimed the city had been re-captured by government forces. Yet a later report by Al-Sumaria television indicated the battle for control of the city was ongoing.
By late Wednesday, ISIS was joined by
Sunni militants alienated from Maliki’s Shi’ite-dominated government,
and together they were battling government forces at the northern
entrance of Samarra, a city only 70 miles north of Baghdad. Samarra is
home to the Askariya Shrine, one of the Shi’ites’ most treasured
religious symbols. Its golden dome was shattered by
a bomb in 2006 in an effort to ignite a sectarian civil war, and ISIS
commanders once again threatened to destroy it if those defending it
refused to lay down their arms.
It was initially reported that government
soldiers offered little resistance, leading to speculation that they
have been ordered to surrender. In an interview, a local commander in
the Salahuddin Province that contains the city of Tikrit, confirmed that
assessment. “We received phone calls from high-ranking commanders
asking us to give up,” he claimed. “I questioned them on this, and they
said, ‘This is an order.’ ” Residents of Tikrit also reported that
government soldiers willingly gave up their weapons and uniforms to the
militants, a notable deviation from the expectation that they would be
killed on the spot.
By Thursday, the battle for Samarra had reportedly tilted in the government’s favor. The Long War Journal noted attempts
by ISIS to enter the city had been blunted by government forces that
stopped an armed convoy from entering the city. Aircraft deployed by the
government were part of the equation, as were the aforementioned
Shi’ite brigades organized for the battle.
The battle for Tikrit had reportedly turned
as well—courtesy of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. Two battalions of the
Quds Forces have been sent to aid Maliki, and combined Iraqi-Iranian
forces have retaken 85
percent of that city, according to security forces from both nations.
The combined forces were also helping the government retain control of
Baghdad and Najaf and Kabala. While Iran is helping a fellow Shi’ite
ally, keeping ISIS out of Najaf and Kabala, which are sacred sites on a
par with Mecca and Medina.
Unfortunately, Thursday also saw Iraq’s Sunni and Kurdish factions boycott a
meeting of the Iraqi parliament preventing a quorum from being attained
for a vote on declaring the national state of emergency requested by
Maliki, two days earlier. The factions, already alienated by Maliki’s
preferential treatment of the nation’s Shi’ite majority, were adamantly
opposed to giving extraordinary powers to the Shi’ite Prime Minister.
That reality was also reflected by reports that a number of former Ba’athist military commanders from the Hussein era had joined forced
with ISIS in the effort to overthrow the Maliki regime. “These groups
were unified by the same goal, which is getting rid of this sectarian
government, ending this corrupt army and negotiating to form the Sunni
Region,” said Abu Karam, a senior Baathist leader and a former
high-ranking army officer, who said planning for the offensive had begun
two years ago. “The decisive battle will be in northern Baghdad. These
groups will not stop in Tikrit and will keep moving toward Baghdad.”
In other words, the ultimate stability of the government—and Iraq itself— remains very much in question.
In the meantime, reports indicate that Maliki secretly asked
the Obama administration to consider providing air support to his
government, in the form of drones, airmen and drone pilots. “What we
really need right now are drone strikes and air strikes,” said a senior
Iraqi official Wednesday. Such appeals have so far been rebuffed.
Bernadette Meehan, spokeswoman for the National Security Council,
declined to comment on the requests. “We are not going to get into
details of our diplomatic discussions,” she said in a statement. “The
current focus of our discussions with the government of Iraq and our
policy considerations is to build the capacity of the Iraqis to
successfully confront” ISIS. However, on Thursday afternoon, President
Obama hinted at some flexibility.
“I don’t rule out anything,” he said in response to a question about
possible air strikes. “We do have a stake in making sure these jihadists
are not getting a permanent foothold in either Iraq or Syria.”
Such a statement strains credulity. For the
last three years the president and his administration have done nothing
to mitigate the rise of ISIS, which has transformed itself from a
terrorist group into a full blown army that controls
a cross-border swath of territory from Mosul up through the Anbar
province, and west to the Syrian town of Al Bab on the outskirts of
Aleppo. “This organization has grown into a military organization that
is no longer conducting terrorist activities exclusively but is
conducting conventional military operations,” said retired four-star
Army Gen. Jack Keane, who was a key advisor to Gen. David Petraeus
during the war in Iraq. “They are attacking Iraqi military positions
with company-and battalion-size formations. And in the face of that the
Iraqi security forces have not been able to stand up to it.”
That inability is a direct consequence of
Obama’s determination to completely withdraw from Iraq in December of
2011, irrespective of events on the ground and advice of military
commanders. Withdrawal was precipitated by the president’s failure to
negotiate a Status of Forces Agreement that would have allowed some U.S.
troops to remain in country. And while the media prefer to blame Iraqi
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the fault lies squarely with
a president who demonstrated a calculated indifference towards
negotiating a deal in 2011 similar to the one George W. Bush procured in
2008 under far more difficult circumstances.
The result was President Obama’s commitment
of only 3000-5000 troops to Iraq following the 2011 withdrawal. That
number seriously undercut the recommendations of his military commanders
who had asked for 20,000 troops to carry out such missions
as counterterrorist operations, diplomat support — and the training and
support for Iraqi security forces. Former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta
and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen would have been
satisfied with 10,000 troops, but Obama rejected this. The Maliki
government, already risking a domestic backlash for keeping any troops
in the nation, concluded that the political risks involved weren’t worth
it when Obama was so transparently unserious.
His fellow Democrats are no better. Ever
since the 2004 presidential campaign, when anti-war activist Howard Dean
temporarily vaulted to the head of the Democratic pack of presidential
contenders, many of the same Democrats who initially supported the war
began their long and ultimately successful campaign to undermine it in
order to gain political advantage. This includes current Secretary of
State John Kerry, who had said there was “no question in my mind that
Saddam Hussein has to be toppled one way or another,” Vice President Joe
Biden, who said that “Saddam either has to be separated from his
weapons or taken out of power,” and former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, who cast her vote for war authorization “with conviction.” By
the 2004 election, however — after unanimously voting to demolish the
country’s existing political infrastructure — these Democrats spoke of
little else but abandoning Iraq and allowing it to degenerate into the
sectarian chaos on display today.
After ten years, the Left’s wish for Iraq has
finally been realized. Democrats are now in a lurch justifying the
descent of the country. Speaking before the
Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) Thursday, Clinton hypocritically
bemoaned the “dreadful, deteriorating situation,” which she herself
played a role in engineering, and claimed she “could not have predicted
the extent to which ISIS could be effective in seizing cities in Iraq
and trying to erase boundaries to create a new state.” However, the rise
of ISIS, due to the dramatic withdrawal of U.S. forces, has been
predicted for quite some time. Just last February, a threat assessment
by the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency asserted that the ISIS
“probably will attempt to take territory in Iraq and Syria . . . as
demonstrated recently in Ramadi and Fallujah,” due to the weak security
environment “since the departure of U.S. forces at the end of 2011.”
Obama, Clinton and the rest of the Democratic
Party received ample warning about where their sabotage of Iraq would
lead. And despite the clear disaster unfolding in the country, Obama and
his party will reprise the same inadequate troop level/scheduled
departure strategy in Afghanistan. Does a similar fiasco await us there?
Americans should expect nothing less from a party at the helm that
conflates abandoning wars with winning them.
Arnold Ahlert is a former NY Post op-ed columnist currently contributing to JewishWorldReview.com, HumanEvents.com and CanadaFreePress.com. He may be reached at atahlert@comcast.net.
Source: http://www.frontpagemag.com/2014/arnold-ahlert/who-lost-iraq/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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