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Heavy fighting in and around Mosul as Iraqi troops expand their foothold

November 12, 2016 By administrator

heavy-fightingIraqi allied forces, numbering 100,000 and backed by US air power, are pressing into the IS stronghold. The militants are vastly outnumbered but are using bombers, snipers and ambushes to fight back.

A suicide car bomber sent by the Islamic State (IS) group struck Iraqi special-forces Saturday in Mosul, sparking heavy fighting in the strategic city in the northern Iraq.

The early morning attack occurred in the Qadisiya neighborhood, and triggered a barrage of gunfire, mortar rounds and rocket-propelled grenades, Iraqi officers said. They added that fighting was also taking place in the adjoining Arbajiya neighborhood.

But backed by US and Iraqi air power Iraqi special-forces appear to have taken control of the two districts after killing 30 militants, three rocket launchers and destroying nine car bombs sent on suicide missions by the IS.

🆘‼️🔥 Meanwhile in #Mosul … Terrorists of #ISIS continues to crucify innocent people. pic.twitter.com/JVCpqVQaHR

— Onlinemagazin Ⓥ (@OnlineMagazin) November 11, 2016

For more than a week Iraq’s infantry and armored division troops have been trying to expand their small foothold in the city that IS has controlled since the middle of 2014 when their leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared a Muslim caliphate across parts of Iraq and neighboring Syria.

An alliance of 100,000 Iraqi fighters supported by thousands of Western personnel on the ground is trying to drive IS out of the biggest city under its control in either country.

They’re up against just a few thousand militants but they’re facing stiff resistance in the form of suicide car bombers, assault fighters, snipers and rocket fire.

Tunnels and ambushes

IS fighters have, at times, melted into the city’s population of 1.5 million and used a network of tunnels around the city to launch surprise raids and ambushes.

A statement issued by the military said the Counter Terrorism Service took control of the districts of al-Qadisiya al-Thania on Friday, as well as the adjacent al-Arbajiya.

To the south, troops from the First Infantry and Ninth Armored divisions attacked militants in the Salam neighborhood.

Military forces are closing in on Mosul from the north and south, aiming to open new fronts inside the city in order to put added pressure on the jihadists.

The Iraqi forces are made up of Iraqi army troops, special-forces and federal police units. Outside the city, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters are holding territory to the northeast while predominantly Shi’ite paramilitary forces are positioned to the west.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: heavy fighting, Iraq, Mosul

Mosul Update: Iraq forces advance against Daesh in Mosul from city’s south “Hammam al-Alil”

November 5, 2016 By administrator

all-hamam-ali-1Iraqi troops have pushed into the center of the last town before Mosul where Daesh terrorists await a final offensive by the army and volunteer forces to drive them out. 

Units of the police force on Saturday moved into the town of Hammam al-Alil which includes a vast territory on the banks of the Tigris river and hoisted the Iraqi flag over buildings.

They also captured six villages near the town, which is located some 25 kilometers south of Mosul, after launching an offensive on Friday.

To the southwest of the city, troops liberated three villages and killed a Daesh commander.

Iraqi police commander Major-General Thamer al-Husseini said federal police forces had entered the Salahiya district of Hammam al-Alil, adding the town and its surrounding areas will be liberated “within hours.”

Elsewhere in the northern city of Kirkuk, 32 members of Daesh terrorist group were killed in two car bomb blasts. The circumstances of the explosions were not immediately clear.

Meanwhile, Iraq’s Hashd al-Shaabi forces, also known as the Popular Mobilization Units, liberated three villages west of Mosul.

The development comes as Iraqi army troops, backed by Hashd al-Shaabi and Kurdish Peshmerga forces, are closing in on Mosul, Daesh’s last stronghold in Iraq, from almost all directions in a full-scale operation launched on October 17.

On Friday, Iraqi special forces launched an assault to advance deeper into the city’s urban center, and engaged in fierce fighting with Daesh terrorists, estimated to number between 3,000 and 5,000, in the sprawling city.

The Iraqi troops managed to enter Mosul’s limits earlier this week for the first time since June 2014, when the city fell to Daesh amid a large-scale terror campaign in northern and western Iraq.

So far, a large number of the villages and districts around the city have been purged of the terrorists. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has vowed that the country’s second largest city will be fully recaptured by year-end.

n another development, two roadside bombs struck a convoy carrying Iraqi families fleeing Daesh in Mosul late on Friday, killing 18 people.

The incident took place late on Friday as the Iraqi citizens from the town of Hawijah, about 120 kilometers south of Mosul, were being taken to al-Alam, next to the Tigris River.

Police say 17 civilians and one policeman lost their lives in the incident.

Thousands of people have fled Mosul and its surrounding areas since Iraqi forces launched their offensive three weeks ago to liberate the city from Daesh terrorists.

Source: http://presstv.com/Detail/2016/11/05/492243/Iraq-Mosul-Hammam-alAlil-Daesh

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Daesh, Iraq, Mosul

Mosul residents storm Daesh-run jail, free dozens of inmates

November 4, 2016 By administrator

mosul-jailResidents of the Daesh-held Iraqi city of Mosul have managed to storm the city’s main prison and free dozens of inmates amid a major military operation by the Iraqi forces who are tightening the noose around the terror group holed up in the northern city.

Iraq’s Arabic-language al-Sumaria satellite television network quoted an unnamed security source as saying that the Mosul residents on Friday evening broke into the city’s main prison, located in the eastern part of Mosul, and freed at least 45 prisoners after killing all of the Daesh militants manning the jail.

The development comes as Iraqi army troops, backed by the country’s Hashd al-Shaabi forces, also known as the Popular Mobilization Units, and Kurdish Peshmerga forces, are closing in on Daesh’s last stronghold in Iraq from almost all directions in a full-scale operation launched on October 17 to liberate the city.

The Iraqi troops managed to enter Mosul’s limits earlier this week for the first time since June 2014, when Daesh began its terror campaign in northern and western Iraq. So far, a large number of the city’s villages and districts have been purged of terrorists. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has vowed that the country’s second largest city will be fully recaptured by year-end.

‘Daesh killing hundreds, recruiting children’

Meanwhile, UN human rights spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani has announced that the terrorists have executed hundreds of people, including 180 former Iraqi government employees who were killed on Wednesday as the Takfiri group was withdrawing from Gogjali town.

Citing “credible reports”, she added that the terrorists also executed 50 deserters at the Ghazlani military base in Mosul on Monday.

Shamdasani, who was speaking on Friday at a regular UN briefing in Geneva, Switzerland, went on to say that Daesh had moved 1,600 people, likely to use them as human shields against airstrikes, from the town of Hammam al-Alil to Tal Afar near Mosul on Tuesday, and told them they might be taken to Syria.

She also warned that Daesh was trying to recruit children, particularly boys above the age of nine, in Hammam al-Alil as the group was increasingly losing its adult terrorists in clashes with the Iraqi troops.

“They’ve been knocking on people’s doors and asking for their boys,” Shamdasani further said, adding that defiant families were threatened with harsh punishment.

The UN official also said that Daesh was currently holding about 400 Kurdish, Izadi and Shia women in Tal Afar, and had possibly killed up to 200 people in Mosul.

On Friday, the Iraqi special forces launched an assault to advance deeper into the city’s urban center, and engaged in fierce fighting with Daesh terrorists, estimated to number between 3,000 and 5,000 in the sprawling city.

In another related development, Iraqi civilians fleeing Daesh in Mosul reunited with their families for the first time in more than two years at the al-Khazar camp, to the east of the city, on Friday.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraq, jail, Mosul

Kurdistan Reportedly Sells 910,000 Bpd For $1B Every Month “Where Barzani stashing the Billions?”

November 3, 2016 By administrator

barzani-and-billions-oilBy Tsvetana Paraskova

The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq is selling 910,000 bpd and reaping nearly US$1 billion in oil revenues every month, an investigative reporting piece by the Kurdistan region’s news outlet NRT showed on Wednesday. If the figures are correct, Iraq as a whole is pumping much more than the central government, the Kurdistan government, and OPEC sources have been estimating.

According to a foreign source with knowledge of Kurdistan’s oil, NRT has estimated that the fields in the Kurdistan Region and in Kirkuk under the control of the KRG Ministry of Natural Resources are producing as follows: Khurmala oil field – 210,000 bpd, Tawke oil field – 190,000 bpd, Taq Taq oil field – 110,000 bpd, Havana and Bai Hassan oil field – 300,000 bpd, and other small oil fields – 100,000 bpd. That’s a total of 910,000 bpd, or 27,300,000 barrels every month. If oil is sold at US$36 as the KRG has indicated, this means almost US$1 billion in revenue.

NRT’s investigation has revealed that except for some foreign companies and “officials from the Kurdistan Region, including Masoud Barzani, the KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani and the KRG Minister of Natural Resources, Ashti Hawrami, no other individual or party is aware of the revenue”.

According to figures by the autonomous province’s Ministry of Natural Resources, the KRG received US$328 million from crude oil exports in September. For the whole month of September, the KRG shipped a total of 16.94 million barrels of crude, according to the ministry.

ADVERTISEMENT

Iraq – which has questioned the way OPEC calculates output from secondary sources since day one after the cartel agreed to work toward an agreement to limit production – released a few days ago detailed data about the crude oil output at each of its 26 oilfields as well as equally detailed export figures, in an attempt to prove that OPEC’s external-source output estimates do not reflect reality.

The data also included a total output figure from fields in Kurdistan. According to these figures, Iraq pumped 4.7 million bpd in September.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 25 governors replaced across Turkey, Barzani, Billions, Iraq, oil, Turkey

Abadi says ‘we are ready’ if Turkey wants war

November 3, 2016 By administrator

turkish-armermentWhat is Turkey up to? The question gained fresh urgency today as Turkish Defense Minister Fikri Isik and Land Forces Commander Gen. Zeki Colak inspected troops in Hatay near the Syrian border a day after Turkish forces backed by tanks and other combat vehicles massed near the town of Silopi on Turkey’s border with Iraq. In a related development, Turkey’s chief of general staff, Hulusi Akar, flanked by the country’s powerful spy chief, Hakan Fidan, met with his Russian counterpart, Valery Gerasimov, in Moscow to talk about Syria.

Columnist

Amberin Zaman

Amberin Zaman is a journalist who has covered Turkey, the Kurds and Armenia for The Washington Post, The Daily Telegraph, The Los Angeles Times and the Voice of America. She served as The Economist’s Turkey correspondent between 1999 and 2016. She was a columnist for the liberal daily Taraf and the mainstream daily Haberturk before switching to the independent Turkish online news portal Diken in 2015. She is currently a public policy scholar at The Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, DC, where she is focusing on Kurdish issues. On Twitter: @amberinzaman

“Turkey may start a series of shocking interventions,” predicted Ibrahim Karagul, the editor-in-chief of the pro-government Yeni Safak, in a column today.

“Turkey is preparing itself for all contingencies” with regard to the developments in the region, said Isik Nov. 2. “Turkey respects Iraq’s territorial integrity, but [Ankara] is determined to ward off any terror threats arising from Iraq,” he added.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi reacted harshly to the Turkish moves. “We do not want war with Turkey,” he said Nov. 1. “But if a confrontation happens we are ready for it. We will consider [Turkey] an enemy and we will deal with it as an enemy.”

Pouring oil on the flames, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu addressed Abadi, saying, “If you have the strength, why did you surrender Mosul to terror organizations? If you are so strong, why has the [Kurdistan Workers Party] occupied your lands for years?”

A Western official told Al-Monitor on strict condition of anonymity that the possibility of a military confrontation between the members of the anti-IS coalition was being treated seriously. “While we still view it as unlikely, Turkey’s increasingly erratic and unpredictable behavior means that we cannot rule it out,” the official said. All of this conflict is draining energy away from what should be the anti-IS coalition’s main focus, the battle for Mosul.

Abadi is said to be urging Washington to flex its military muscles to deter a Turkish incursion. But doing so would thrust the United States into the awkward position of treating a critical NATO ally as a hostile force. It would also add to existing tensions with Ankara over Washington’s support for the Syrian Kurdish militia known as the People’s Protection Units (YPG). Turkey denounces the group as “terrorists” over its tight links with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Turkey already has several hundred elite troops stationed in Mosul and insists that it must take part in the ongoing campaign to retake the city. Abadi rejects Turkey’s participation and wants its troops to leave immediately.

Turkey refuses to budge on several counts. It believes its military presence gives it leverage over future governance plans for Mosul. More immediately, though, Turkey frets that the Shiite Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) may target Sunni Turkmens in neighboring Tal Afar over their role in expelling — and killing — thousands of Shiite Turkmens when IS took Tal Afar in 2014.

Turkey also believes that several hundred PKK fighters based in the nearby Yazidi stronghold of Sinjar may collude with the PMU to further entrench itself in the area, creating a strategic bridgehead from Iraq to YPG-controlled territories in Syria. Echoing the prevailing view in Ankara, Karagul argued that this is all part of a broader Iranian scheme to cement its own influence along Turkey’s borders.

In an editorial for the Woodrow Wilson Center, British academic Gareth Stansfield agreed that the PKK would wade into Tal Afar “because they could be encouraged by the [Shiite] militias’ leadership to further antagonize Turkey,” and that “there is no better way of challenging the Turkish state than with the PKK.”

Turkey’s hawkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly vowed to resort to military means to prevent such a thing from happening if need be. Turkey’s incursion into northern Syria in August was as much to uproot IS from its borders as to prove that when it comes to the PKK, Turkey is willing to put its boots where its mouth is.

Washington is scrambling to head off a dust-up in Iraq. But its efforts to get the PKK to move out of Sinjar have met with stiff resistance from the PKK leadership. It remains unclear whether Washington would be prepared to use its leverage over the YPG to get the PKK to be more cooperative at a time when it needs the Syrian Kurds’ participation in a planned offensive against IS’ Syrian stronghold, Raqqa. Stansfield concluded that with the PMU now pushing toward Tal Afar, “the scene is set for an extremely dangerous episode to unfold.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: confrontation, Iraq, Turkey

Conflict between Iraqi Government and Kurdish KRG began to emerge on Mosul Takeover administration

October 27, 2016 By administrator

kurd-iraqi-confertationIraqi government forces have managed to liberate more areas around the northern city of Mosul as part of a massive offensive aimed at retaking the entire city from Takfiri Daesh terrorists.

Iraq’s Joint Operations Command (JOC) announced that security forces had liberated Qala region and taken control of Janin military base east of Mosul, located some 400 kilometers north of the capital Baghdad.

Commander of the Mosul Operations, Major General Najm al Jabouri, also said his forces established control over the villages of Saf al-Tuth and Nana on Wednesday, following a fierce exchange of gunfire with Daesh snipers.

Additionally, Iraqi armed forces welcomed more than 1,000 Iraqi refugees from the recently-liberated village of Shoura, located 40 kilometers south of Mosul.

The government forces are going to transport the internally-displaced people to a processing center and refugee camps within the next few days.

The prime minister of Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region said Peshmerga forces will not enter Mosul in order to avoid the danger of a “potential ethnic conflict.”

Nechirvan Barzani, however, issued a veiled warning to the Iraqi central government, suggesting that the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) wanted to take over the administration of Mosul after it was liberated.  

Mosul is of paramount significance to the KRG, he said, warning that the city would become the birthplace of another terrorist group if it is not administered well after liberation from the grip of Daesh extremists.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: administration, Iraq, Kurd, Mosul

Iraqi artillery fire now hitting Daesh ISIS inside Mosul

October 25, 2016 By administrator

iraqi-artillery-mosulWith the start of the second week of operations aimed at liberating the northern Iraqi city of Mosul from Daesh, Iraq’s top anti-terror commander says military forces have started targeting the terror outfit’s positions inside the city with artillery fire.

Abdul-Ghani Asadi, the commander of the Iraqi army’s anti-terrorism contingent, made the announcement on Monday.

Iraqi forces have, meanwhile, liberated more than 70 percent of the territory lying to the south of the Daesh-held northern city of Mosul, and are weeding out explosives planted by the terrorist group on their way to the city proper.

On Tuesday, the joint military and volunteer forces liberated three more villages, located to the city’s south, from Daesh, the country’s war news media reported, with Tweeter pictures showing children rejoicing after the areas’ liberation.

Assisting the liberation operations, Turkish Peshmerga fighters also retook three more villages, namely Khoursabad in the Narwan region, Batnaya in the Tel Kaif district, and Assaf, all located around Mosul.

Security forces also took back a gas plant in Tal Kaif and entirely liberated the heart of the district.

Mosul-based Daesh militants have, meanwhile, filled up trenches with oil and set them on fire in order to block the overflying aircraft’s field of vision. In one incident, they threw nine of their defectors in one of the burning trenches in Mosul’s al-Arabi neighborhood, killing them.

Footage also showed a military Abrams tank ripping through a bomb-laced Daesh vehicle, which had been left at one entrance to the city to block the forces’ advance.

Overwhelmed by casualties, the Takfiris threw 40 bedridden patients, most of them elderly, out of the Mosul General Hospital, filling its aisles and emergency ward with their own wounded members, Iraq’s al-Sumaria TV network reported.

Locals, meanwhile, said the bodies of most of the victims of the city’s clashes had been taken to the al-Qabat district, situated in the city’s east.

On Monday, Iraqi forces were engaged in a push toward the center of the strategically-important al-Hamdaniya district in the northeast of Iraq’s Nineveh Province, of which Mosul is the capital, as part of the larger-scale push to retake Mosul.

Large numbers of the terrorists are, meanwhile, reported to have fled Mosul as the group is said to have lost the power to confront the advancing Iraqi forces.

The Takfiri terror group has declared the city its so-called headquarters in Iraq. The city has been under Daesh control since 2014, when the terror outfit started ravaging the country.

Also on Tuesday, a Kurdish journalist captured footage of a jet fighter destroying a Daesh car bomb north of Mosul as it was heading toward the Peshmerga forces in Nawaran.

Reports of horror emerging

The UN human rights office said it had preliminary reports about scores of mass killings by Daesh around Mosul in the past week.

UN human rights spokesman Rupert Colville told a regular UN briefing in Geneva that the bodies of 70 civilians with bullet wounds had been discovered by Iraqi security forces in the Tuloul Naser Village on October 20, and 50 former police officers being held outside the city had also reportedly been killed.

Fifteen civilians were killed and their bodies thrown into the river in the nearby Safina Village, while six men were tied to a vehicle and dragged around the village, the official said.

He said there were reports that Daesh fighters had also shot dead three women and three girls and wounded four other children because they were lagging behind during a forced relocation due to one of the children’s disability.

A Turkish “if”

Meanwhile, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has said Ankara could launch a “ground operation” in Iraq if it is threatened.

“If there is a threat posed to Turkey, we are ready to use all our resources, including a ground operation…, to eliminate that threat,” Cavusoglu said in an interview with Kanal 24 broadcaster.

He did not explain what could constitute a “threat” to the Turkish state. Kurds, including those in Iraq, have long been considered by Ankara to be “terrorists.” Turkey has been hitting their positions, as well as those of Kurdish forces in Syria, with airstrikes for some time.

Daesh, too, may be a source of such a threat. Ankara said this week it had already hit Daesh positions with its artillery at the Bashiqa camp in northern Iraq.

But Cavusoglu’s remarks may also be directed at the Iraqi military. Officials in Baghdad, who are engaged in a war of words with the Turks over unauthorized Turkish military deployments to their territory, recently said the Iraqi military may target the Turkish forces if the latter interfere in the ongoing battle for Mosul.

Area freed in Anbar

Meanwhile, Suhaib al-Rawi, the governor of the vast western Iraqi province of Anbar, has also said that security forces have fully liberated the province’s al-Rutba district, raising the national flag over the district governor’s building there

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraq, Mosul

Iraqi official: Turkey and we agreed not true in Mosul

October 22, 2016 By administrator

no-deal-with-turkeyIraqi government officials, US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter “Turkey and Iraq have agreed in principle on Mosul,” said the statement is not true

officials speaking to the BBC on condition his name not be disclosed, said they do not want Turkey to join the Mosul operation.

Iraq stated that if Turkey wants to join the Mosul operation against it turns out.

Ashton Carter in Friday ‘Ankara and Baghdad that Turkey thought that an agreement on the operation taking place in Mosul, “he said.

Carter, made these disclosures as part of his visit to Turkey after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan calls.

stating that the approval of the Iraqi government on this issue certainly the US defense secretary, said he was not certain of the details of Turkey’s possible role in Mosul.

‘DO NOT STOP VIOLATION AND with us our sovereignty, we WANT TURKEY’

The Iraqi official told the BBC that the allegations be true deal and Mosul’s liberation in a role that falls to Turkey ‘he said.

He said “we expect from Turkey in the fight against Daesan terror stand beside Iraq, does not violate Iraq’s sovereignty, to respect neighborly ties and is threatening the unity of Mosul or the Iraqi people in another place,” he said.

between Iraq and Turkey, Turkey in recent tensions deepened over military base in Başika case.

Iraq, the base says it is a violation of the sovereign rights of Baghdad.

The military base was established in Ankara at the invitation of the government in Baghdad and Erbil, Turkey to the security issues in the region directly advocates said the base concerned.

Source: BBC Turkish http://aryenhaber5.com/irakli-yetkili-musul-konusunda-turkiyeyle-anlastigimiz-dogru-degil/

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraq, join, Mosul, not true, operation, Turkey

Will Iraq boycott Terrorist State of Turkey?

October 21, 2016 By administrator

iraqi-boycott-turkeyBy Adnan Abu Zeed
Contributor,  Iraq Pulse

BAGHDAD — As Turkey continues to thumb its nose at Iraq, thousands of Iraqi Sadrist protesters surrounded the Turkish Embassy on Oct. 18 in Baghdad and demanded that Ankara remove its troops from the Bashiqa base near Mosul. Meanwhile, Iraq’s parliament is mulling the effectiveness of a potential economic boycott against Turkey.

Parliament member Ali Abd al-Salman told the media Oct. 12 that an economic boycott is necessary “to force Turkey to withdraw its troops.”

However, things have escalated beyond mere calls for a boycott. Rahim al-Darraji, a parliament member representing Al-Mouwaten bloc, called for “burning Turkish goods in the streets.”

And some Iraqis seem to be taking serious steps toward waging economic war on Turkey.

For example, the provincial council of Basra decided Oct. 16 to stop hiring Turkish companies for projects, especially in the oil business, in addition to stopping Turkish nationals from entering Basra International Airport and preventing the circulation of Turkish goods in the province.

In what seemed like a serious action rather than a simple demand, the Karbala provincial council on Oct. 15 threatened to expel Turkish companies operating in the province if Turkey insists on keeping its troops in Iraq. Resentment against Turkey is even growing on the street: On Oct. 9, Iraqi workers expelled officials from a Turkish company for taking down a Shiite religious banner.

Iraqi boycotts against Turkey are not new. The Baghdad provincial council voted in December to boycott Turkish products and prevent new deals with Turkish companies.

But Salam Zaidan, a journalist and expert in economic affairs, told Al-Monitor a boycott isn’t realistic and would harm both countries. For example, Turkey could retaliate by threatening to withhold its water resources, he said. Also, “The Iraqi government will not be able to control the many outlets for imports, including the Kurdistan Regional Government, which relies almost exclusively on trade with Turkey.”

However, several studies say Turkey would lose $11 billion — the equivalent of its trade exchange with Iraq in 2015 — if Iraq were to cut economic ties. In addition, there are 1,058 Turkish companies operating in Iraq that would stand to lose business there.

Mohammed Abbas, a member of the Iraqi parliament’s economics and investment committee, told the media Oct. 13 that “boycotting Turkish goods can be a pressure card in the hands of the Iraqi government.”

Economist Abdul-Hussein al-Shammari had expressed the same opinion when he told the media Oct. 6 that “Iraq’s boycott of Turkish goods will leave a significant impact on the Turkish economy.”

Hussein Thaghab, an economic expert with the pro-government newspaper al-Sabah, told Al-Monitor, “In terms of economic considerations it is possible to pressure Turkey, and this could negatively affect its economy. However, a serious call to boycott Turkish products is quite difficult in the absence of alternative local products that could cover the market’s needs. In addition, it is hard to control the products’ entry since the government is unable to control the borders.”

Thaghab added, “The long-term commercial exchange system and the long-term contracts between Turkish companies and the Iraqi government, as well as the private sector, are the reasons why a boycott is impossible at this time.”

Najiba Najib, another member of the economics and investment committee, also believes a boycott would not have the desired effect.

“It is not possible for Iraq to pressure Turkey economically to force it to withdraw its troops,” Najib told Al-Monitor. “Iraq is a consumer country, and blocking the borders with Turkey would result in a rise in prices in the Iraqi markets. This would further burden the citizens financially, and thus it will not force Turkey out of Iraq.”

To successfully boycott Turkey, Iraq would need to provide comparable alternative products from local and international sources, according to Ahmed Kanani, who heads the committee. “Iraq imports goods worth millions of dollars from Turkey. The Iraqi markets are filled with Turkish products, and finding new sources for imports requires time and plans,” he told Al-Monitor.

Kanani believes that, given enough time, “it would be possible to impede dealing with Turkish traders and businessmen and pressure Turkish companies in Iraq, and thus force them to [pressure] their own government to take positive political positions toward Iraq and withdraw troops from Iraqi territory.”

There is no doubt that implementing a boycott is not as easy as simply calling for one. Even if an economic boycott were feasible, it would be impossible to get parliament to approve it because so many parties have strong relations with Turkey. A lot of companies and contracts are managed by politicians and influential business people who would not be pleased with the deterioration of economic or even political ties with Turkey. Meanwhile, the Iraqi market remains overly dependent on Turkish goods that cannot be dispensed with abruptly.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: boycott, good, Iraq, Turkish

Iraqi court issues warrant against ex Mosul governor Erdogan poppet as troops fight ISIS for Mosul

October 21, 2016 By administrator

ex-mosul-govBy Rudaw

An Iraqi court issued an arrest warrant against former provincial governor Atheel al-Nujaifi for allegedly allowing Turkish troops into Iraq last year, a controversy that has resurfaced as Iraqi and Kurdish forces are locked in an offensive to evict ISIS from its stronghold of Mosul.

Nujaifi, a Sunni, was the governor of Nineveh Province – where Mosul is the capital — when it fell to ISIS in June 2014.  The Iraqi parliament removed him from his position the year after.

According to Turkish authorities, Nujaifi had agreed to allowing Turkish troops into Iraq during his governorship.

Abdulstar Birqdar, the spokesman of the Iraqi judiciary, said Thursday that three Iraqi MPs had filed a complaint against Nujaifi in December last year, claiming he had “sought the help of a foreign state whereby he facilitated the Turkish troops and empowered them to open a military base in the Zilkan military camp north of the province.”

The court warrant accuses Nujaifi of spying for a foreign country.

According to Turkish authorities, it was Nujaifi who gave the green light for troops to set up base in Iraq. Turkey says its role at the Bashiqa camp had been to train the Sunni Nineveh Guard militia, formerly known as the Hashd al-Watani.  Nujaifi is in command of the militia, which enjoys good relations with Turkey.

Nujaifi said in a Facebook posting after news of the warrant that the Mosul offensive was the priority at this time, and that his Turkish-trained forces would be fighting alongside the Iraqi army for Mosul. He downplayed the accusation, saying he would leave the issue to those interested in “trivia” until “the dust of war” is settled and the matter can be dealt with legally.

For months, in the run-up to the Mosul offensive that kicked off Monday, Iraq had publicly urged Ankara to withdraw its troops from its base in Bashiqa and warned against Turkish involvement in the liberation of Mosul.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: allowing, ex mosul, governer, Iraq, troops, Turkish

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  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

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