Looks (at least per RUMINT) like there is some sort of coup underway in Baghdad.
Is it a Sunni bunch wanting to take power or a coalition govt.? This will make or break the future of Iraq.
Just what we need is Baghdad going into chaos as IS advances. I wonder if this is Maliki's decision or is his hand being forced by a higher power (Tehran)?
He's about to start making a lot more money. As soon as this next war kicks off.Who the hell knows! I swear, this Iraqi govt. really screwed the pooch. And let's hope to god that Tehran isn't deciding that this is an opportune time.
That Richard Cheney. I swear. To this day, I'd love to wring his old, geezer neck.
He's about to start making a lot more money. As soon as this next war kicks off.
Just what we need is Baghdad going into chaos as IS advances. I wonder if this is Maliki's decision or is his hand being forced by a higher power (Tehran)?
The United States is sending weapons to Kurdish forces in Iraq who have begun to roll back gains made by Sunni militants, a senior U.S. official confirmed to Fox News.
Providing weapons to Kurdish forces is a reversal of U.S. policy, which previously had only allowed for selling arms directly to the Iraqi government. In recent days, the U.S. military has been helping facilitate weapons deliveries from the Iraqis to the Kurds, providing logistical assistance and transportation to the north.
Iraqi forces and tanks surged into some Baghdad neighborhoods Sunday as a wave of troops swarmed Baghdad's Green Zone -- the secure area where many government buildings, the military headquarters and the U.S. Embassy are located, two Iraqi police officials said.
Exactly what led to the surge remains unclear. But some believe the beefed up military presence is part of a power struggle between second-term Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and newly elected President Fuad Masum.
"You've got Nuri al-Maliki refusing to step down. Now he's mobilized not just security troops loyal to him, but now he's mobilized army units to put tanks in the streets,"said retired Lt. Col. Rick Francona, a CNN military analyst.
I haven't heard much about the ISIS advances south in recent days. I know they are hitting the Kurds pretty hard though.
Wonder if they are spread a little thin and are focusing on one thing at a time?
You would think so, especially with how fast they have been moving. They probably realized they don't have the manpower to take the whole country in one go so shifted strategy from before to a single focus now. A little scary the animals can think (if this is indeed what has happened)
That is the key question right there. Who is pulling the strings and in command? Tactics don't win wars, logistics do. And for someone to recognize the fact that logistically they cannot support a two pronged drive (an assumption) is not your average insurgent type fighter. So I'm curious as to who exactly is planning this out for them.
It makes sense they would try to consolidate the gains in the north and take out the Kurds before moving south again. It removes that potential thorn from their flank.
Link?
Curious, not argumentative.
All fun or games until someone has their head sawed off with a 6 inch blade or 300 people get buried alive out in the desert.
But, other than that, looks like a pleasant place.
