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View Full Version : Islamic militant group posts images that appear to show mass killings in Iraq



RBP
06-15-2014, 09:20 PM
http://i.imgur.com/Zojq9ET.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/tvcx3Yw.jpg

As Iraq’s government bolstered Baghdad's defenses Sunday, the Islamic militant group that captured two major cities last week posted graphic photos that appeared to show its fighters massacring dozens of captured Iraqi soldiers.

The pictures on a militant website appear to show masked fighters of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIS, loading the captives onto flatbed trucks before forcing them to lie face-down in a shallow ditch with their arms tied behind their backs, according to The Associated Press. The final images show the bodies of the captives soaked in blood after being shot.

Most of the soldiers who appear in the pictures are in civilian clothes. Some are shown wearing military uniforms underneath, indicating they may have hastily disguised themselves as civilians to try to escape.

Many soldiers and policemen left their uniforms and equipment behind as the militants swept into Mosul, Tikrit and surrounding areas.

Some of the pictures appeared to show some of the soldiers pleading for their lives, others seemed terrified.

All soldiers appeared in their early 20s, with some wearing the jerseys of such European soccer clubs like Manchester United and Barcelona. Some of the militants wore black baggy pants and shirts, many of them had sandals or flip flops.

The captions did not provide a date or location, but Iraq's top military spokesman, Lt. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, said the killings took place in Salahuddin province, the capital of which is Tikrit.

Al-Moussawi confirmed the photos' authenticity and said he was aware of cases of mass murder of captured Iraqi soldiers in areas held by ISIS.

But last week, Pentagon spokesman Col. Steve Warren said images released by ISIS that claimed to show captured Blackhawk helicopters and other military equipment were faked and photoshopped.

Iraqi authorities appear to be trying to limit the dissemination of such images and other militant propaganda being shared through social media and to deny the militants their use for operational purposes.

Martin Frank, the CEO of IQ Networks, an Internet service provider in Iraq, told The Associated Press that authorities have ordered multiple social media sites including YouTube, Facebook and Twitter to be blocked. On Sunday, they tightened the restrictions further by telling network operators to halt traffic for virtual private networks, which allow users to bypass Internet filters.

Internet traffic in several areas overrun by militants, including Mosul and Tikrit, was ordered to be cut off altogether, he said. No timeframe was given for the shutdowns.

Meanwhile, Iraq’s government on Sunday bolstered defenses around Baghdad Sunday, a day after hundreds of Shiite men paraded through the streets with arms in response to a call by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani for Iraqis to defend their country. ISIS has vowed to attack Baghdad but its advance to the south seems to have stalled in recent days. Thousands of Shiites have also volunteered to join the fight against the ISIS, also in response to al-Sistani's call.

Armed police, including SWAT teams, were seen over the weekend manning checkpoints in Baghdad, searching vehicles and checking drivers' documents. Security was particularly tightened on the northern and western approaches of the city, the likely targets of any advance by ISIS fighters on the capital. The city looked gloomy on Sunday, with thin traffic and few shoppers in commercial areas.

At one popular park along the Tigris river, only a fraction of the thousands who usually head there were present on Sunday evening. In the commercial Karada district in central Baghdad, many of the sidewalk hawkers who sell anything from shoes to toys and clothes were absent.

In Baghdad, Iraqi government officials said ISIS fighters were trying to capture the city of Tal Afar in northern Iraq on Sunday and raining down rockets seized last week from military arms depots. The officials said the local garrison suffered heavy casualties and the town's main hospital was unable to cope with the number of wounded, without providing exact numbers.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters. Tal Afar is mainly inhabited by Turkmen, an ethnic minority.

Al-Moussawi confirmed that fighting was raging at Tal Afar, but indicated that the militants were suffering heavy casualties. On all fronts north of the capital, he said, a total of 297 militants have been killed in the past 24 hours.

There was no way to independently confirm his claims.

ISIS and allied Sunni militants captured a vast swath of northern Iraq last week, including second city Mosul and Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, as Iraqi troops, many of them armed and trained by the U.S., fled in disarray, surrendering vehicles, weapons and ammunition to the powerful extremist group, which also fights in Syria.

The captions of the photos say the killings were to avenge the killing of an ISIS commander, Abdul-Rahman al-Beilawy, whose death was reported by both the government and ISIS shortly before the Al Qaeda splinter group's lightning offensive, which has plunged Iraq into its bloodiest crisis since the withdrawal of U.S. troops in 2011.

"This is the fate that awaits the Shiites sent by Nouri to fight the Sunnis," one caption read, apparently referring to Iraq's Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay warned on Friday of "murder of all kinds" and other war crimes in Iraq, and said the number killed in recent days may run into the hundreds, while the wounded could approach 1,000.

Speaking in Geneva, she said her office has received reports that militants rounded up and killed Iraqi soldiers as well as 17 civilians in a single street in Mosul.

Her office also heard of "summary executions and extrajudicial killings" after ISIS militants overran Iraqi cities and towns, the statement said.

On Saturday, Iraq's security forces were able to halt the advance of Sunni Islamist militants north of Baghdad.

But a police source in Baghdad confirmed to Fox News that a car bomb in Tayran Square in central Baghdad exploded before 12:00 local time Sunday, killing 10 people and wounding 21 others.

After nightfall, another explosion hit the area, killing two and wounding five. The third went off near a falafel shop in the city's sprawling Sadr City district, killing three and wounding seven.

Fighting was also reported outside the town of Tikrit, less than 90 miles north of Baghdad. The Wall Street Journal reported that Iraqi soldiers are using the town of Samarra, about 10 miles south, as a jumping-off point for an assault that would re-take Tikrit, the hometown of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, from ISIS. The Journal also reported that ISIS fighters were using Saddam's well-reinforced presidential palaces as bases of operations as they fought with security forces in the southern parts of the city.

Elsewhere, The New York Times reported clashes in three cities in Salahuddin Province, just north of the capital, with inconclusive results.

Iraq Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's battle to regain control of his own country has been aided by the large numbers of Shiites who have responded to his and al-Sistani 's calls for ordinary citizens to wage war against ISIS in what is quickly becoming a sectarian fight.

"The Iraqi fighter is well known for his courage and valor, he has never been known to be defeated or deserted," Maliki's office said in a statement Saturday.

The Washington Post reported that recruitment centers had been set up in mosques and private homes in Baghdad.

The volunteers were first taken to an assembly center in eastern Baghdad, where they were handed military uniforms, and later went to Taji, home of Iraq's largest military base north of Baghdad, to undergo basic training. State-run television aired footage of the volunteers being drilled, still in their civilian clothes.

PorkChopSandwiches
06-15-2014, 09:56 PM
Fantastic

DemonGeminiX
06-16-2014, 12:43 AM
I just read that our embassy is still open in Baghdad. Obama said some staff will be evacuated and security will be increased.

Bullshit. They need to get the fuck out of Dodge.

Loser
06-16-2014, 12:45 AM
A.)This is what happens when you disarm your people.
B.)If they, iraqi military, are not willing to fight for their own freedom, why should we intervene?

At least in syria they're are trying to fight. Lets help those people.

DemonGeminiX
06-16-2014, 01:09 AM
The Iraqis were never armed until after Saddam was deposed. Saddam had them beaten down into submission. They don't know how to fight for their own freedom. They're still suffering from a subjugation hangover. It'll take at least two generations for them to get over that... generations that won't remember what it was like to be trampled under the foot of a dictator.

And the majority of the cats in Syria that are fighting are extremists.

Loser
06-16-2014, 01:13 AM
The Iraqis were never armed until after Saddam was deposed. Saddam had them beaten down into submission. They don't know how to fight for their own freedom. They're still suffering from a subjugation hangover. It'll take at least two generations for them to get over that... generations that won't remember what it was like to be trampled under the foot of a dictator.

And the majority of the cats in Syria that are fighting are extremists.

Extremists worse then assad? Sometimes you have to pick the lesser of two evils.

And we trained the iraqi military for how many years? And they just run?

DemonGeminiX
06-16-2014, 01:21 AM
They don't know what it means to be free, to have freedom. These ISIS guys are scarier than Saddam ever was. The Iraqis remember how bad Saddam was. They see how much worse these ISIS guys are. Half of the Iraqi military are Sunnis like ISIS is. They won't fight against the faction they agree with. There's half of the military gone. The others, like I said, are suffering from a subjugation hangover. They're like the shaky fearful dog that's been beaten all of it's life. Even after it's rescued, that dog is gonna shake and have trust issues until the day it dies. And so will the people of Iraq. That's why I say two generations. So there are people that don't know the fear and terror of subjugation. It hasn't dominated them all of their lives. They have, know and truly appreciate what it means to be free. And they'll fight for it.

Yes, there is worse than Assad. Syria is a no win scenario. If Assad wins, we lose. If Assad loses, we win, but we eventually lose... because eventually the winners are going to turn on us like they always do over there.

Lambchop
06-16-2014, 02:59 AM
What I can honestly say is that, as someone who has watched unedited videos of killings in the Middle East for about 8 years now , the 1 hour video released by the ISIS is by far the most worrying to date. They clearly don't give a fuck about anything but killing to please God and have left a path of blood for innocents to witness and inspire fear. They fucking ripped up their passports to prove that they won't need them; they are going to enter any and every country by the sword and do not recognise any other way of life that is not Islam.

If they are allowed to continue, the goal is clear: to capture, kill and then use your child daughters as sex slaves as a reward from God.

Godfather
06-16-2014, 03:33 AM
If the troops who surrendered now being slaughtered doesn't motivate the remaining Iraqi military units, I'm really not sure anything would.

Loser
06-16-2014, 03:49 AM
What? We go there, save them again, and in a few years it happens all over again?

You can't save someone that refuses to save themselves.

RBP
06-16-2014, 03:54 AM
If the troops who surrendered now being slaughtered doesn't motivate the remaining Iraqi military units, I'm really not sure anything would.

Motivate them to do what is the question. The answer appears to be join ISIS or die. Who has their back if they fight? The government is impotent and the west has abandoned them. Iran?

deebakes
06-16-2014, 03:54 AM
just put saddam back in power :shrug:

RBP
06-16-2014, 03:56 AM
What? We go there, save them again, and in a few years it happens all over again?

You can't save someone that refuses to save themselves.

I understand that point. I also understand a vicious Islamic state the size of Iraq and Syria with that much power and cash will not be content to remain within their borders.

RBP
06-16-2014, 03:57 AM
just put saddam back in power :shrug:

That's like flogging a ... you know the rest :P

Lambchop
06-16-2014, 04:16 AM
They did fear Saddam that magnficently cruel bastard. I'm sure one of his doubles is still alive, while real Saddam is having anal fun times with Satan in Hell as documented in South Park.

RBP
06-16-2014, 04:18 AM
From the NYT:


The bold Sunni militant offensive is the latest inflection point in the long-term unraveling of post-Saddam Iraq. Nevertheless, despite all the international concern it has produced, Iraq’s revived insurgency isn’t a problem with a clear and corresponding solution. Indeed, while President Obama says “I don't rule out anything,” Washington is in no position to change facts on the ground and alter the conditions that are driving the country’s renewed insurgency.

The reality is that violence and asymmetric warfare will remain a symptom of the new Iraq for the foreseeable future. This isn’t due to an alleged shortage of military capabilities, but rather a reflection of what Iraq essentially is: an unreconciled, broken state, plagued by deep ethno-sectarian cleavages, weak institutions and a political system prone to relapse toward an authoritarian order.

I am still withholding agreement. I honestly do not believe this has anything to do with internal Iraqi politics. They can spin this as Sunni v Shiite unsettled and failed internal politics all they want. ISIS is a separatist lethal group that could give a flying fuck about Iraqi politics or history. They want their own state under their own brutal Islamic rules.

I do not believe this is an insurgency.

FBD
06-16-2014, 12:08 PM
and of course the only heads that will roll over this are those of innocents