America directed the crowd to support the restoration of Anbar as the only option despite fears of sectarian
Tuesday 19-05-2015
Twilight News / Current and former US officials said that the involvement of Shiite factions in the attempt to restore the Iraqi city of Ramadi, al Daash represents a risk launching a new torrent of blood in the sectarian conflict, but added that there are no other options seem to remember in front of Washington and Baghdad.
Like takeover regulation fighters on gray despite continuous months of air strikes led by the United States and what the military advice of a new deterioration of the Iraqi army, which retreat and broken out of the city in a state of chaos at the weekend.
Abadi and headed immediately to the units of the popular crowd, which has become the most powerful military force in Iraq since the collapse of the national army began last June in the face of sweeping gains made by the organization of the Islamic state.
And it reached a queue of three thousand fighters from the crowd on Monday to a military base near Ramadi, capital of Anbar Sunni majority, which is considered a long time ago the opposition center for the Iraqi government led by Shiite province.
He described the US official, speaking on condition of anonymity gray as a "powder keg" and said that any use of the factions fighting "must be dealt with very sensitively."
The official said without trying to predict the outcome of the involvement of factions "possibility exists that things go wrong very very."
And US officials said Washington is divided deeply divided on the participation of the Shiite factions with links to Iran discount the United States and working to expand its influence throughout the Middle East.
After these factions led the campaign that led to the restoration of the city of Tikrit, some deliberately Shiite fighters last month to burn property and committing acts of looting and violence in the city, according to locals.
A second US official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, "there in our government who believe that any role for Iran represents a curse ..
Others say that the Shiite participation will be published sectarian violence. There are others say this is not true."
An official at the CIA that one fears is that the organization of the Islamic state may take advantage of the participation of the Shiite factions in raising sectarian passions.
However, analysts said the reality is that the Iraqi government does not seem to have enough of the Sunni forces at their disposal to use in an attack on Ramadi.
US President Barack Obama and reluctantly began bombing targets of the organization in the past year after its fighters seized large swaths of Iraq, but made clear his wish not to drag the American forces back to the conflict Obama himself has pledged to ending it when he became president.
It comes a month after the fall of the gray of Obama's Ebadi receiving a warm reception in Washington, and the declaration of support for him in order to heal the sectarian rift and the formation of a strong national army with the task of addressing the organization of the Islamic state.
He said the second in charge of the asylum-Abadi to use Shiite factions "never try to stop it. You must fight the army available to you. This is the army available to them."
Another official said that the United States supports "all the elements" organizing forces fighting Islamic state, including the Shiite factions that are nominally under the control of the Baghdad government.
The official added, "but as we have said must be no clear leadership and control of the (Iraqi security forces) and proper planning and coordination whenever possible with local leaders."
He described the Republican Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham are two of the most outspoken critics of Obama's foreign policy fall of Ramadi as "sad air campaign is being waged critical of this administration" and the absence of broader strategy ticket.
The two expressed concern that Chen Shi'ite factions backed by Iran attack.
They added, "Whatever he may achieve militias (Shiite) of success in operations in Anbar would be much greater than the damage resulting from the strategic violent sectarianism that followed, fear and distrust between the two Ciodahma that Iraqi Sunnis."
According to Reuters.
Previously said Bruce Riedel, a senior CIA intelligence experts on the region and now works at the Brookings Center in Washington, "in light of the unwillingness of the United States or the Gulf Arab countries in the deployment of ground forces and the chaos that Iraqi armed forces prevail not before Iraq choice but to resorting to militias. "
"The error in the coalition strategy over the last year is the weakness of the ground forces. In the light of the constraints on the United States and its Arab allies, the only option is to force the wilderness of Iraqi Shiites under Iranian leadership."
"Of course it alienated this year, whether in Iraq or in Saudi Arabia, but Baghdad does not have another serious option
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Tuesday 19-05-2015
Twilight News / Current and former US officials said that the involvement of Shiite factions in the attempt to restore the Iraqi city of Ramadi, al Daash represents a risk launching a new torrent of blood in the sectarian conflict, but added that there are no other options seem to remember in front of Washington and Baghdad.
Like takeover regulation fighters on gray despite continuous months of air strikes led by the United States and what the military advice of a new deterioration of the Iraqi army, which retreat and broken out of the city in a state of chaos at the weekend.
Abadi and headed immediately to the units of the popular crowd, which has become the most powerful military force in Iraq since the collapse of the national army began last June in the face of sweeping gains made by the organization of the Islamic state.
And it reached a queue of three thousand fighters from the crowd on Monday to a military base near Ramadi, capital of Anbar Sunni majority, which is considered a long time ago the opposition center for the Iraqi government led by Shiite province.
He described the US official, speaking on condition of anonymity gray as a "powder keg" and said that any use of the factions fighting "must be dealt with very sensitively."
The official said without trying to predict the outcome of the involvement of factions "possibility exists that things go wrong very very."
And US officials said Washington is divided deeply divided on the participation of the Shiite factions with links to Iran discount the United States and working to expand its influence throughout the Middle East.
After these factions led the campaign that led to the restoration of the city of Tikrit, some deliberately Shiite fighters last month to burn property and committing acts of looting and violence in the city, according to locals.
A second US official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, "there in our government who believe that any role for Iran represents a curse ..
Others say that the Shiite participation will be published sectarian violence. There are others say this is not true."
An official at the CIA that one fears is that the organization of the Islamic state may take advantage of the participation of the Shiite factions in raising sectarian passions.
However, analysts said the reality is that the Iraqi government does not seem to have enough of the Sunni forces at their disposal to use in an attack on Ramadi.
US President Barack Obama and reluctantly began bombing targets of the organization in the past year after its fighters seized large swaths of Iraq, but made clear his wish not to drag the American forces back to the conflict Obama himself has pledged to ending it when he became president.
It comes a month after the fall of the gray of Obama's Ebadi receiving a warm reception in Washington, and the declaration of support for him in order to heal the sectarian rift and the formation of a strong national army with the task of addressing the organization of the Islamic state.
He said the second in charge of the asylum-Abadi to use Shiite factions "never try to stop it. You must fight the army available to you. This is the army available to them."
Another official said that the United States supports "all the elements" organizing forces fighting Islamic state, including the Shiite factions that are nominally under the control of the Baghdad government.
The official added, "but as we have said must be no clear leadership and control of the (Iraqi security forces) and proper planning and coordination whenever possible with local leaders."
He described the Republican Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham are two of the most outspoken critics of Obama's foreign policy fall of Ramadi as "sad air campaign is being waged critical of this administration" and the absence of broader strategy ticket.
The two expressed concern that Chen Shi'ite factions backed by Iran attack.
They added, "Whatever he may achieve militias (Shiite) of success in operations in Anbar would be much greater than the damage resulting from the strategic violent sectarianism that followed, fear and distrust between the two Ciodahma that Iraqi Sunnis."
According to Reuters.
Previously said Bruce Riedel, a senior CIA intelligence experts on the region and now works at the Brookings Center in Washington, "in light of the unwillingness of the United States or the Gulf Arab countries in the deployment of ground forces and the chaos that Iraqi armed forces prevail not before Iraq choice but to resorting to militias. "
"The error in the coalition strategy over the last year is the weakness of the ground forces. In the light of the constraints on the United States and its Arab allies, the only option is to force the wilderness of Iraqi Shiites under Iranian leadership."
"Of course it alienated this year, whether in Iraq or in Saudi Arabia, but Baghdad does not have another serious option
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
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