PDA

View Full Version : Coup in Iraq



Belmont31R
08-10-14, 20:38
Not a lot of info yet but appears to be happening now.

http://thehill.com/policy/international/214801-us-monitoring-reports-of-coup-in-iraq

C-grunt
08-10-14, 21:47
Hmmmmm

Big A
08-10-14, 22:09
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-08-10/coup-iraq-prime-minister-maliki-refuses-step-down-orders-security-forces-alert

NWPilgrim
08-11-14, 01:28
Wonder if Iran will sit idle while the ISIS overruns the Shiite ruling party.

Sam
08-11-14, 16:02
CNN calls it a "power struggle".

Voodoochild
08-11-14, 16:18
CNN calls it a "power struggle".

They wouldn't have it any other way. Don't dare say the C word. Not after we have been propping ol boy up for how many years?

Big A
08-11-14, 16:39
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-08-11/anyone-control-iraq-post-coup-confusion-deepens-0

Oh goody...

SteveS
08-11-14, 16:54
All was good when Sadam kept the natives under control.

MountainRaven
08-11-14, 17:31
All was good when Sadam kept the natives under control.

Yup. Always better having someone gas civilians and using helicopter gunships to shoot up people trying to flee the country than this.

:rolleyes:

I'm going to stand by my idea: Arm and train the Kurds. The Kurdish militia was ignored by the US under both Bush and Obama until now. Hell, sell them F-16s and AH-1s if they can afford them. Put some Green Berets on the ground with the Peshmerga and light up everything that isn't Kurdish, Peshmerga, or under their protection in the meantime.

Inform Iran that so long as they leave the Kurds alone, they can do likewise with the Iraqi Shi'ites.

Call up Putin and give him the green light on supplying arms and advisors to al-Assad, so long as he (al-Assad) is willing to play nice with the Sunni moderates.

Formally recognize the independence of Iraqi Kurdistan. Then let Iran and Syria annex as much of Iraq as they think they can hold against ISIS's "Islamic State".

montanadave
08-11-14, 17:44
Yup. Always better having someone gas civilians and using helicopter gunships to shoot up people trying to flee the country than this.

:rolleyes:

I'm going to stand by my idea: Arm and train the Kurds. The Kurdish militia was ignored by the US under both Bush and Obama until now. Hell, sell them F-16s and AH-1s if they can afford them. Put some Green Berets on the ground with the Peshmerga and light up everything that isn't Kurdish, Peshmerga, or under their protection in the meantime.

Inform Iran that so long as they leave the Kurds alone, they can do likewise with the Iraqi Shi'ites.

Call up Putin and give him the green light on supplying arms and advisors to al-Assad, so long as he (al-Assad) is willing to play nice with the Sunni moderates.

Formally recognize the independence of Iraqi Kurdistan. Then let Iran and Syria annex as much of Iraq as they think they can hold against ISIS's "Islamic State".

Works for me. And by throwing Putin and Assad a bone, maybe Putin will ease some of the tension in Ukraine.

Eurodriver
08-11-14, 19:18
I'm down with formally recognizing Kurdistan. Good people. Good culture.

http://www.macleans.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/MAC21_KURDISTAN02.jpg

SteveS
08-11-14, 19:41
Yup. Always better having someone gas civilians and using helicopter gunships to shoot up people trying to flee the country than this.

:rolleyes:

I'm going to stand by my idea: Arm and train the Kurds. The Kurdish militia was ignored by the US under both Bush and Obama until now. Hell, sell them F-16s and AH-1s if they can afford them. Put some Green Berets on the ground with the Peshmerga and light up everything that isn't Kurdish, Peshmerga, or under their protection in the meantime.

Inform Iran that so long as they leave the Kurds alone, they can do likewise with the Iraqi Shi'ites.

Call up Putin and give him the green light on supplying arms and advisors to al-Assad, so long as he (al-Assad) is willing to play nice with the Sunni moderates.

Formally recognize the independence of Iraqi Kurdistan. Then let Iran and Syria annex as much of Iraq as they think they can hold against ISIS's "Islamic State".What is happening now that Saddam is gone.

Turnkey11
08-12-14, 00:24
I'm down with formally recognizing Kurdistan. Good people. Good culture.

http://www.macleans.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/MAC21_KURDISTAN02.jpg

Id be happy if they kicked ISIS's ass and expanded Kurdistan all the way to Tikrit or beyond. Iraq is defunct, might as well make the best of the situation and carve your own borders. Ive always wanted to be a tourist in Iraq a couple decades after the war, Kurdistan might be the ticket.

ThirdWatcher
08-12-14, 02:34
All was good when Sadam kept the natives under control.

I will start out by saying I have never been to Iraq and I am certainly no expert on what's really going on over there. It seems that while Saddam was a tyrant of the worst kind, he did maintain some semblance of order (when he wasn't executing political foes and gassing Kurds) and then we come along in 2003, destabilize things, and then leave. It's like we did half the job. (I've wondered how many Iraqis think they were better off with Saddam in power?)

Big A
08-12-14, 10:24
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-08-11/maliki-bid-to-block-successor-escalates-crisis-in-iraq.html

a1fabweld
08-12-14, 10:40
Am I an azzhole for not giving a shit about what happens in the middle east? (Aside from our service men & Women)

TehLlama
08-12-14, 16:14
Am I an azzhole for not giving a shit about what happens in the middle east? (Aside from our service men & Women)

More of a case that with sufficiently inept leadership, the likelihood of those problems being exported to us increases exponentially. There are many reasons to care, at a minimum just understanding enough to hold political leadership accountable when they're running against the advice of military advice is relevant as a voting citizen of a republic; realistically more if you're inclined to be curious, or at least want to be somewhat informed (that said, free pass given for anybody in a specialized/high information field; just seems odd to me that those tend to be the best informed folks anyway).

Big A
08-13-14, 13:29
Maliki says Abadi's appointment as Iraqi PM 'has no value':
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/13/us-iraq-crisis-maliki-idUSKBN0GD0QY20140813

Iran Joins U.S. in Backing Replacement for Iraq’s Maliki:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-08-12/iran-joins-u-s-in-backing-replacement-for-iraq-s-maliki.html

Kurds Push Attack in North Iraq as Maliki Clings to Power:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-08-13/kurds-push-attack-in-north-iraq-as-maliki-clings-to-power.html

Big A
08-14-14, 17:46
Iraq's Maliki Steps Down "To Stop Bloodshed", Blames CIA, Supports Abadi As New Prime Minister:
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-08-14/iraqs-maliki-steps-down-stop-bloodshed-supports-abadi-new-prime-minister

KingCobra
08-14-14, 23:57
Yup. Always better having someone gas civilians and using helicopter gunships to shoot up people trying to flee the country than this.

:rolleyes:

I'm going to stand by my idea: Arm and train the Kurds. The Kurdish militia was ignored by the US under both Bush and Obama until now. Hell, sell them F-16s and AH-1s if they can afford them. Put some Green Berets on the ground with the Peshmerga and light up everything that isn't Kurdish, Peshmerga, or under their protection in the meantime.

Inform Iran that so long as they leave the Kurds alone, they can do likewise with the Iraqi Shi'ites.

Call up Putin and give him the green light on supplying arms and advisors to al-Assad, so long as he (al-Assad) is willing to play nice with the Sunni moderates.

Formally recognize the independence of Iraqi Kurdistan. Then let Iran and Syria annex as much of Iraq as they think they can hold against ISIS's "Islamic State".
Actually, the Kurds are doing extremely well right now of fighting IS, all the way up until they ran out of supplies defending the civilians on the mountain in northern Iraq. Once they got more supplies they went back to doing extremely well.

MountainRaven
08-15-14, 00:13
Actually, the Kurds are doing extremely well right now of fighting IS, all the way up until they ran out of supplies defending the civilians on the mountain in northern Iraq. Once they got more supplies they went back to doing extremely well.

From what I've been hearing, the Syrian Kurds have been responsible for doing most of the IS-kicking, with the Iraqi Kurds mostly falling back. At least until recently, when the Syrian Kurds - with their greater number of recent combat veterans who have spent much of the last two years fighting ISIS - and Iraqi Kurds (and Yazidi militiamen) - whose experiences were primarily of waging a guerrilla war against Saddam Hussein and most of whose fighters have little or no combat experience - have teamed up to kick some IS together.

KingCobra
08-15-14, 00:21
That is literally what we have been briefed the past three months. Of course our f/a-18's are bombing the **** out of tat place makes a huge difference.

skydivr
08-15-14, 08:52
I'd put my money (and support) on the Kurds. They are the only ones who act like the deserve it.

You know, this reminds me almost exactly of what happened after the fall of Tito's Yugoslavia...it took over a decade, a civil war and a whole lot of killing before things leveled out....Taking out the strongman leaves a vacuum that everybody tries to fill....

ThirdWatcher
08-15-14, 20:23
I'd put my money (and support) on the Kurds. They are the only ones who act like the deserve it.

You know, this reminds me almost exactly of what happened after the fall of Tito's Yugoslavia...it took over a decade, a civil war and a whole lot of killing before things leveled out....Taking out the strongman leaves a vacuum that everybody tries to fill....

+1 I concur.

Moose-Knuckle
08-15-14, 21:28
Women Take Up Arms Against The Islamic State

http://news.yahoo.com/women-arms-against-islamic-state-210422192.html

jpmuscle
08-15-14, 23:50
Women Take Up Arms Against The Islamic State

http://news.yahoo.com/women-arms-against-islamic-state-210422192.html
That'll p*** of the hardliners