TWITTER New Yorker link - here. |
Noticed this appears to be Carnegie Endowment retweeted.
Imagine Carnegie Endowment aren't friends of Palestine.
Carnegie Endowment is a foreign policy 'think tank'. Would you believe they've got a Moscow centre?
Don't know about these NGOs (or is it a GO ... haven't checked funding). Who would want foreign influence in their countries?
Sinjar is a town on the Iraq-Syria border.
Like what's happening anywhere else in the world changes what's happened in Gaza!
Gaza's like shooting fish in a bucket.
Sinjar's either Iraq or Kurd.
ISIS has a fair bit of weaponry by the sound of it. Hey, they've also changed their name, I think. Now they're the Isamic State, as far as I know.
The New Yorker writes:
Yesterday, a senior U.S. official told me that the Obama Administration is contemplating an airlift, coördinated with the United Nations, of humanitarian supplies by C-130 transport planes to the Yazidis hiding in the Sinjar mountains. There are at least twenty thousand and perhaps as many as a hundred thousand of them, including some peshmerga militiamen providing a thin cover of protection. The U.N. has reported that dozens of children have died of thirst in the heat. ISIS controls the entrance to the mountains. Iraqi helicopters have dropped some supplies, including food and water, but the refugees are hard to find and hard to reach.ISIS rolls over local forces and consolidates power. ISIS is not Al Qaeda. It operates like an army, taking territory, creating a state. The aim of the Sinjar operation seems to be control of the Mosul Dam, the largest dam in Iraq, which provides electricity to Mosul, Baghdad, and much of the country. According to one expert, if ISIS takes the dam, which is located on the Tigris River, it would have the means to put Mosul under thirty metres of water, and Baghdad under five.One way to protect the innocent and hurt those who are terrorizing them would be for the U.S. to launch air strikes on ISIS positions. That option has been discussed within the administration since the fall of Mosul, in June, but it runs against President Obama’s foreign-policy tendencies. “The President’s first instinct is, ‘Let’s help them to do it,’ ” the official told me. “The minute we do something, it changes the game.” This time, unlike in Syria, it isn’t hard to figure out how to “help them to do it”: send arms to the Kurds, America’s only secular-minded, pluralistic Muslim allies in the region, and the only force in the area with the means and the will to protect thousands of lives.It seems delusional to imagine that there is such a thing as an Iraqi central government that should be given priority over stopping ISIS and preventing a massacre. That dream of the American project in Iraq is gone. But perhaps the Obama Administration is being more realistic. Yesterday, I also learned that the U.S. is, in fact, sending arms to the Kurds—just not openly. This was even more welcome news, though it’s too bad that the weapons didn’t reach the peshmerga in time to defend Sinjar. The U.S. Joint Operation Center in Erbil is helping peshmerga ground troops and the Iraqi air force to coordinate attacks on ISIS, providing intelligence from the sky. It’s a breakthrough that the Kurds and the Iraqis are cooperating at all. “For the moment,” the senior official said. “And it could all fall apart, because it’s lightning in a bottle.”
*Yazidi is Kurdish people linked to Zoroastrianism. I think Zoroastrianism was the original faith in Iran (Persia). How cool's that! Didn't think there were any beyond India, where they fled to centuries ago, I think it was. Find them interesting.
That sounds pretty full on.
If ISIS/IS operate as an army, what do al-Qaeda do?
It would seem odd to overtake territory and then to just leave it, which I'm guessing is what happens.
No comments:
Post a Comment