Yahoo! News: Iraq
Yahoo! News: Iraq |
- Iraqis seek political solution to avert army attack on Falluja
- A nervous calm grips Fallujah, but clashes nearby
- 500 reported killed in rebel infighting in Syria
- Venezuelans pay last respects to slain actress
- The myth of Iraq's squandered stability
- Al Qaeda group fights back against Syria rebel assault
- Iraq’s Crisis: Can the Sunni Awakening Rise Again?
- Tribes, police seize parts of Iraq city from militants
- Baker Hughes: Iraq protest hurt 4Q earnings
- Potential 2016 U.S. presidential contenders shadow 2014 elections
- 'Nearly 500 killed' in Syria rebel-jihadist fighting
- Bewildered Falluja residents flee feared Iraq army assault
- Israeli youths help Syrians fight winter chills
- Activists: Nearly 500 dead in Syria rebel clashes
- Iraqi troops clash with al-Qaida militants in west
- Official: Iraqi troops, militants clash in west
- Assad's forces kill dozens of rebels in Homs city
- Jihadists advance on Syria's Raqa: activists
- The Enemy of Our Enemy
- For Indonesian jihadists, Syrian civil war beckons
- As fighting grips Iraq, Republicans reopen old war wounds
Iraqis seek political solution to avert army attack on Falluja Posted: 10 Jan 2014 04:29 PM PST
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A nervous calm grips Fallujah, but clashes nearby Posted: 10 Jan 2014 03:04 PM PST
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500 reported killed in rebel infighting in Syria Posted: 10 Jan 2014 02:23 PM PST |
Venezuelans pay last respects to slain actress Posted: 10 Jan 2014 01:59 PM PST |
The myth of Iraq's squandered stability Posted: 10 Jan 2014 01:47 PM PST In March of that year, Gen. Petraeus said that despite a lack of progress on national reconciliation, he was hopeful that Iraqi leaders would "exploit the opportunities that we and our Iraqi counterparts have fought so hard to provide them." A key to his strategy was the Sahwa, or Awakening, a militia movement that drew its strength from Sunni Arab tribes who were sick of Al Qaeda's local affiliate and wanted to carve out of peaceful future in a new Iraq. Instead, the political course that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his allies charted in 2008 has, more than anything, led to the state of near open-insurrection across the Sunni Arab dominated Anbar Province today. This is the key to unpicking Iraq's challenges today - and assertions from politicians like Sen. Lindsey Graham or Sen. John McCain that all would be different if President Barack Obama had managed to keep a residual force of 12,000 or so US troops in the country is highly speculative, at best. In the summer of 2008, reporter Sam Dagher covered the US handover of a supposedly pacified Anbar Province to Iraqi security control for the Monitor. |
Al Qaeda group fights back against Syria rebel assault Posted: 10 Jan 2014 01:02 PM PST By Dominic Evans BEIRUT (Reuters) - Al Qaeda-linked jihadists struck back against rival rebels in eastern and northern Syria on Friday after a week of internecine fighting among opponents of President Bashar al-Assad in which 500 people have been killed, a monitoring group said. With less than two weeks to go before what is hoped will be the first peace talks between the opposition and Assad's government, disparate opposition groups met for the first time in the Spanish city of Cordoba. They agreed to work together but did not agree who, if any of them, should attend the peace talks. In rebel-held areas, other groups have turned against the al Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which aims to construct an Islamist caliphate straddling the border separating Syria and Iraq. |
Iraq’s Crisis: Can the Sunni Awakening Rise Again? Posted: 10 Jan 2014 12:31 PM PST For nearly a week, media reports from Iraq were eerily similar to those half a decade ago: fierce clashes had erupted between Iraqi troops and al-Qaeda insurgents in Anbar province. A wide expanse of farmland and desert that extends from the western Baghdad suburbs to the Syrian border, Anbar was the scene of some of the most brutal fighting of the Iraq War, where more than 1,300 American troops lost their lives and nearly ten thousand more Iraqis. The news that hit many American veterans the hardest was that fighters affiliated with al-Qaeda had taken control of Fallujah, Anbar's second-largest city, where the U.S. fought two large, bloody battles in the spring and fall of 2004. "At the moment, there is no presence of the Iraqi state in Fallujah," a local journalist, who was not named for safety reasons, told the Washington Post. "The police and the army have abandoned the city, al-Qaeda has taken down all the Iraqi flags and burned them, and it has raised its own flag on all the buildings." |
Tribes, police seize parts of Iraq city from militants Posted: 10 Jan 2014 11:13 AM PST
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Baker Hughes: Iraq protest hurt 4Q earnings Posted: 10 Jan 2014 09:52 AM PST Oilfield services company Baker Hughes said Friday that its fourth-quarter earnings were hurt by a protest in Iraq. The company's operations were suspended in Iraq in November due to a protest but resumed ... |
Potential 2016 U.S. presidential contenders shadow 2014 elections Posted: 10 Jan 2014 09:50 AM PST
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'Nearly 500 killed' in Syria rebel-jihadist fighting Posted: 10 Jan 2014 08:29 AM PST
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Bewildered Falluja residents flee feared Iraq army assault Posted: 10 Jan 2014 07:01 AM PST
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Israeli youths help Syrians fight winter chills Posted: 10 Jan 2014 06:38 AM PST After an unusually severe winter storm moved through the Middle East last month, leading to the death of 27 Syrian children, Israeli youths decided to step in. Gal Lusky of Israel Flying Aid, a veteran humanitarian worker who helped organize the campaign, says it's the most inspiring effort she's been a part of. "I did some work in Pakistan, Iraq, Sudan – this is the most moving [work] I ever did," says Ms. Lusky, who coordinated the campaign, dubbed Operation Human Warmth, with the youth group Hanoar Haoved Vehalomed and the affiliated social movement Dror Israel. "For me, knowing that those kids in a year or so might be holding weapons against those Syrians that today they send help to – it's not a common reaction." But even some young Israeli soldiers who found out about the campaign asked if they could join. |
Activists: Nearly 500 dead in Syria rebel clashes Posted: 10 Jan 2014 06:03 AM PST BEIRUT (AP) — Rebel-on-rebel fighting between an al-Qaida-linked group and an array of more moderate and ultraconservative Islamists has killed nearly 500 people over the past week in northern Syria, an activist group said Friday, in the most serious bout of violence among opponents of President Bashar Assad since the civil war began. |
Iraqi troops clash with al-Qaida militants in west Posted: 10 Jan 2014 05:16 AM PST |
Official: Iraqi troops, militants clash in west Posted: 10 Jan 2014 04:38 AM PST BAGHDAD (AP) — An official says fierce clashes have erupted between Iraqi special forces and al-Qaida-linked militants in a village in western Anbar province. |
Assad's forces kill dozens of rebels in Homs city Posted: 10 Jan 2014 02:31 AM PST
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Jihadists advance on Syria's Raqa: activists Posted: 10 Jan 2014 01:47 AM PST
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Posted: 10 Jan 2014 12:00 AM PST In the wars she has fought, America has often allied with regimes that represented the antithesis of the cause for which we were fighting. In World War I, Woodrow Wilson said we were fighting to "make the world safe for democracy." Yet our foremost allies were five avaricious empires: the British, French, Italian, Japanese and Russian. In World War II, the ally who did most of the fighting against Hitler was Josef Stalin. In America's wars, cold and hot, the enemy of our enemy has often been our ally, if not our friend. |
For Indonesian jihadists, Syrian civil war beckons Posted: 09 Jan 2014 10:03 PM PST |
As fighting grips Iraq, Republicans reopen old war wounds Posted: 09 Jan 2014 06:19 PM PST
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