Yahoo! News: Iraq
Yahoo! News: Iraq |
- U.S. diplomat warns to be 'prepared for the worst' right after N. Korean official reportedly shuts down diplomacy
- ISIS Losing Its 'Capital' Is A Pivotal Defeat For The Terrorist Group
- McCain on Willingness to Work With Trump 'Dumb Question'
- Woman Claims Delta Stopped Her From Singing National Anthem For Slain Soldier
- Confederate monuments vandalized in 2 Virginia cities
- Obama administration approved nuclear deal with Kremlin after FBI uncovered Russian bribery plot
- Rohingya man refugee again 40 years after leaving Bangladesh
- Mom's incredible hack for getting her child to take medicine goes viral
- Georgia State Senator Offers Free Bump Stock In Wake Of Vegas Massacre
- Body Of Missing 6-year-old With Autism Is Found In Dumpster As Relative Taken Into Custody
- White House slams lawmaker's 'disgusting' criticism of Trump's call to soldier's widow
- 'Very unusual' mistrial in woman's burning death
- Mandalay Bay Security Guard To Appear On ‘Ellen’ After Ducking Other Interviews
- Freed Taliban Hostage Caitlan Coleman Reportedly Rushed To Hospital
- Billy Joel, 68, and wife Alexis Roderick are expecting a baby
- Joe Biden: Donald Trump 'Doesn't Understand How the Government Functions'
- Defeated Isil 'cowards' take the bus home as Raqqa, capital of terrorism, is defeated at last
- Virginia's Governor Race Is Shaping Up To Be A Close One
- Nebraska man accused of helping Florida girlfriend kill self
- Bill Cosby Accusers Demand Academy Kick Out Cosby And Polanski Too
- Remembering William Seward’s Alaska ‘folly’
- Mother Allegedly Killed Two Sons Inside Burning Oven
- Bidding war heats up for $5 billion second Amazon HQ
- From Damascus, Iran vows to confront Israel
- Trump's Approval For Hurricane Response Plunges 20 Points After Puerto Rico Storms
- Wanted man turns himself in after losing Facebook bet with police
- The Latest: More evacuees from California wildfires go home
- The Internet Couldn't Get Enough Of Gucci Mane And Keyshia Ka'oir's Luxurious Wedding
- Stunning Photos Show Faces Of Poverty That Are Rarely Seen
- The Story Behind That 2,000-Year-Old Thracian Chariot You Saw on Reddit
- Abedin Sent Government Emails on Weiner Laptop: Report
- Boeing could rebut Airbus deal with new plane, partner
- Kenya's Odinga pulled out of election to avoid defeat: deputy president
- John McCain says he'll block Trump's defence nominees until he gets more details on Afghanistan plan
- Utah man will be tried on murder charge in girl's suicide
- Royal Caribbean's newest cruise ship is ‘the largest in the world’
- Reese Witherspoon Says A Director Assaulted Her When She Was 16
- Donna Karan Apologizes Again For Victim-Blaming Harvey Weinstein Accusers
- Tillerson Knocks China, Courts India Ahead of South Asia Trip
- American woman becomes princess after meeting a real prince in a nightclub
- 51 Fresh Fall Salads That Will Take You From Summer To Fall
- Donald Trump attacks bipartisan healthcare deal he had praised the day before
- Las Vegas gunman's estate could offer rare redress for victims
Posted: 17 Oct 2017 04:55 AM PDT |
ISIS Losing Its 'Capital' Is A Pivotal Defeat For The Terrorist Group Posted: 17 Oct 2017 02:41 PM PDT |
McCain on Willingness to Work With Trump 'Dumb Question' Posted: 17 Oct 2017 12:01 PM PDT |
Woman Claims Delta Stopped Her From Singing National Anthem For Slain Soldier Posted: 18 Oct 2017 03:40 PM PDT |
Confederate monuments vandalized in 2 Virginia cities Posted: 17 Oct 2017 02:35 PM PDT |
Obama administration approved nuclear deal with Kremlin after FBI uncovered Russian bribery plot Posted: 17 Oct 2017 11:20 AM PDT The Obama administration potentially knew of corruption at a Russian nuclear supplier years before it agreed to sign over 20 per cent of US's uranium supply to the company, a new report has claimed. The Hill claims federal agents found evidence of illegal payments made to an employee at a Russian nuclear company years before the Obama administration allowed the company to make a major business deal. |
Rohingya man refugee again 40 years after leaving Bangladesh Posted: 17 Oct 2017 09:02 PM PDT Nearly four decades ago Fazol Ahmed returned to his native Myanmar with his family under a Rohingya repatriation scheme. Now he is back in the teeming camps of Bangladesh with his wife and children, a refugee once again. Ahmed is among the hundreds of thousands of refugees who have crossed into Bangladesh since an upsurge in violence in neighbouring Myanmar in August that the UN has said amounts to ethnic cleansing. |
Mom's incredible hack for getting her child to take medicine goes viral Posted: 18 Oct 2017 11:29 AM PDT No matter the flavor, from orange to grape, we have vivid memories of being force-fed a spoonful, only to quickly chase it down with a glass of milk or a treat. England's Helena Lee was trying to feed her newborn Calpol when she remembered reading about this trick -- all you need is a bottle and syringe. |
Georgia State Senator Offers Free Bump Stock In Wake Of Vegas Massacre Posted: 17 Oct 2017 09:27 PM PDT |
Body Of Missing 6-year-old With Autism Is Found In Dumpster As Relative Taken Into Custody Posted: 17 Oct 2017 05:02 PM PDT |
Posted: 18 Oct 2017 01:10 PM PDT |
'Very unusual' mistrial in woman's burning death Posted: 16 Oct 2017 07:25 PM PDT |
Mandalay Bay Security Guard To Appear On ‘Ellen’ After Ducking Other Interviews Posted: 17 Oct 2017 09:43 PM PDT |
Freed Taliban Hostage Caitlan Coleman Reportedly Rushed To Hospital Posted: 18 Oct 2017 07:43 AM PDT |
Billy Joel, 68, and wife Alexis Roderick are expecting a baby Posted: 18 Oct 2017 09:01 AM PDT |
Joe Biden: Donald Trump 'Doesn't Understand How the Government Functions' Posted: 17 Oct 2017 04:03 PM PDT |
Posted: 17 Oct 2017 07:18 AM PDT The Islamic State's "capital" fell on Tuesday after US-backed forces declared victory in the Syrian city where the jihadist group plotted attacks on the West. Brig Gen Talal Silo, the spokesman for the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, said that clashes with Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) fighters in Raqqa had stopped, ending their three-year reign of terror in the city. "The SDF is now in control of the former capital of terrorism," Mr Sllo told the Daily Telegraph. "A formal declaration will be made from the city soon, after the clearing operations end. Raqqa is still full of landmines." The fighters limped out from their final redoubt in Raqqa's central hospital on Tuesday and onto waiting buses. Rojda Felat, a Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) commander, waves her group's flag at the iconic Al-Naim square in Raqqa on October 17, 2017. Credit: AFP Having promised to fight to the death for the capital of their so-called caliphate, in the end Islamic State's jihadists surrendered after realising they had been cornered. "Cowards to the end," said Macer Gifford, the pseudonym of a Briton fighting alongside the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces in Raqqa. He has been battling Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) militants in the city since the start of the offensive in June and was there to watch some of the last of them flee. "It was difficult to see them so close and to just watch them leave," the former currency trader from Oxford told the Telegraph. ISIS leaving Raqqa hospital. Cowards until the end... pic.twitter.com/sE6K3nPgHh— Macer Gifford (@macergifford) October 17, 2017 After a devastating four-month battle, the remaining 200-odd fighters gave up their fight and agreed to an evacuation deal which saw them bused out of the city to the last-remaining slivers of territory still under the jihadists's control to the south. The final black flag was taken down from the city's stadium, which had been used as a prison during Isil's brutal three-year rule and had become synonymous with the group's violent excesses. Photos showed Kurdish female fighters of the SDF waving their own yellow flag in its place. Fighters of Syrian Democratic Forces gesture the "V" sign in Raqqa, Syria October 17, 2017 Credit: REUTERS All that was left to do was check the many tunnels Isil had dug for sleeper cells and IEDs, Talal Silo, the SDF"s spokesman, said. "A formal declaration will be made from the city soon, after the clearing operations end. Raqqa is still full of landmines," Mr Silo told the Daily Telegraph. "But the SDF is now in control of the former capital of terrorism." During the campaign for Raqqa the city suffered massive devastation from Isil's mines as well as from US-led coalition air strikes which left most of its buildings levelled and in ruins. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor put the overall death toll for the battle at 3,250, including fighters and civilians, but said hundreds were still missing or unaccounted for. Five British volunteers were also killed. Isil's use of civilians as human shields forced the coalition to rely on coordinated air strikes, at a heavy cost. Fighters of Syrian Democratic Forces are seen in Raqqa, Syria October 17, 2017 Credit: REUTERS "They never fought us face-to-face like men," Mr Gifford told the Telegraph by phone. "They would just shoot at us from sniper positions and drive at us with car bombs. "They surrounded themselves with women and children, which they used as protection against the strikes." An international charity group says tens of thousands of people who did manage to flee are now in desperate need of aid and that the nearby camps are "bursting at the seams." With the high levels of destruction reported in and around the city, most families have nowhere to return home and are likely to stay in camps for months or years to come. The militants seized the city in early 2014 in a blitzkrieg offensive across Syria and neighbouring Iraq, making it the headquarters of its self-styled "caliphate". At one point they controlled approximately a third of Syria and a third of Iraq, making up a quasi-state the size of Britain. So confident was the group during its height they threatened to conquer Rome. Col. Ryan Dillon, spokesman for the anti-Isil coalition, said on Tuesday the fall of Raqqa would deny Isil the "well spring" that provided planning and support for terror operations in Syria and around the world. The effect the loss of the city, which had become the administrative heart of the Islamic State, will have on the group cannot be underestimated. It was from Raqqa its miliants filmed their slickly produced and often gory propaganda videos which lured thousands of recruits from around the world to join them. They plotted the most devastating attacks on Europe from the city's internet cafes. It was from the hills outside Raqqa Briton Mohammed Emwazi, otherwise known as Jihadi John, executed two of his countrymen in videos which shocked the world in 2014. The jihadists would continue to rule over the city's residents with an ultra-conservative and brutal interpretation of Sharia law for another three years. Schools were closed and children were sent to mosques for indoctrination into jihad and camps for military training. Adults were stoned to death and beheaded for infractions as minor as smoking or listening to music. But the group's fortunes changed dramatically after Iraqi forces began their offensive to retake its most prized territory of Mosul last year. And in recent months in Syria they have been forced back into a strip of the Euphrates valley and surrounding desert. A fighter from Syrian Democratic Forces takes a selfie as he stands near rubble at a damaged site in Raqqa Credit: Reuters Now more than 85 per cent of Isil's territory in Syria has been liberated and around 90 per cent in Iraq. But experts say Isil will remain a serious threat for the foreseeable future, despite its significant territorial losses. And that while the battle may be over, the war is yet to be won. "Today marks the end of Caliphate ISIS, but the beginning of Insurgency ISIS," said Hassan Hassan, a resident fellow at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy and co-author of ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror. Charlie Winter, a senior research fellow at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence, warned that its ideology would linger long after its "caliphate" was gone. "I don't think it's simply a question of taking away the Islamic State's territory and the Islamic State's idea disappears," he said. He said the group saw itself as successful, having "managed to declare a caliphate and keep it going" - something unprecedented in modern jihadism. Additional reporting by Luna Safwan in Beirut |
Virginia's Governor Race Is Shaping Up To Be A Close One Posted: 17 Oct 2017 01:04 PM PDT |
Nebraska man accused of helping Florida girlfriend kill self Posted: 17 Oct 2017 12:10 PM PDT |
Bill Cosby Accusers Demand Academy Kick Out Cosby And Polanski Too Posted: 17 Oct 2017 08:57 AM PDT |
Remembering William Seward’s Alaska ‘folly’ Posted: 18 Oct 2017 02:11 AM PDT |
Mother Allegedly Killed Two Sons Inside Burning Oven Posted: 17 Oct 2017 04:59 PM PDT |
Bidding war heats up for $5 billion second Amazon HQ Posted: 17 Oct 2017 10:26 PM PDT It's the prize of a lifetime -- a $5 billion investment creating 50,000 well-paid jobs that everyone wants, but only one US city will get. From East to West, from North to South, metropolises across the United States are locked in a frenzied bidding war desperate to woo Amazon into favoring them as the site of the e-commerce giant's second headquarters. From $7 billion in tax breaks in Newark, New Jersey -- 50 years ago aflame by deadly race riots -- to a giant cactus shipped inter-state, bids range from the colossally ambitious to the silly before Thursday's deadline for submissions. |
From Damascus, Iran vows to confront Israel Posted: 18 Oct 2017 06:26 AM PDT By Ellen Francis and Babak Dehghanpisheh BEIRUT (Reuters) - Iran's military chief warned Israel against breaching Syrian airspace and territory on a visit to Damascus on Wednesday, raising tensions with Israel as it voices deep concern over Tehran's influence in Syria. General Mohammad Baqeri pledged to increase cooperation with Syria's military to fight Israel and insurgents, Iranian and Syrian state media said. Iranian forces and Iran-backed Shi'ite militias, including Hezbollah, have provided critical military support to Damascus, helping it regain swathes of Syria from rebels and militants. |
Trump's Approval For Hurricane Response Plunges 20 Points After Puerto Rico Storms Posted: 17 Oct 2017 03:53 AM PDT |
Wanted man turns himself in after losing Facebook bet with police Posted: 18 Oct 2017 07:54 AM PDT A wanted Michigan man has turned himself in after losing a bet he made with police on Facebook. Michael Zaydel had promised to give himself up to police if a Facebook post about an existing arrest warrant received more than 1,000 shares. The cocky 21-year-old even promised to bring Redford Township Police Department (RTPD) officers a dozen doughnuts if they were victorious in the challenge. "I'm not worried about it," he wrote. "If your next post gets 1,000 shares I'll turn myself in with a dozen doughnuts and that's a promise. "And I'll pick up every piece of litter around your public schools." In a follow-up post, the department said he "may or may not be a man of his word," adding, "it is our experience everyone gets caught at some point. He has drawn a lot of attention to himself, and that makes it hard to hide from reality." The fugitive eventually surrendered to police, fulfilling his promise by arriving at the station with doughnuts and a bagel. "Zaydel made good on his promise to turn himself in to RTPD for his outstanding warrants," the department said. "He walked in on his own, and not only did he bring the doughnuts, he brought one bagel! We would again like to express our gratitude for the support of all who followed this, shared it, and left us positive feedback." Mr Zaydel was sentenced to 39 days in jail after pleading guilty to breaking the terms of his probation. Is this the world's most meta mugshot? |
The Latest: More evacuees from California wildfires go home Posted: 17 Oct 2017 12:27 AM PDT |
The Internet Couldn't Get Enough Of Gucci Mane And Keyshia Ka'oir's Luxurious Wedding Posted: 18 Oct 2017 09:33 AM PDT |
Stunning Photos Show Faces Of Poverty That Are Rarely Seen Posted: 17 Oct 2017 04:17 PM PDT |
The Story Behind That 2,000-Year-Old Thracian Chariot You Saw on Reddit Posted: 17 Oct 2017 12:03 PM PDT The photo of an ancient Thracian chariot alongside the bones of two horses and a dog has quickly risen to the top of Reddit today (Oct. 13), with more than 65,000 likes. A team of archaeologists led by Veselin Ignatov, of the Istoricheski muzej Nova Zagora, a museum in Bulgaria, discovered the 2,000-year-old wooden chariot in 2008. In 2009, Ignatov and his team also found a brick tomb, containing the remains of a man dressed in what appears to be armor, near the chariot. |
Abedin Sent Government Emails on Weiner Laptop: Report Posted: 17 Oct 2017 04:30 PM PDT |
Boeing could rebut Airbus deal with new plane, partner Posted: 17 Oct 2017 06:40 PM PDT Bombardier's alliance with Airbus creates new hurdles for Boeing, but the US giant could respond by deepening its collaboration with Brazil's Embraer and launching a new aircraft, analysts say. The surprise deal with Airbus was designed to let Bombardier proceed with its C Series program and avert draconian US sanctions that had been ordered in a preliminary Commerce Department decision in response to a Boeing complaint. "Anything that's good for Airbus is bad for Boeing of course," said Jim Corridore, an analyst at CFRA Research, summarizing the reaction of many observers to the Airbus-Bombardier venture. |
Kenya's Odinga pulled out of election to avoid defeat: deputy president Posted: 17 Oct 2017 07:04 AM PDT By Katharine Houreld NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya's opposition leader Raila Odinga decided not to stand in next week's presidential election to avoid defeat rather than for reasons of principle, the deputy president said on Tuesday. Odinga was due to face President Uhuru Kenyatta on Oct. 26 in a repeat of a presidential vote held in August but he withdrew his candidacy, saying the electoral commission had failed to institute reforms to guarantee fairness. Kenyatta won the Aug. 8 election by 1.4 million votes. |
Posted: 17 Oct 2017 03:32 PM PDT Senator John McCain has said he'll hold up Donald Trump's nominees for key Defence Department posts until the President articulates a more detailed strategy for the war in Afghanistan. Mr McCain, the chairman of the influential Senate Armed Services Committee, said the panel needs new information in order to properly outfit the US armed forces with training and equipment. "If we don't get the information we need, we can't do that," Mr McCain told reporters. |
Utah man will be tried on murder charge in girl's suicide Posted: 18 Oct 2017 03:45 PM PDT |
Royal Caribbean's newest cruise ship is ‘the largest in the world’ Posted: 17 Oct 2017 02:16 PM PDT |
Reese Witherspoon Says A Director Assaulted Her When She Was 16 Posted: 17 Oct 2017 04:16 AM PDT |
Donna Karan Apologizes Again For Victim-Blaming Harvey Weinstein Accusers Posted: 17 Oct 2017 09:43 AM PDT |
Tillerson Knocks China, Courts India Ahead of South Asia Trip Posted: 18 Oct 2017 12:41 PM PDT |
American woman becomes princess after meeting a real prince in a nightclub Posted: 18 Oct 2017 02:57 AM PDT Most of us can but dream of rocking up to the club and casually meeting a member of a royal family. But, that's what happened to Ariana Austin on the dance floor of Washington D.C. nightclub Pearl back in December 2005 when she met Joel Makonnen, a.k.a. Prince Yoel. The story didn't end there for Austin and Makonnen. Twelve years on from their nightclub meet-cute, the couple tied the knot, and Austin became a princess. SEE ALSO: Prince George's favourite film proves once and for all he just can't wait to be king Per the New York Times, Prince Yoel is the great-grandson of Haile Selassie, the last emperor of Ethiopia, part of the Solomonic dynasty. Austin also happens to be of noble blood: she's the granddaughter of the lord mayor of Georgetown, Guyana. A post shared by Ariana Austin Makonnen (@chezariana) on Sep 15, 2017 at 7:14am PDT Enough about royalty, we want to know what went down in that nightclub on that fateful night in 2005. That night, Makonnen strolled over to Austin and her friend and said: "You guys look like an ad for Bombay Sapphire," according to the NYT. It appears Makonnen's regal background didn't help him out in the chat-up line department. Apparently, it took Makonnen just five more minutes to tell Austin: "You're going to be my girlfriend." Well, he certainly didn't waste any time. Official pics are here! All credit to the talented @dotunayodeji. Planning by @favoredbyyodit Dress @lazarobridal #AriJo #royalwedding #moretocome ❤️ A post shared by Ariana Austin Makonnen (@chezariana) on Oct 16, 2017 at 4:39pm PDT The couple were wed in an Ethiopian Orthodox ceremony in Temple Hills, Maryland, surrounded by family and friends. And, in case you were wondering, the couple certainly don't sit on thrones all day long. Austin works at the Executives' Alliance for Boys and Men of Color, and Makonnen works at Otsuka America Pharmaceutical. Congrats to the happy (royal) couple! WATCH: Prince George looks beyond cute for his first day of school |
51 Fresh Fall Salads That Will Take You From Summer To Fall Posted: 18 Oct 2017 09:20 AM PDT |
Donald Trump attacks bipartisan healthcare deal he had praised the day before Posted: 18 Oct 2017 09:31 AM PDT Donald Trump has hit out at a deal to fund Obamacare subsidies - a day after he appeared to support the bipartisan move to help Americans afford health insurance. Earlier this week, Republican Senator Lamar Alexander and Democratic Senator Patty Murray announced they reached an agreement to fund insurance subsidies for Obamacare that Mr Trump said he was planning to end. The subsidies, often called cost-sharing reductions, are payments to insurance companies from the federal government to help offset the cost of deductibles and out-of-pocket health costs for lower-income people. |
Las Vegas gunman's estate could offer rare redress for victims Posted: 18 Oct 2017 04:48 AM PDT By Tina Bellon NEW YORK (Reuters) - Victims of mass shootings in the United States often win little or no damages from perpetrators but the Las Vegas massacre may be different because the shooter is thought to have been a wealthy man, lawyers said. While there are often few assets to collect from the young men who typically carry out these killings, Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock, 64, is thought to have had multi-million-dollar investments in buildings across Texas and California. "It definitely depends on the assets in the estate whether you pursue that claim," said Theida Salazar, a Los Angeles attorney who represented one of the victim's families in the 2015 shooting in San Bernadino, California. |
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