Iraq Weekly Security Report
Transcription
Iraq Weekly Security Report
Iraq Weekly Security Report May 26, 2015 Security Analysis May 19 - 25, 2015 Executive Summary • Baghdad and Shia militia spokesmen announce the launch of a fresh offensive in Anbar to reclaim Ramadi town, amid ongoing air campaign against Islamic State fighters in western districts. • Large sections of Baiji refinery damaged in fires, as Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and militia fighters press further into the districts key disputed areas. • Conditions across the south continued this week, with tribal conflict, popular unrest and organized crime in Basra governorate remaining the primary drivers of local instability. National Overview Iraqi authorities respond to international criticism with the initiation of fresh operations against the Islamic State group, as Kurdistan witnesses rare instance of intra-Kurdish violence between rival militia groups. Central to debates in Iraq’s political and military sphere were the comments of US Defense Secretary Ash Carter who on Sunday decried Iraq’s Anbar-based troops for showing “no will to fight” despite having considerably outnumbered militants in clashes over the past month. Whether or not such comments reflected the sitDAHUK uation on the ground is uncertain given that Iraqi federal ERBIL Police and tribal fighters had sustained similar incursions NINEVEH in the face of both heavy resistance and dwindling SULAIMANIYA KIRKUK ammunition supplies for over three months prior to the fall of Ramadi. Nonetheless, Iranian officials were quick SALAHUDDIN to respond in kind, accusing the United States of showing “no will” to confront the militants directly, promptDIYALA ing a bitter exchange of recriminations only halted after BAGHDAD ANBAR vice President Joe Biden intervened to assure the Federal WASIT KARBALA BABIL Republic that Iraq retained America’s full support in the battle against the Islamic State. On the regional level, QADISIYA MAYSAN recriminations were also felt in the Kurdistan region this week, as Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) parNAJAF DHI QAR Over 30 Incidents liamentarians issued condemnation and dispatched a Over 10 Incidents BASRA MUTHANNA cross-party delegation to the Kelashin border area with Over Five Incidents Iran, following clashes between the two foreign Kurdish At Least One Incident paramilitary groups, the Turkish Kurdistan Workers Party No Incidents (PKK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) who opened fire on one another on Sunday night. Reported Violent Incidents May 19 - 25, 2015 Northern Region Large sections of the Baiji refinery was damaged in fires, as ISF and militia fighters press further into the district’s key disputed areas. While control of both Baiji town and its refinery complex remain contested between pro and anti-government forces, Shia Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) fighters are now understood to have closed off southern and eastern routes into the facility, following the arrival of hundreds of fresh Security Analysis May 19 - 25, 2015 reserves on May 23. In coordination with operations across Anbar, fresh assaults on occupied positions are anticipated to begin in the coming days and may also spread to sites such as Fatha (5 kilometers NE) and Albu Tumah (10 kilometers SE) which have both fallen back under militant control while the main force of the army presses into the urban centers. Precise estimates of the damage to the Baiji complex in the course of the battle have yet to be released, though amateur footage available from frontline militants suggests that large sections of the facility were damaged when militants detonated VBIEDs and concealed IED devices, according to federal police, in an effort to slow the advance of government forces. Further north, Peshmerga units reported intercepting a number of ISIS attempts to ambush Kurdish security positions in Bartalah and Khazar east of Mosul, amid some of the heaviest coalition air strikes across Sinjar and the north east so far witnessed in 2015. Central Region Baghdad and Shia militia spokesmen announce the launch of fresh offensive in Anbar to reclaim Ramadi town as coalition air strikes are called in to resist a new wave of attacks on Iraq’s westernmost ISF outposts. Now officially confirmed on State television and through spokesmen for the Shia Popular Mobilization units, referred to as the Hashid al-Shaabi in recent broadcasts, ground operations movement of troops are expected to push towards Ramadi from the north-east of the district, while Baghdad-based ISF continue their struggle east of Karma. Previous massed offensives in Diyala and Salahuddin have proven the effectiveness of the sheer weight of numbers offered by the Shia paramilitaries, though at this stage it is difficult to verify precisely how many fighters have now entered Anbar, and where their operations will stop. Pressure to ISIS from the west will nonetheless represent a welcome development for tribal fighters on the Syrian border and in disputed zones such as Baghdadi (south of Haditha) where militants are now advancing rapidly. On May 22 militants seized the border town of Hussaya, seven kilometers east of Anbar’s provincial capital, days later capturing the Waleed border crossing into Syria and threatening the Trabeel Iraq-Jordan posts. While ISF positions have now been strengthened around Haditha and Baghdadi town, additional offensives over the coming week have the potential for further ISIS gains in the west, particularly for the region’s remote and isolated security posts. Southern Region No significant change to security conditions across the south were identified this week, with tribal conflict, popular unrest and organized crime in Basra governorate remaining the primary drivers of local instability. In a positive development, no further instances of kidnappings or small arms fire (SAF) around the West Qurna field have been reported, though as before this situation has the potential to change due to the inherently unstable nature of tribal ceasefires in and around Basra. Instead, the primary development around Qurna and Midaina districts were a series of demonstrations by local workers (by far the most common source of protest across all southern governorates) including one gathering on May 24 which saw over 200 security guards demonstrate outside the West Qurna 2 field, demanding a continuation of their employment. As is commonplace, the protest was disbanded after a number of hours without injury or incident. For organizations operating between the oilfields and Basra city, it is important to stress that recent trends identified in the Iraq security update, namely the use of IEDs against residential property and shootings of local gang or tribal enemies remain commonplace and while almost never targeting foreign workers directly, may pose an underlying security risk when proper precautions are not followed. Key Security Events May 19 - 25, 2015 Erbil, May 24: Fighters of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) clashed in in the border area of Kelashin, resulting in the death of two KDPI personnel. DAHUK Salahuddin, May 22: ISF and PMU unit reserves reached blockaded areas of the Baiji refinery complex, triggering a series of clashes and VBIED strikes, including against critical infrastructure by Islamic state militants. Dahuk Rabia Sinjar Tal Afar Mosul Erbil ERBIL NINEVEHBadkdida Sulaymaniyah Kirkuk SULAIMANIYA Hawija KIRKUK Baiji Anbar, May 22: ISIS militants capture the tribal –protected pro government town of Hussayba after Sunni militiamen were forced to withdraw due to low ammunition supplies. The town is currently contested in tribal counter-offensives. Tikrit Diyala, May 24: ISF intercepted two VBIEDs after a third detonated in Juba 6 kilometers north east of Baquba. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, though it is likely that local cells active in the previous car bomb attacks on May 07 and 08 in Balad Ruz were involved. Tuz Khurma Sulaiman Beg SALAHUDDIN Jalawla Al Qairm Samarra Haditha Khalis Muqdadiyah DIYALA Baqubah Hit Taji Ramadi Rutba Khanaqin Sadia Baghdad BAGHDAD Fallujah Abu Ghraib ANBAR Anbar, May 25: Spokesmen for the Popular Defense Forces announced the start of the preliminary operations to liberate Anbar and northern Salahuddin, beginning initial bombardment of militant targets in the early evening. Hillah KARBALA Karbala BABIL Al Amarah Najaf Ad QADISIYA Diwaniyah NAJAF LEGEND Kut WASIT MAYSAN Nasiriyah DHI QAR Basra KRG Territory ISIS Held City Kurdish Held City Disputed City ISF Held City Peshmerga Controlled Areas Basra, May 19: MUTHANNA A local cleric was kidnapped and murdered in the Hartah area of Basra governorate, in an attack likely to have been triggered by tribal disputes with the Shahmani tribe. BASRA News Summary May 19 - 25, 2015 Politics and Security • PM Abadi Promises to Liberate Ramadi ‘In Days’ – Rudaw. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi claimed in an interview on Sunday with the BBC that the provincial capital city of Ramadi can be recaptured from the Islamic State “in days.” The prime minister also criticized remarks by US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter who gave a scathing assessment of the Iraqi security forces battle against ISIS in Anbar province. Carter accused Iraqi troops of abandoning Ramadi despite greatly out-numbering the jihadists. Carter told CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday that the Iraqi forces lack the will to fight the militias. Abadi said Carter’s claim “shocked” him. He acknowledged that Carter is supporting Iraq but said the top US defense official had “received wrong information.” Full Article Defense Secretary Opens Possibility to Strategy Shift on Iraq • Joe Biden Calls Iraqi PM to Calm Outcry Over Carter Remarks on Fight Against ISIS – Guardian. Vice-President Joe Biden spoke to the Iraqi prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, on Monday to reassure him of US support, a day after controversial remarks by the defense secretary, Ash Carter, sparked a war of words over the recent military successes of Islamic State. Carter told CNN on Saturday Iraqi forces had shown “no will to fight” ISIS and had fled in Ramadi despite outnumbering the militants. ISIS also captured Palmyra, in Syria, last week. A spokesman for Abadi subsequently told the Associated Press Carter had been given “incorrect information”, and said: “We should not judge the whole army based on one incident.” Full Article • Joint PUK-KDP Delegation to Visit Site of Border Clash– Rudaw. A delegation comprised of members of the two ruling parties of the Kurdistan region will reportedly visit the site of a border clash between rival Kurdish parties in the remote Qandil Mountains. A source from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) forces in Qandil mount told Rudaw on condition of anonymity that members of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) are expected to meet the two parties involved in the dispute, but no time for the meeting was provided. “They will meet the KDPI first and then they will also visit PKK officials to work out the problems.” Full Article Defense Secretary Ash Carter held open the possibility of a strategy shift by the White House on Iraq, a few days after recent setbacks in Iraq and Syria revived sharp criticism of the Obama administration’s approach in combating extremist groups there. Islamic State forces last week captured the key Iraqi city of Ramadi and also expanded their reach in Syria. Critics and even allies of the administration took to Sunday television talk shows to call for a strategy change by the administration to stem the advance of Islamic State forces. The calls included more aggressively arming Sunni tribes and Peshmerga forces who oppose Islamic State, also known as ISIL and ISIS. “If there comes a time when we have to change the kinds of support we give we will make that recommendation,” Carter said in an interview with CNN that aired Sunday. House Armed Services Chairman Mac Thornberry (R., Texas) said on ABC’s “This Week” that the battle in Ramadi was among the many reasons why he doubted the Obama administration’s claim that US efforts have succeeded in degrading the strength of ISIS. Source: WSJ. Full Article News Summary May 19 - 25, 2015 Economics and Business • Crude Oil Advances Amid Lower US Supply, Middle East Violence – Bloomberg. Crude oil rose amid signs a US glut is easing and on concern that violence in the Middle East will worsen. US crude inventories have fallen for three straight weeks after rising to a record last month, Energy Department data show. Violence flared in OPEC’s two biggest members Iraq and Saudi Arabia, raising tensions ahead of the producer group’s meeting on June 5 in Vienna. “The worst of the inventory build in North America may be over,” Bart Malek, an analyst at TD Securities in Toronto, said by phone. “That in combo with expectations that the US economy may do OK is helping to keep crude up a little bit.” Brent crude for July settlement rose 15 cents to close at $65.52 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange, after gaining as much as 1.3 percent to $66.22. Full Article KRG Oil Shipment for April Meets Baghdad Quota The Kurdistan Ministry of Natural Resources released monthly oil delivery figures on Saturday, reporting a total for April that would meet the amount agreed upon by the regional government to deliver to Baghdad. According to the release, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG)’s oil shipment for April met the required 550,000 barrels per day (bpd) that was stipulated in a Baghdad-Erbil oil budget agreement that was established in December. • Islamic State torches Iraq’s largest oil refinery at Beiji – UN. Fighters from ISIS – also known as Islamic State (IS) – have torched part of Iraq’s largest oil refinery at Beiji, some 200 kilometers from Baghdad, apparently in a bid to keep back the Iraqi army and Shia militants. Billowing clouds of black smoke have been seen high above the refinery, captured along with the city of Beiji during the lightning advances made by IS last June. Iraqi army and Shia militia – known as Popular Mobilization Forces or PMF – are now within 2 kilometers of the facility. Colonel Maan Al-Sa’eedi, commander of the second federal police brigade, told Al Jazeera: “ISIS has rigged Beiji with booby trapped trenches, sand barracks and road side bombs. We are hoping that our forces will overcome these obstacles, the enemy is desperate and lost manpower and firepower and therefore is trying different methods to halt our advance.” Full Article Key Upcoming Dates June 18 - 19 Beginning of Ramadan July 14 Republic Day Based on the agreement for 2015, the federal government is required to send the KRG a 17 percent share of the national budget in return for the oil from the Kurdistan region. Baghdad cut budget payments to the KRG in January 2014 in a punitive response to Erbil’s bids to export oil independently. Iraqi Oil Minister Abdul Mahdi arrived in Erbil last week and met Kurdish government officials, including President Masoud Barzani, in an effort to salvage the budget deal. Baghdad has accused the KRG of shortages in the oil shipments. KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani announced last week, however, that Erbil has honored the deal. Source: Rudaw. 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