Thursday, June 12, 2014

Secretary-General Rasmussen says doesn't see a role for NATO in Iraq

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said on June 12 he didn't see a role for the organisation in Iraq after Islamist militants seized swathes of territory in the country and took 80 Turkish citizens hostage.

Rasmussen condemned the violence and called for immediate release of the hostages.

"We urge the hostage takers to release the hostages immediately. Nothing can justify this criminal act ... I don't see a role for NATO in Iraq, but of course we follow the situation closely and urge all parties involved to stop the violence," Rasmussen said during a conference in Madrid. "Nothing can justify this criminal act."


NATO ambassadors held an emergency meeting at Turkey's request on June 11 on the situation.

  • Turkey did not invoke Article 4 of the NATO charter, which allows any ally to call for consultations if the security of any member country is threatened.
The June 11 meeting was merely for information purposes, a Turkish diplomat told the Hürriyet Daily News.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said there was "no question" of British troops being sent back to Iraq to help battle Islamic militants who have seized control of key cities.

Hague said that while the situation was of great concern, the government was "not countenancing at this stage any British military involvement." He said he believed Iraq had sufficient forces to counter the threat.

A U.S. official told AFP that the United States "stands ready" to help Iraq, but made no mention of sending troops.

[hurriyetdailynews.com]
12/6/14
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2 comments :

  1. In a show of unity against disruptive forces in Iraq, the foreign secretaries of the United States and Britain said their respective countries would work to help stabilize the situation there and push Iraq’s leaders to overcome sectarian differences and build political cohesion.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and British Foreign Secretary William Hague, at a global summit in London, said on Friday that their nations would collaborate on support for Iraq’s government, under siege by militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant.

    Rebels, who have seized several key cities and terrified civilians and Iraqi soldiers, are bearing down on the capital city of Baghdad.

    "We are laser-focused on dealing with the crisis at hand," Kerry said, saying he expects President Barack Obama to make "timely decisions'' on Iraq.

    The United States already has increased military shipments this year, especially in the last month, and has expanded training programs in Iraq and Jordan. The State Department announced yesterday it was providing more than $12 million in emergency humanitarian aid.

    "But just as important as any short-term action," Kerry said, is having Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki do more to overcome sectarian differences.

    "This needs to be a wakeup call for all of Iraq’s leaders," Kerry said.

    Hague, saying Britain was "looking urgently at ways to assist" in managing the crisis, said his government, like the United States’, is working with the United Nations Security Council and is providing assistance such as counterterrorism expertise.

    "We will work closely with the United States and with all our allies," Hague said, emphasizing that in stabilizing the situation, "this does not mean we are planning a military intervention ourselves."

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  2. Die Kurden machen sich das Chaos im Irak zunutze...

    Kurdische Kämpfer haben die bisher umstrittene, ölreiche Stadt Kirkuk eingenommen. So dehnen sie das kurdische Autonomiegebiet aus und schaffen die Voraussetzung für einen eigenen Staat.

    Im neuen irakischen Bürgerkrieg geht alles sehr schnell. Nachdem die Terrorarmee Isis die nordirakische Metropole Mossul fast kampflos eingenommen hatte, machten es ihr die irakischen Kurden nach und nahmen nach eigenen Angaben die Ölstadt Kirkuk in Besitz. Die irakische Armee hatte sich davor kampflos aus der Stadt abgesetzt, deren Außenbezirke bereits unter dem Beschuss von Isis-Verbänden lagen.

    In beiden Fällen demonstrierte die für mehr als 25 Milliarden Dollar von den USA ausgebildete und bewaffnete irakische Armee ihre größte Fähigkeit: den dramatischen Zusammenbruch und die plötzliche Flucht. Nur mithilfe einer eilig ins Land gebrachten iranischen Sondereinheit gelang es den irakischen Truppen offenbar, zumindest Tikrit, die Heimatstadt des einstigen Diktators Saddam Hussein, zurückzuerobern. Isis hatte den Ort kurz davor angegriffen und teilweise eingenommen.

    In dem Vakuum, das die irakische Schwäche schuf, bilden sich mit atemberaubender Geschwindigkeit neue Machtstrukturen. Nicht nur Isis hat nun eine echte Chance, einen Sunniten-Staat zu schaffen, der die bisherigen Grenzen Syriens und des Irak sprengen würde. Auch die Kurden kommen mit der Einnahme Kirkuks ihrem Traum eines eigenen, lebensfähigen Staates näher als je zuvor. Mit seinen Ölvorkommen wäre Kirkuk eine solide wirtschaftliche Basis für den Kurdenstaat – der de facto bereits seit dem Golfkrieg von 1991 existiert als "autonome Region".

    Kurden erhalten Teil der Öleinnahmen aus Bagdad

    In seiner bisherigen Form ist diese Region "Kurdistan" eine vorteilhafte Zwischenlösung für die Kurden, die völlige Freiheit genießen, in ihrem Gebiet zu machen, was sie wollen, und zugleich von Bagdad einen Teil der irakischen Öleinnahmen überwiesen bekommen..............http://www.welt.de/politik/ausland/article129036944/Die-Kurden-machen-sich-das-Chaos-im-Irak-zunutze.html

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