I/II.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2666690/Kerry-promises-intense-sustained-support-Iraq-Obama-steps-military-action.html

Kerry promises 'intense and sustained' support for Iraq as Obama steps back
from military action


   - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry promised 'intense and sustained'
   U.S. support for Iraq on Monday
   -
*He was in Iraq meeting Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to deliver the Obama
   administration's message that Iraqis must come together in order to save
   their country *
   - *President Barack Obama is so far continuing to stand firm on his
   decision not to deploy combat troops to Iraq*
   - *The country's problems can't be solved by military might alone, he
   said, in interview that aired on CNN, CBS and MSNBC on Monday morning*
   -
*'There's no amount of American fire power that's gonna be able to hold the
   country together,' Obama told CNN *
   - *A new poll shows that more Americans than not believe the U.S. is
   under no obligation to give Iraq military assistance*
   -

By REUTERS REPORTER
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Reuters+Reporter>
 and FRANCESCA CHAMBERS
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Francesca+Chambers>

PUBLISHED: 04:47 GMT, 24 June 2014 | UPDATED: 04:48 GMT, 24 June 2014

Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday promised 'intense and sustained'
U.S. support for Iraq, but said the divided country would only survive if
its leaders took urgent steps to bring it together.


Hours before Kerry arrived in Baghdad, Sunni tribes who have joined a
militant takeover of northern Iraq seized the only legal crossing point
with Jordan, security sources said, leaving troops with no presence along
the entire western frontier which includes some of the Middle East's most
important trade routes.


U.S. President Barack Obama has offered up to 300 American advisers to Iraq
but held off granting a request by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shi'ite
Muslim-led government for air strikes to counter the two-week advance by
Sunni militants.

Officials have meanwhile called for Iraqis to form an inclusive government.
The insurgency has been fuelled largely by a sense of materialization and
persecution among Iraq's Sunnis.


'The support will be intense and sustained and if Iraq's leaders take the
necessary steps to bring the country together, it will be effective,' Kerry
told reporters in Baghdad.

He said Maliki had 'on multiple occasions affirmed his commitment to July
1' as the date to start the formation of a new government bringing in more
Sunnis and Kurds to share power, a move Washington is keen to see.

SNIPPED

II.
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/06/23/world/meast/iraq-crisis/

Kerry assures Iraqis of U.S. support if they unite against militants
By *Chelsea J. Carter*, *Hamdi Alkhshali *and* Susanna Capelouto*, CNN
June 23, 2014 -- Updated 2343 GMT (0743 HKT)

*Baghdad, Iraq (CNN)* -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met Iraqi
leaders Monday as radical Sunni militants continue their march toward
Baghdad during the country's tensest time since the U.S. withdrawal of
troops in 2011.

"The future of Iraq depends on decisions made in the next few days and
weeks," Kerry said after meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki,
the man who some observers say needs to step down
<http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2014/06/20/if-maliki-steps-down-who-replaces-him/?hpt=ac_mid>
.

Al-Maliki has agreed to a July 1 deadline to begin the process to form a
new government, a requirement for U.S. assistance in fighting the Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria
<http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/12/world/meast/who-is-the-isis/index.html>, or
ISIS, Kerry said.

"Our support will be intense, sustained," and will be effective if Iraqi
leaders unite to face the militant threat, he said.

With al-Maliki's Shiite-led government losing more ground to ISIS, Kerry
implored the leader to rise above "sectarian motivations" to become more
inclusive and make the government more representative of Iraq's population.

Kerry also met with Iraq's foreign minister as well as Shiite and Sunni
leaders.

Al-Malaki's office issued a statement after his meeting with Kerry, saying
the Prime Minister told Kerry the current situation "poses a threat" not
only to Iraq but the region as well. Al-Malaki "called on the countries of
the world, especially countries in the region, to take it seriously," the
statement said.

But outside the rooms of high-level talks, parts of Iraq are falling by the
day. Here's the latest on the crisis that is spilling far beyond Iraq's
borders:

*Where is Iraq's military?*

The United States believes "multiple Iraqi military divisions" outside
Baghdad have dissolved and are plagued by problems in morale, leadership,
training and equipment, according to a senior U.S. defense official.

"The readiness outside of Baghdad is certainly in question as they have
ceded multiple towns. Forces in Baghdad seems to be holding today," the
official said.

The United States believes there are around 10,000 fighters who are either
affiliated with ISIS or members of the group, the official said, and while
they are stretched thin over vast territory, they are getting support in
the Sunni areas they increasingly control.

Kerry said Monday in Baghdad that President Barack Obama has prepared "a
range of options for Iraq," including enhanced intelligence, joint
operations centers, military advisers and "steady supplies of munitions."

But the United States is being more careful about sending additional
weapons and ammunition to Iraq, because of a lack of confidence in the
Iraqi troops, the defense official said.

*ISIS captures more ground*

Militant fighters believed to be ISIS have seized the Baiji oil refinery,
the largest in Iraq, three Iraqi security sources told CNN Monday.

Earlier in the day, an Iraqi military spokesman had said that an attack was
under way, but had been repelled by security forces. CNN cannot
independently confirm either claim.

The Baiji refinery is a key strategic resource because it refines much of
the fuel needed for internal consumption. There are already long lines at
many gas stations across the country.

ISIS militants also advanced toward Baghdad over the weekend from the north
and the west. At least 70% of Anbar province is now under the control of
ISIS, two security officials in the region told CNN.

ISIS is on a mission to create an Islamic state across Sunni areas of Iraq
and in Syria.

Militants have taken over the Tal Afar airbase in northern Iraq as well as
the city of Tal Afar, officials said.

On Monday, Iraqi troops prepared to recapture the airbase, Iraqi Maj. Gen.
Abu al-Waleed said. "At least 1,000 Iraqi troops have amassed to the north
of Tal Afar and are firing rockets at militants in control of the city," he
said.

The fighters also seized the western Anbar town of Rutba, 70 miles (113
kilometers) from the borders of Jordan and Saudi Arabia, security sources
in Baghdad and Anbar told CNN on Sunday.

Then there's Qaim. ISIS captured the city along the Syrian border Saturday,
and the militants now enjoy a stronghold and a number of other towns in
Anbar province. The fighters have a direct line to the western outskirts of
Baghdad, where tension simmers just beneath the surface.

Checkpoints in the capital seemed to pop up overnight, particularly the
closer one got to central Baghdad. Security forces appeared to be
controlling access to neighborhoods through a mix of checkpoints and road
closures.

*Dozens of prisoners, five police killed*

At least 71 prisoners and five police officers were killed Monday when
militants attacked an Iraqi police convoy transferring inmates from one
prison to another, police said.

Five militants were also killed. It was not immediately clear whether ISIS
was behind the attack.

The convoy was traveling from Hilla, a predominately Shiite city south of
Baghdad, to another prison north of the city. Police did not provide
further details about the attack.

Iraq's military is accusing ISIS of carrying out massacres.

"Hundreds of Iraqi soldiers have been beheaded and hung and their bodies
have been desecrated," said Iraq's military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Qassim
Atta. "Why has the U.N. not decried these atrocious crimes, which are among
the biggest crimes against humanity?"

*Sharia law spreads*

One of ISIS' biggest victories came when it took over Mosul, Iraq's
second-largest city, this month. On Sunday, witnesses said militants
paraded around the city in vehicles, announcing on loudspeakers that they
have decided to form Islamic Sharia courts in Mosul.

Sharia law covers religious and nonreligious aspects of life, and ISIS has
begun imposing Sharia law in the towns it controls.

Boys and girls must be separated at school. Women must wear the niqab, or
full veil, in public. Music is banned, and fasting is enforced during
Ramadan.

*The military denies huge losses*

But Iraq's military said it's not losing as much ground to ISIS as some may
think. The military made a "strategic withdrawal" in some areas, Atta, the
military spokesman, told reporters.

He said the withdrawals were part of a campaign to "open all these fronts
so we can strengthen our positions." But Atta did not detail the specific
locations.

Two security officials told CNN that Iraqi forces have withdrawn from
Haditha, 168 miles (about 270 kilometers) northwest of Baghdad.

But even if some withdrawals were strategic, it's unclear when or how Iraqi
forces could retake areas now in the hands of well-armed ISIS fighters.

The military said it has fought back against militants with airstrikes.
Officials showed reporters footage of airstrikes they said took place in
Tal Afar.

Atta said the video showed a "large number of ISIS forces fleeing these
strikes" that left up to 50 people dead.

*Recruiting station gets pummeled*

Apparently, those trying to join Iraqi forces are at risk before they even
enlist.

In the Shiite-dominated Hilla, at least four people were killed in a
shelling attack on a recruiting station. Another 34 people were wounded.

Hundreds of predominantly Shiite men went to the recruiting station to
answer a call to arms to protect Iraq.

*U.S. sends more help*

The U.S. will have a greater presence in Iraq aside from Kerry's visit this
week. About 300 U.S. military advisers will arrive, a senior defense
official said. They will not be deployed all at once.

The United States has reached an agreement with the Iraqi government over
legal protection for those advisers, Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John
Kirby said Monday.

"We believe these protections are adequate to the short-term assessment and
advisory mission our troops will be performing in Iraq. With this
agreement, we will be able to start establishing the first few assessment
teams," he said.

In addition, some U.S. military personnel already at the U.S. Embassy in
Baghdad will be reassigned and become advisers.

The first military advisers will focus on assessing the strengths and
weaknesses of Iraqi security forces, U.S. officials said. The advisers will
also assess what Iraqi military equipment and weapons may now be in the
hands of ISIS, and try to get better intelligence on ISIS strategy,
weapons, and movements of its fighters.

But Obama said there's only so much the United States can do.

"Part of the task now is to see whether Iraqi leaders are prepared to rise
above sectarian motivations, come together, compromise," the President told
CNN's Kate Bolduan.

"If they can't, there's not going to be a military solution to this
problem. There's no amount of American firepower that's going to be able to
hold the country together, and I've made that very clear to Mr. Maliki and
all the other leadership inside of Iraq."

CNN's Chelsea J. Carter and Hamdi Alkhshali reported from Baghdad, and
Susanna Capelouto wrote and reported from Atlanta. CNN's Barbara Starr,
Holly Yan, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Nic Robertson and Tim Lister also contributed
to this report.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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