http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/16/world/middleeast/iraq.html?ref=world&_r=0

Militants Claim Mass Execution of Iraqi Soldiers
By ROD NORDLAND and ALISSA J. RUBINJUNE 15, 2014 

Continue reading the main story Video 
 
Play Video|1:37
ISIS: Behind the Group Overrunning Iraq
ISIS: Behind the Group Overrunning Iraq
Background on the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, the Islamist group that 
gained control of the second-largest city in Iraq.

Credit Yaser Al-Khodor/Reuters. 


BAGHDAD — Militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria boasted on Twitter 
that they had executed 1,700 Iraqi government soldiers, posting gruesome photos 
to support their claim.

The authenticity of the photographs and the insurgents’ claim could not be 
verified, and Iraqi government officials initially cast doubt on whether such a 
mass execution took place. There were also no reports of large numbers of 
funerals in the Salahuddin Province area, where the executions were said to 
have been conducted.

If the claim is true, it would be the worst mass atrocity in either Syria or 
Iraq in recent years, surpassing even the chemical weapons attacks in the 
Syrian suburbs of Damascus last year, which killed 1,400 people and were 
attributed to the Syrian government.

Related Coverage 
  a..  
  Rebels’ Fast Strike in Iraq Was Years in the MakingJUNE 14, 2014 
  b.. Open Source: Iraq Reportedly Blocks Social NetworksJUNE 13, 2014 
The latest attack, if proved, would also raise the specter of the war in Iraq 
turning genocidal, particularly because the insurgents boasted that their 
victims were all Shiites. There were also fears that it could usher in a series 
of reprisal killings of Shiites and Sunnis, like those seen in the Iraq war in 
2005-7.

Continue reading the main story 
Graphic 
The Iraq-ISIS Conflict in Maps, Photos and Video 
A visual guide to the crisis in northern Iraq. 

 
OPEN Graphic 
The office of the Shiites’ supreme spiritual leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali 
al-Sistani, Saturday night issued what amounted to a revision of the 
ayatollah’s call to arms on Friday, apparently out of concern that it was 
misinterpreted by many as a call for sectarian warfare.

The statement, billed as “clarifying the position on taking up arms,” implored 
Iraqis, “especially those living in mixed areas, to exert the highest level of 
self-restraint during this tumultuous period.”

The claim of the mass execution appeared on a Twitter feed previously used for 
ISIS announcements, so whether or not the executions were genuine, the 
organization certainly intended to boast of them.

“We’re trying to verify the pics, and I am not convinced they are authentic,” 
said Erin Evers, the Human Rights Watch researcher in Iraq. “As far as ISIS 
claiming it has killed 1,700 people and publishing horrific photos to support 
that claim, it is unfortunately in keeping with their pattern of commission of 
atrocities, and obviously intended to further fuel sectarian war.”

News was slow to circulate in Iraq, however, since the government last week 
blocked social network sites, including YouTube, Twitter and Facebook.

An Iraqi military intelligence official confirmed that the military was aware 
of the reported executions in Salahuddin Province, which includes the key city 
of Tikrit, but he did not know how many there were. He spoke on the condition 
of anonymity in line with his agency’s rules.

Col. Suhail al-Samaraie, head of the Awakening Council in Samarra, a 
pro-government Sunni grouping, also confirmed that officials in Salahuddin were 
aware of large-scale executions having taken place last week, but he did not 
know how many. “They are targeting anyone working with the government side, 
anyplace, anywhere,” he said. He said the insurgents were targeting anyone with 
a government affiliation, whether Sunni or Shiite.

One of those executed by the insurgents was a police colonel named Ibrahim 
al-Jabouri, a Sunni official in charge of the criminal investigation division 
in Tikrit, according to Mr. Samaraie.

A local journalist familiar with the Iraqi military in Salahuddin Province said 
the Fourth Iraqi Army Division had collapsed as the insurgents advanced last 
week, and 4,000 soldiers were believed to have been captured. Local reports 
said many of the victims were Sunnis as well as Shiites, he added.

A New York Times employee in Tikrit said by telephone that residents spoke of 
seeing hundreds of prisoners captured when they tried to flee Camp Speicher, a 
former American military base and airfield on the edge of Tikrit that was 
turned into an Iraqi training center. Those who were Sunnis were given civilian 
clothes and sent home; the Shiites were taken to the grounds of Saddam 
Hussein’s old palace in Tikrit, where they were said to be executed, their 
bodies dumped in the Tigris River, which runs by the palace compound.

The ISIS photographs appeared to have been taken at that location. However, the 
Times employee said he had not spoken to any witnesses who claimed to have seen 
the executions or bodies.

Continue reading the main story 
Graphic 
In Iraq Crisis, a Tangle of Alliances and Enmities 
The major players in the Iraq and Syria crisis are often both allies and 
antagonists, working together on one front on one day and at cross-purposes the 
next. 

 
OPEN Graphic 
The still photographs uploaded on the ISIS Twitter feed were bloody and 
gruesome, showing the insurgents, many wearing black masks, lining up at the 
edges of what looked like hastily dug mass graves and apparently firing their 
weapons into groups of young men who were bound and packed closely together in 
large groups.

The photographs showed at least five massacre sites, with the victims lying in 
shallow mass graves with their hands tied behind their backs. The number of 
victims that could be seen in any of the pictures numbered between 20 and 60 in 
each of the sites, although it was not clear whether the photographs showed the 
entire graves. Some appeared to be long ditches.

The photographs showed the executioners flying the ISIS black flag, with 
captions such as “the filthy Shiites are killed in the hundreds,” “The 
liquidation of the Shiites who ran away from their military bases,” and “This 
is the destiny of Maliki’s Shiites,” referring to Prime Minister Nuri Kamal 
al-Maliki.

Many of the captions were viciously mocking toward the purported victims. In 
one photograph, showing 25 young men walking toward an apparent execution site, 
where armed, masked men awaited, the caption read, “Look at them walking to 
death on their own feet.”

And another showed a couple hundred prisoners, all of whom had been made to 
stand, bent over from the waist with their hands clasped behind their backs, as 
armed men guarded them. All were in civilian clothes, and the caption claimed 
they had jettisoned their uniforms. “They were lions in uniform, and now they 
are just ostriches,” it read.

Other photographs showed prisoners, mostly young men, stuffed in large numbers 
in dump trucks and pickup trucks. They appeared extremely frightened.

A senior Iraqi government official, speaking on the condition of anonymity 
because he was not authorized to make press statements, said news of the 
executions was slow to circulate because Twitter had been blocked. “I don’t 
doubt they are real, but 1,700 is a big number,” he said. “We are trying to 
control the reaction. They are trying to bring back the 2005 to 2006 days.” 
Sunni and Shiite militias engaged in a wave of tit-for-tat killings of 
civilians during that period, killing tens of thousands.

Ayatollah Sistani’s statement late Saturday came only one day after his office 
had said it was the duty of every Iraqi to take up arms to support the 
government, which greatly accelerated the formation of volunteer groups, 
supplementing Shiite militias and planning to support the Iraqi Army.

Adamant that his words on Friday not be taken as a starting bell for a repeat 
of that period of bloody sectarian fighting or potentially something even more 
brutal, Ayatollah Sistani used plain language to make clear that he was opposed 
to and would condemn any sectarian behavior.

All citizens need “to steer clear from sectarian and untamed nationalistic 
discourse that is of detriment to Iraq’s national unity,” he said.

Both the Iraqi military and the informal Shiite militias already appear to have 
embraced each other, and in at least some cases, militia commanders are already 
working inside Iraqi Army bases, blurring the line between the government 
troops and informal squads of gunmen — some of whom may wear government 
uniforms but are not army soldiers.

Such groupings in 2005 to 2007 were responsible for much of the sectarian 
bloodletting, when as many as 1,000 civilians were being killed every week.

An Iraqi employee of The New York Times contributed reporting from Tikrit, 
Iraq, and Tim Arango from Erbil, Iraq.

Kirim email ke