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The Mosul operation

Abadi still refuse any Turkish participating in Mosul operation

He humiliate erdogan with actions not words like erdogan

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what a beutiful smile :enjoy::lol:
 
Watch that, is he looking to naked legs of La Guard or to Obama , who is ignoring a DWARF?

 
Watch that, is he looking to naked legs of La Guard or to Obama , who is ignoring a DWARF?

When you are big and free and don't take orders from them they try to ignore you ok we got that who care plz

But guess what their mod was in Baghdad just to ask if you can participate but he went back with empty hands

But guess what if he was erdogan or saud yes mr Obama will pay attention to them since they appease him

yet I don't think he mean it he just was fully involved with the European politician.

at the end the winner do this:tdown:
 
If they stepped in in mid 2014 when everything was going to hell Iraqis would be thankful, now it's not anything to help us, it's to screw us. In 2014 neighbors were quietly watching hoping for IS to take Baghdad, except for Iran which offered military intervention back then, not now when the ISF is winning.
 
Turkish artillery units shelling ISIL in Bashiqa: PM Yıldırım

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Turkish artillery units are shelling the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) jihadist group in Bashiqa near Mosul, Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım said Oct. 23, hours after U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter visited the Bashiqa military camp.

The Turkish shelling on the jihadist group came at the request of Peshmerga forces, Yıldırım told reporters in the Aegean province of Afyonkarahisar.

The Peshmarga fighters said they had taken Bashiqa from ISIL as coalition forces pressed their offensive against the jihadists’ last stronghold in Iraq.

Masoud Barzani, President of the Iraqi Kurdish region, told U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter that the Kurds had succeeded in liberating Bashiqa from ISIL.

Peshmerga fighters told reporters at the scene that they had entered Bashiqa. Journalists were not being allowed into the town, which lies 12 kilometers to the northeast of Mosul.

Ankara and Baghdad have been at odds over the Turkish training camp near Bashiqa with the Iraqi administration calling on Turkey to leave the area.

The Bashiqa town’s capture, if confirmed, would mark the removal of one more obstacle on the road to the northern Iraqi city.

The top U.S. commander in Iraq, Army Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend, said his own information - while limited - “suggests that President Barzani is right, that there has been a considerable success at Bashiqa.”

But he added: “I have not received a report that says every house has been cleared, every Daesh [ISIL] has been killed and every IED [roadside bomb] has been removed.”
 
"Turkey sends 500 tons of aid to Mosul amid humanitarian concerns

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Turkey sent 20 trucks carrying 500 tons of humanitarian aid for 45,000 people on Friday to Iraq as part of Ankara's efforts to help those displaced due to the conflict between Daesh and Iraqi forces in Mosul, a stronghold of the terrorist group in Iraq.

The Turkish Red Crescent and Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) is overseeing the aid delivery, which comes a few days after the troops of Baghdad's government and peshmerga forces of the Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) moved to capture villages around Mosul before a major offensive.

Speaking at a send-off ceremony in the capital Ankara for the trucks, Red Crescent President Kerem Kınık said the aid was part of a broader effort by Turkey to address the needs of the internally displaced. Kınık said military operation in Mosul where some 2 million people have lived under Daesh's oppression for more than two years, would have "a significant humanitarian impact." He pointed out difficulties in ensuring the safety of civilians and said a Red Crescent delegation had already visited the region where Mosul is located to assess the impact of a potential humanitarian crisis.

"The risk of a massive migration (of the displaced) is an obvious fact voiced by all parties involved in the operations. We took a series of measures to stop the wave of migration and care for the internally displaced within Iraq and the aid we sent today will be dispatched to people who fled the villages around Mosul," he said.

Primary humanitarian needs are food, accommodation and clothes for the internally displaced who left their residences with few possessions. The humanitarian aid Turkey sent on Friday consists of food for 10,000 people and clothes for 35,000 others and is destined to be delivered to about 30 villages liberated near Mosul.

In an interview with Reuters, Kınık said they were in touch with the United Nations and the KRG for the security of the trucks that will enter the country through the KRG-controlled north. Kınık told Reuters they expected a wave of "between 150,000 and 400,000 people" displaced and they planned expanding two camps for the displaced that are set up in Iraq for 20,000 people including "setting up a new camp for 100,000 people" if the situation worsens in Iraq.

Although it supported military training of security personnel in Iraq for anti-terror operations, Ankara drew the ire of Baghdad's government including some Shiite groups that opposed Turkish presence in Iraq while embracing the international coalition assisting the operations in Mosul.

Charities have launched an aid campaign titled "Mosul is your home too" in preparation for the wave of those displaced. The Turkish Red Crescent is leading the aid efforts for the city, a former Ottoman territory and home to an ethnic Turkmen community.

"These people are our neighbors, have been our brothers and sisters for centuries. They would turn to Turkey and would expect it to help them first in case of a crisis. We will not abandon them and heal their wounds. We will not leave them in the hands of a terrorist group," Kınık said at the send-off ceremony."

Turkey sends 500 tons of aid to Mosul amid humanitarian concerns
 
- Turkish Rebuplic's ID is not like that.
- His name is Arabic.
- His nationality is Syrian.
- Turkish soldiers not allowed to grow beard.

Try better next time.

If they stepped in in mid 2014 when everything was going to hell Iraqis would be thankful, now it's not anything to help us, it's to screw us. In 2014 neighbors were quietly watching hoping for IS to take Baghdad, except for Iran which offered military intervention back then, not now when the ISF is winning.

All this crying....You all repeat the same thing over and over again....if Turks had helped us way back in 2014....

Because of your incompetency, our diplomats and Turkish workes felt hostage to ISIS in Mosul...There were 80 hostages....we couldn't lift our finger against them for months.....
 
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All this crying....You all repeat the same thing over and over again....if Turks had helped us way back in 2014....

Because of your incompetency, our diplomats and Turkish workes felt hostage to ISIS in Mosul...There were 80 hostages....we couldn't lift our finger against them for months.....
He will forget this after 5 minutes again.
 
All this crying....You all repeat the same thing over and over again....if Turks had helped us way back in 2014....

Because of your incompetency, our diplomats and Turkish workes felt hostage to ISIS in Mosul...There were 80 hostages....we couldn't lift our finger against them for months.....

Explaining it in hundreds of different ways and people on this forum still won't get it.

The truth is the ISF doesn't need help from neighbors, there will be setbacks and victories as in any war but they can handle it alone and it would be better as well. All foreign ground forces were opposed, Iraq requested Turkey to train Iraq's police, they didn't. They started supporting Nujaifi and train a force that is not tied to Iraq's chain of command, I explained why in another thread. All these actions are not to help, they are to exploit the current situation which is not in our favor.

If Turkey were to actually send trainers to Baghdad or train forces tied to the ISF rather than support Nujaifi who stands against Iraq and set up a force that is separate from the ISF then there would be no problem. Erdogan hates Shi'ites, he even made an offensive remark about them. His policy in Iraq has been hostile for years, now what he does is exploit the situation. People here seem to not understand, Iraq does not refuse Turkey's participation because they're Turks or Sunnis.. They refuse because Turkey is not seeking to support the ISF, they seek to carve out a state.

In case anyone is annoyed, replace Turkey with Erdogan given that this is his policy and not that of Turks here.

I notice @xenon54 keeps speaking in the 'we' form whilst he's living in Europe, people don't understand they aren't political leaders and that they don't have any say over these policies yet they like to assume the seat of the PM and make demands.

Either way seems like a troll thread.
 
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If they stepped in in mid 2014 when everything was going to hell Iraqis would be thankful, now it's not anything to help us, it's to screw us. In 2014 neighbors were quietly watching hoping for IS to take Baghdad, except for Iran which offered military intervention back then, not now when the ISF is winning.


I find the Maliki was unjust to sunnis excuse the most laughable one.Yes,Maliki was devisive,yes he was stupid but even if the sunnis were wronged ,how in the hell do you get from forming a resistance to joining ISIS ? I mean resistance movements popp out all over the world but they went full wahhabis killing Yazidis,Christians,people who generally had nothing to do with Maliki or the Shia majority.

These crocodile tears are ridiculous trying to find stupid excuses for the simple fact that terrorists are terrorists.And now Turkey tries to help these terrorists in Mosul after the Russians bitchslapped them in Syria,they moved their playground.
 
I find the Maliki was unjust to sunnis excuse the most laughable one.Yes,Maliki was devisive,yes he was stupid but even if the sunnis were wronged ,how in the hell do you get from forming a resistance to joining ISIS ? I mean resistance movements popp out all over the world but they went full wahhabis killing Yazidis,Christians,people who generally had nothing to do with Maliki or the Shia majority.

These crocodile tears are ridiculous trying to find stupid excuses for the simple fact that terrorists are terrorists.And now Turkey tries to help these terrorists in Mosul after the Russians bitchslapped them in Syria,they moved their playground.

Things were becoming relatively calm in Iraq in 2012, then Syria's civil war got worse. ISI (Islamic state of Iraq) found refuge in Syria and managed to re-organize after their defeat in Iraq. The Anbar protests of 2013 allowed ISI to make a comeback, they infiltrated it. The image below is from 2013, Anbar under the eyes of gov forces who just stood by watching given that if they'd intervene the Muslim world would shout that Shi'ites are oppressing Sunnis. The army had its hands tied by politics, they were destroyed from within the Iraqi gov/parliament. Arab media was busy calling the army Maliki forces back then as well, it's not that long ago, threads exist on PDF which cover all of that.

What Turkey (Erdogan) does is not supportive to Iraq, they try to exploit the situation for their own interests. If they were supportive of hte ISF there wouldn't be such resistance. Iraq allowed Morocco and Jordan to conduct airstrikes in the country whilst they're Sunni states, the difference is they supported the ISF rather than some force that's working against the state/gov. People will keep using the sectarian card in Iraq, too many fall for it, it's far from the truth however.

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On a sidenote... protests against corruption are genuine, though that isn't sectarian, it's not exactly like the people in the south have more wealth than those in Anbar. Some idiots find it important to make it sectarian paving the way for IS, now these guys in the pictures regret ever participating in that protest, who knows how many of them are even alive. They had their city, their homes and security was quite well in Ramadi/Fallujah actually, the army wasn't even stationed inside those cities. Now what do they have?
 
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