Parachute
riggers for the United States Army prepared water to be airdropped over
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By MICHAEL
D. SHEAR and TIM ARANGOAUG. 9, 2014 / The New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/10/world/middleeast/iraq.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&version=LedeSum&module=first-column-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0
“I don’t
think we’re going to solve this problem in weeks,” Mr. Obama told reporters
before leaving for a two-week golf-and-beach vacation on Martha’s
Vineyard . “This is going to be a long-term project.”
The
president repeated his insistence that his administration would not send ground
troops back to Iraq
after ending an unpopular, decade-long war and withdrawing the last troops in
2011. But two days after emphasizing the limited scope of the mission in a
White House address, he pledged that the United
States would stand with Iraq if it could form a unified and
inclusive government to counter the Sunni militants who threaten its future.
“Changing
that environment so that the millions of Sunnis who live in these areas feel
connected to and well served by a national government, that’s a long-term
process,” he said during a lengthy departure statement on the White House lawn
during which he took several questions from reporters.
The
American military continued striking militants in Iraq on Saturday, with jet fighters
and drones conducting four attacks that military officers said were designed to
defend Yazidis, an ethnic and religious minority.
In a
statement issued late Saturday, the military’s Central Command said American
fighters and drones first hit one of two armored personnel carriers that
fighters with the Islamic State in Iraq
and Syria were using to fire
on civilians near Mount Sinjar , in northern Iraq . In follow-up strikes,
American aircraft hit three more ISIS armored
personnel carriers and a truck with weapons, the statement said. All of the
aircraft returned safely.
The
president’s assessment of the campaign’s duration came as ISIS militants began
advancing along a main road up Mount
Sinjar , where thousands
of Yazidis remained trapped. In Mosul , residents
reported that nearly two dozen bodies of ISIS
fighters, said to have been killed in American airstrikes, had arrived at the
city’s morgue, while at least 30 wounded fighters were being treated at a
hospital.
A
significant number of Yazidis were said to be fleeing from the mountain toward Syria ,
according to two American officials and Yazidi refugees along the border. With
American military confirmation that American warplanes had carried out attacks
Saturday on ISIS forces shooting at the
Yazidis, it appeared that a way off the mountain had opened for at least some.
A number of the civilians appeared to still be on the mountain, and the
situation remained desperate, American officials said.
Some
Yazidis have cellphones and have been in regular touch with American officials
as they try to escape.
It is
estimated that 5,000 to 12,000 Yazidis fled Mount Sinjar
on Saturday and more were expected on Sunday, according to one American
official, who requested anonymity because he was discussing internal
information. The Yazidis have been fleeing by car as well as on foot, the
official said, and many were said to be dying along the way.
The
American military also carried out its third airdrop of food and water over Mount Sinjar ,
according to Central Command.
One C-17
and two C-130 cargo planes, escorted by American jet fighters, carried out the
mission, which brings the total American assistance to more than 52,000 meals
and more than 10,600
gallons of fresh water, the command said.
Saturday
was the first time Mr. Obama had addressed the question of a timeline for the
military intervention in Iraq ,
and his remarks are likely to raise new questions, especially among those who
fear that the mission could slowly pull America back into a more robust
involvement in the country. The president said he would not give a “particular
timetable” on the new operations.
Aides said
that Mr. Obama had not committed to years of continuous airstrikes while Iraqis
develop a new government, but that his comments reflected the uncertainty of a
military effort that will be re-evaluated in the months ahead.
The
open-ended nature of Mr. Obama’s actions presents a tricky political problem
for a president who campaigned against what he once called a “dumb war” and
repeatedly pressed Republicans to set a date for the departure of American
troops from the battlefield. The last American troops left Iraq in December
2011, yet Mr. Obama now finds himself in charge of a new, if very different,
military operation there with no certain end in sight.
When he
announced the airstrikes on Thursday night, Mr. Obama emphasized the immediate
goals of protecting Americans in Baghdad and in
Erbil, the capital of the Kurdish autonomous region in northern Iraq , and helping to rescue the Iraqis trapped
by ISIS fighters on the mountain. In his
remarks Saturday morning, he focused more on the need to help Iraqis over the
long term, giving them what he called space to develop a government that can
fight back against militants.
But his
acknowledgment that the effort in Iraq
will take time may not be enough to satisfy Republican critics, many of whom
accuse Mr. Obama of failing to embrace a sufficiently aggressive air mission
aimed at driving the militants out of Iraq
and Syria .
Senator
John McCain, Republican of Arizona and Mr. Obama’s 2008 presidential opponent,
said Saturday that Mr. Obama’s vision for military operations against militants
in Iraq
was too narrow. He said the actions ordered by the president were not nearly
enough to counter a growing threat from “the richest, most powerful terrorist
organization in history.”
“Obviously,
the president of the United States
does not appreciate this is not just a threat to American troops on the ground,
or even Iraq or Kurdistan,”
Mr. McCain said in a telephone interview from Vietnam , where he was traveling
with a congressional delegation. “This is a threat to America .”
In
describing a potentially long time frame for military action in Iraq , Mr. Obama cited in part the danger and
complexity of the rescue mission on Mount
Sinjar . The military has
airdropped 36,224 meals to the refugees in the last two days, officials said.
But Mr. Obama said the much harder task of creating a safe corridor for them
would take more time. “The next step, which is going to be complicated
logistically, is how can we give people safe passage,” he said.
Defense
Department officials expressed confidence that they could achieve within a few
days one of Mr. Obama’s announced goals: stopping the advance of the militants
on Erbil , where hundreds of American
diplomatic officials and military advisers are stationed. On Friday, the
military struck a number of ISIS targets near Erbil ,
including a stationary convoy of seven vehicles and a mobile artillery unit
that was being towed by a truck.
“We can
stop them from moving into Erbil ,” a senior
Defense Department official said Saturday, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to describe military planning. “The cost will become too high. There
will be a tremendous amount of deterrence in these strikes.”
But
officials said breaking the siege on Mount
Sinjar and protecting Americans in Baghdad from advancing ISIS militants would take more
time, particularly given the instability of Iraq ’s internal politics and the
vagaries of protecting and eventually evacuating the stranded Iraqis.
In Baghdad , efforts to name
a replacement for Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, a Shiite, stalled on
Saturday, with Mr. Maliki clinging to power and rivals unable to decide on an
alternative. A session of Parliament scheduled for Sunday, when leaders had been
expected to nominate a new prime minister, was postponed until Monday.“Until
this moment, nothing has changed,” said Kamal al-Saadi, a member of Parliament
from Mr. Maliki’s bloc. “We are sticking with our only candidate, Maliki.”
Earlier,
Mr. Obama said the length of American involvement would depend on how quickly
Iraqi leaders could form a national unity government with meaningful roles for
the country’s two main minority groups, Sunnis and Kurds. Without saying so
explicitly, American officials have been quietly working to replace Mr. Maliki
because they believe that he is incapable of uniting the country to face the
militant threat.
Mr. Obama
said an inclusive government would give all Iraqis a reason to believe that
they were represented, and Iraqi military forces a motive to fight back against
the militants. Once that happens, he said, the American military, working with
Iraqi and Kurdish fighters, can “engage in some offense.”
“The most
important timetable that I’m focused on right now is the Iraqi government
getting formed and finalized,” he said before boarding Marine One.
Hours
before Mr. Obama spoke in Washington, Sunni militants in northern Iraq
ordered engineers to return to work on the Mosul Dam, the country’s largest,
suggesting that the extremists who captured the dam last week after fierce
battles with Kurdish forces would use it, at least for now, to provide water
and electricity to the areas they control.
As ISIS consolidates its control of territory, it has shown
an intent to act strategically when it comes to natural resources. But its
control over the fragile dam also gives the group the ability to create a
civilian catastrophe: A break could unleash a tidal wave over Mosul
and cause flooding and deaths along the Tigris
River south to Baghdad and beyond, experts said.
In London , the British foreign secretary, Philip Hammond,
said Royal Air Force planes would “imminently” begin humanitarian airdrops in
northern Iraq .
President François Hollande of France
also pledged humanitarian support, officials said.
Michael D.
Shear reported from Washington, and Tim Arango from Baghdad . Reporting was contributed by Helene
Cooper and Jonathan Weisman from Washington; Alissa J. Rubin from Fishkhabour,
Iraq; Omar Al-Jawoshy from Baghdad; Alan Cowell from London; and Michael R.
Gordon from Naypyidaw, Burma.
Refugees
Displaced From Recent Fighting in Sinjar PUBLISHED AUGUST 8
As many as
40,000 people are trapped on
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Obama admite alargar
bombardeamentos no Iraque para derrotar jihadistas
JOANA AMADO
09/08/2014 - PÚBLICO
Numa longa entrevista ao New York Times, o Presidente americano critica a
falta de consenso político dos líderes iraquianos que permitiu o avanço dos
islamistas radicais.
Ao segundo dia de
raides aéreos da aviação americana contra as posições dos jihadistas do Estado
Islâmico (EI) no Norte do Iraque, o Presidente dos EUA, Barack Obama, fez saber
que não exclui o alargamento dos bombardeamentos a outras zonas do país onde os
islamistas ganham terreno.
Os Estados
Unidos, disse Obama numa longa entrevista sobre política externa ao New York
Times, estão dispostos a ajudar a travar a ofensiva dos islamistas sunitas, mas
os dirigentes políticos iraquianos vão ter que encontrar uma maneira de
conseguirem trabalhar juntos no futuro.
É esta a
contrapartida. Ou os xiitas (maioria, no poder), os sunitas (minoria que
governava o Iraque no tempo de Saddam) e os curdos (que ganharam crescente
autonomia nos últimos anos) se entendem, ou então os EUA “não vão ser a força
aérea” de ninguém.
Na quinta-feira o
Presidente autorizou o exército americano a proceder a ataques “localizados”
contra os combatentes do EI no Norte do Iraque, naquela que disse ser uma
operação limitada para evitar um “genocídio” de minorias em fuga e para
proteger os americanos que trabalham na capital do Curdistão iraquiano, Erbil.
Na entrevista ao
New York Times, Obama dá entender que os EUA podem ir mais longe para ajudar o
Iraque a derrotar o EI, que já declarou a criação de um califado em partes do
Iraque e também da Síria. “Não deixaremos que ninguém crie um califado através
da Síria e do Iraque, mas só o poderemos fazer se soubermos que temos parceiros
no terreno, capazes de preencher o vazio”, após uma derrota dos islamistas
sunitas. Em delcarações aos jornalistas, horas mais tarde, explicou que os
primeiros raids tinham destruído equipamento militar do EI mas avisou que
"o problema não vai ficar resolvido em apenas algumas semanas".
Trata-se de um "projecto a longo prazo".
O Presidente dos
EUA elogia as autoridades da região semi-autónoma do Curdistão iraquiano, como
sendo “funcionais” e “tolerantes para com as outras seitas e religiões”. Deixando
implícita a crítica aos xiitas liderados pelo primeiro-ministro Nouri al-Maliki
, Obama diz que “os curdos usaram bem o tempo que lhes foi dado pelo sacrifício
das nossas tropas no Iraque”, para criarem um modelo de sociedade que “eu
gostaria de ver no resto do país”.
Insistindo na
ideia de que os EUA não podem ajudar quem não está disposto a ajudar-se a si
mesmo, Obama falou da lição que aprendeu com a Líbia, um país que está hoje
mergulhado no caos, depois de ter sido alvo de uma intervenção militar dos
europeus e americanos para derrubar um ditador.
“Depois daquele
dia em que Muammar Khadafi se foi, em que toda a gente festejou com cartazes a
dizer ‘Obrigado América’... foi nesse momento que tinha que ter existido um
esforço muito mais agressivo para reconstruir uma sociedade que não tinha
quaisquer tradições cívicas… Por isso, é essa a lição que eu aplico sempre que
faço a pergunta, ‘Devemos intervir militarmente? Temos uma resposta para o dia
seguinte?'”
E no caso do
Iraque, Obama ainda não tem uma resposta para o dia seguinte, a não ser a de
que, se não houver um consenso social e político no Iraque que acabe com a
política do “vencedor/vencido”, assim que a aviação americana regressar para
casa, os islamistas do EI voltaram a atacar.
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