BAGHDAD
(AP) — Iraq's Shiite clerical leadership Friday called on all Iraqis to
defend their country from Sunni militants who have seized large swaths
of territory, and a U.N. official expressed "extreme alarm" at reprisal
killings in the offensive, citing reports of hundreds of dead and
wounded.
U.S. President Barack Obama said he is weighing options
for countering the insurgency, but warned Iraqi leaders that he would
not take military action unless they moved to address the country's
political divisions.
Fighters from the al-Qaida-inspired Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant made fresh gains, driving government forces
at least temporarily from two towns in an ethnically mixed province
northeast of Baghdad. The assault threatens to embroil Iraq more deeply
in a wider regional conflict feeding off the chaos caused by the civil
war in neighboring Syria.
The fast-moving rebellion, which also
draws support from former Saddam Hussein-era figures and other
disaffected Sunnis, has emerged as the biggest threat to Iraq's
stability since the U.S. withdrawal in 2011. It has pushed the nation
closer to a precipice that could partition it into Sunni, Shiite and
Kurdish zones.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, whose Shiite-led
government is struggling to form a coherent response to the crisis,
traveled to the city of Samarra to meet with military commanders late
Friday, according to state TV.
Militants earlier in the week
overran military bases and several communities including the
second-largest city of Mosul and Saddam's hometown of Tikrit. Samarra,
the site of a prominent Shiite shrine 60 miles (95 kilometers) north of
Baghdad, sits between Tikrit and the capital.
A representative for
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the most revered Shiite spiritual
leader in Iraq, told worshippers at Friday prayers that it was their
civic duty to confront the threat.
"Citizens who can carry weapons
and fight the terrorists in defense of their country, its people and
its holy sites should volunteer and join the security forces," said
Sheik Abdul-Mahdi al-Karbalaie, whose comments are thought to reflect
al-Sistani's thinking.
He warned that Iraq faced "great danger,"
and that fighting the militants "is everybody's responsibility, and is
not limited to one specific sect or group."
In Geneva, U.N. human
rights chief Navi Pillay warned of "murder of all kinds" and other war
crimes in Iraq, and said the number killed in recent days may run into
the hundreds, while the wounded could approach 1,000.
Pillay said
her office has received reports that militants rounded up and killed
Iraqi army soldiers as well as 17 civilians in a single street in Mosul.
Her
office heard of "summary executions and extrajudicial killings" as ISIL
militants overran Iraqi cities and towns this week, the statement said.
"I
am extremely concerned about the acute vulnerability of civilians
caught in the cross-fire, or targeted in direct attacks by armed groups,
or trapped in areas under the control of ISIL and their allies," Pillay
said. "And I am especially concerned about the risk to vulnerable
groups, minorities, women and children."
Obama did not specify what options he was considering, but he ruled out sending American troops back into combat in Iraq.
"We're
not going to allow ourselves to be dragged back into a situation in
which, while we're there we're keeping a lid on things, and after
enormous sacrifices by us, after we're not there, people start acting in
ways that are not conducive to the long-term stability and prosperity
of the country," Obama said on the South Lawn of the White House.
Administration
officials said Obama is weighing airstrikes using drones or manned
aircraft. Other short-term options include an increase in surveillance
and intelligence-gathering. The U.S. also is likely to increase aid to
Iraq, including funding, training and both lethal and non-lethal
equipment.
Al-Maliki and other Iraqi leaders have pleaded with
Washington for more than a year for additional help to combat the
growing insurgency.
Neighboring Shiite powerhouse Iran signaled its willingness to confront the growing threat from the militant blitz.
Former
members of Tehran's powerful Revolutionary Guard have announced their
readiness to fight in Iraq against the Islamic State, the official IRNA
news agency reported. Iranian state TV quoted President Hassan Rouhani
as saying his country will do all it can to battle terrorism next door.
"The
Islamic Republic of Iran will apply all its efforts on the
international and regional levels to confront terrorism," the report
said Rouhani told al-Maliki by phone.
Iranian officials denied their forces were actively operating in Iraq, however.
Mansour
Haghighatpour, who sits on an influential Iranian parliamentary
committee on national security and foreign policy, told The Associated
Press that Baghdad is capable of fighting the militants, but Tehran
would consider other options if asked.
Iran has built close
political and economic ties with postwar Iraq, and many influential
Iraqi Shiites have spent time in the Islamic Republic. Iran this week
halted flights to Baghdad because of security concerns and said it was
intensifying security on its borders.
Police said Sunni militants
driving machine gun-mounted pickups entered the two newly conquered
Iraqi towns in Diyala province late Thursday — Jalula, 125 kilometers
(80 miles) northeast of Baghdad, and Sadiyah, 95 kilometers (60 miles)
north of the capital. Iraqi soldiers abandoned their posts there without
any resistance, they said.
Jalula residents said the gunmen
issued an ultimatum to the soldiers not to resist and give up their
weapons in exchange for safe passage. After seizing the town, the gunmen
announced on loudspeakers that they have come to rescue residents from
injustice and that none would be hurt.
The gunmen later
disappeared from Jalula, only to be replaced with the Kurdish security
forces known as peshmerga. They raised the Kurdish flag over government
buildings and transferred abandoned Iraqi military equipment back to the
Kurds' self-ruled northern region, according to two police officials.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to talk to journalists, and the residents declined to give
their names out of fears for their safety.
The Islamic State has
vowed to march on Baghdad, but the capital would be a far more difficult
target with its large Shiite population. The militants would face far
stronger resistance from government forces and Shiite militias.
So
far, they have stuck to the Sunni heartland and former Sunni insurgent
strongholds where people are alienated by al-Maliki's government over
allegations of discrimination and mistreatment.
Iraq's former
Sunni vice president, Tariq al-Hashemi, told the AP in Istanbul that
while the Islamic State was one player in the uprising, they are not the
driving force.
"They are not involved in the decision-making," he
said, adding that the Sunni tribes in Mosul and Anbar are "behind this
Iraqi spring."
Baghdad considers al-Hashemi a fugitive after he
was found guilty in absentia in terrorism-related cases — charges he
dismisses as politically motivated.
Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr
and the Asaib Ahl al-Haq Shiite militia have vowed to defend Shiite holy
sites, raising the specter of street clashes and sectarian killings.
Still, authorities have tightened security around the capital and residents stocked up on supplies.
Hundreds
of young men volunteered for military service at a recruiting center
Thursday, and more were being urged to join by cars playing Shiite
religious songs that roamed Shiite neighborhoods Friday after the
cleric's call.
The Islamic militants in Mosul declared they would
impose Shariah law and trumpeted their success in a parade of seized
armored vehicles that was captured on online video.
A fighter with
a loudspeaker urged the people to join the militants "to liberate
Baghdad and Jerusalem." The Islamic State's black banners adorned many
of the captured vehicles. Some in the crowd shouted "God is with you" to
the fighters.
The video appeared authentic and consistent with AP reporting of the events depicted.
The
U.N. refugee agency reported that local authorities say 300,000 people
fleeing from Mosul have sought safety in the Erbil and Duhok
governorates in the Kurdistan region. UNHCR monitoring teams report many
arrived with little more than what they were wearing, although some are
staying with relatives and in hotels, the agency said.
Kurdish
security forces filled the power vacuum caused by the retreating Iraqi
forces, taking control of the ethnically mixed oil hub of Kirkuk in
northern Iraq.
The advances by the Sunni militants are a heavy
defeat for al-Maliki. His Shiite-dominated political bloc came first in
April parliamentary elections — the first since the U.S. military
withdrawal — but failed to get a majority, forcing him to try to build a
governing coalition.
The U.N. envoy in Iraq, Nickolay Mladenov,
urged the Federal Court to certify the election results before the
current parliament's mandate expires Saturday.
"There is a need to
guarantee the continuity of the parliament, representing all Iraqis, is
in place and will continue to address urgent decisions of national
importance," Mladenov said.
Iraq's government began blocking
access to websites like Facebook and Twitter, according to Renesys, a
New Hampshire-based Internet analysis firm. The outages, reported
Thursday and Friday, appeared to coincide with government efforts to
disrupt the militants' offensive and mirrored other past efforts by
Middle East countries to block Internet access.
Internet access
routed through Kurdistan into neighboring Turkey appeared to continue
functioning, said Jim Cowie, the head of research and development at
Renesys. Iraq also accesses the Internet through providers in Jordan and
via submarine cables.
"There can always be battle damage but in this particular case it's government directed," Cowie told the AP.
___
Schreck
reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writers
Julie Pace in Washington, John Heilprin in Geneva, Jon Gambrell in
Cairo, Edith Lederer at the United Nations, Qassim Abdul-Zahra in
Baghdad, Desmond Butler in Istanbul and Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Iran,
contributed to this report.
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