ISIS militants march on despite airstrikes, international outrage
(CNN) -- Despite airstrikes and international
outrage against ISIS militants, the terror group is overrunning Iraqi
forces and slowly marching on toward a province on Baghdad's doorstep.
And as alarming developments piled up over the weekend, Iraqi forces
threatened to flee if the U.S. military does not intervene.
Here are where things stand:
On Baghdad's doorstep
ISIS trying to overtake Anbar province
U.S. insists Baghdad safe from ISIS
ISIS threatens area near Baghdad
Photos: Syrian civil war in 2014
Kurds hold out hope despite ISIS gains
Iraqi refugees flee from ISIS
Gen. Wesley Clark: ISIS fight is Iraq redux
ISIS fighters are making
headway against poorly-equipped local forces. The Islamist extremists
appear set to take Kobani, a key Syrian town along the Turkish border.
Next up: an entire province on Baghdad's doorstep.
Iraq's Anbar province pleaded for U.S. ground troops to halt the group's rapid, relentless assault.
The terror group came
within 25 kilometers (15.5 miles) of the Baghdad airport, according to
the leader of U.S. military efforts to fight ISIS in Iraq.
The United States brought in low-flying attack helicopters to keep ISIS at bay, Gen. Martin Dempsey told ABC on Sunday.
"You're not going to
wait until they're climbing over the wall," Dempsey said. "Had (ISIS
forces) overrun the Iraqi unit, it was a straight shot to the Baghdad
airport."
Anbar province at risk
The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria is moving -- fast.
The group, which calls
itself the Islamic State, controls about 80% of the province, according
to Sabah Al-Karhout, president of Anbar Provincial Council.
If the province falls,
the Sunni extremists would take over an area from the perimeter of
Iraq's capital to Raqqa in Syria, according to Falleh al-Issawi, the
provincial council's deputy head.
Targeting law enforcement
No one is safe from the
militants. The police chief of the province was killed over the weekend
when a blast targeted his convoy, authorities said.
The attack is just one of the things sending shockwaves among forces fighting the militants.
Iraqi army forces and Anbar tribesmen have threatened to abandon their weapons if the U.S. military does not intervene.
The army soldiers lack
training and equipment, according to local authorities. Already, some
1,800 tribesmen in the province have been killed or injured in the
struggle.
Iraqi officials have
been adamant that they don't want U.S. forces on the ground. U.S.
President Barack Obama has not shown any intent to deploy any.
Offensive against ISIS in Syria in ruins, too
ISIS is still advancing
in Syria, where it emerged during the years-long civil war. Its current
focus there is Kobani, a Kurdish enclave a stone's throw from Turkey.
And the militants are gradually taking control of a large chunk of Kobani.
Kobani fell eerily
silent Sunday after clashes earlier in the day, according to a fighter
in the city. He said he fears ISIS is planning a major assault.
One day earlier, ISIS fighters clashed with local troops over the official border crossing into Turkey at Mursitpinar.
Should they take it, the
militants would control three official border crossings between Turkey
and Syria and a stretch of the border about 60 miles (97 kilometers)
long.
Source: By Faith Karimi and Laura Smith-Spark, cnn.com, Re-posted by Abdulgafar Abdulrauf Adio (www.econsforumnews.blogspot.com)
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