Security &Policy Advisor | Intelligence Analyst | Investigator | and hard worker Man. I Read, Write, Learn, Analyse and Publish. Freelance Security Consultant. www.iSumeri.me
Saturday, August 23, 2014
ISIS works on merge its norther front across Iraq and Syria.
Monday, August 18, 2014
Iraq Security Weekly Roundup
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
موجز الاحداث الامنية الاسبوعي للعراق
اجمالي الهجمات الغير انتحارية 45 قتيلا و 125 جريحا الاسبوع الماضي. بينما خلفت التفجيرات الانتحارية ما لا يقل عن 55 قتيلا و 104 جريح.
كما خلفت الهجمات بالاسلحة الخفيفة و المتوسطة تسعة قتلى و جرح واحد على الاقل, بما في ذلك خسائر القوات المسلحة العراقية خلال اشتباكاتها مع المسلحين.
اما حوادث اطلاق النار غير المباشرة (الصواريخ و قذائف الهاون و القصف المدفعي العسكري) فقد تركت 15 قتيلا و ما لا يقل عن 24 جريحا بالاظافة الى خطف سبعة اشخاص في حوادث منفصلة في وسط و شمال البلاد في حين عثرت السلطات الحكومية على ثلاثة جثث مجهولة في كل من بغداد و البصرة. كما سيطرت الدولة الاسلامية على عدد من البلدات الصغيرة في جميع انحاء الموصل الاسبوع الماضي, مما يزيد من في توسيع نطاق نفوذها في مناطق قريبة بشكل غير مريح الى حكومة اقليم كوردستان (الاراضي القريبة من الحكومة الكردية الاقليمية) كما اجبر العديد من المدنيين من الخلفيات العرقية والدينية على الفرار من مناطقهم مثل القرى ذات الاغلبية الايزيدية في فضاء سنجار و مدينة قرقوش ذات الاغلبية المسيحية.
وتشير التقارير التي يصعب التحقق منها الى ان الفظائع واسعة النطاق ترتكب في المناطق الخاضعة لسيظرة الدولة الاسلامية وتحديدا ضد المدنيين اليزيديين و المسيحيين على حد سواء. ردا على التصعيد فقد وافقت الولايات المتحدة الامريكية على شن غارات جوية ضد اهداف لمتشددي الدولة الاسلامية.
وبدأت الغارات الجوية في 8 آب مستهدفة معاقل مسلحي الدولة الاسلامية حول محافظة نينوى صعودا الى المناطق المحاذية لمحافظة اربيل الكردية, كما تشمل عمليات الاغاثة الجوية لمساعدة المدنيين الفارين من مناطق النزاع المسلح. ومع ذلك, استمر القتال بين المقاتلين المسلحين و قوات الامن العراقية في مناطق عديدة تركزت في المنطقة الوسطى و الشمالية ومن المرجح ان تستمر الاشتباكات في المستقبل القريب.. وعلى الرغم من الضربات الامريكية المستمرة ايضا. وسيكون من الصعب جدا استعادة المدن و المناطق الحضرية الكبرى التي تسيطر عليها حاليا من قبل مقاتلي الدولة الاسلامية مثل الموصل.
Monday, August 11, 2014
Iraq Political Report
Iraq Security Weekly Roundup
Monday, August 4, 2014
Iraq weekly security weekly report
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Iraq Security Weekly roundup
Islamist militants led by the Islamic State (IS) continue to battle with the federal and Kurdish security forces in several parts of the central and northern region.
Violence remains particularly concentrated in urban parts of Anbar, Salah ad-Din, Ninawa, western Diyala, south-western Ta'mim and northern Babil provinces. Terrorist attacks also continue to take place throughout Baghdad.
Air strikes continue to target militant positions in sparsely populated areas in the west of Anbar and Ninawa provinces near the border with Syria.
Last week saw a handful of attacks in the south of the country, including what appears to have been sectarian killings at a Sunni mosque in Basrah, as well as two small bombings in the city of Najaf, a major centre for the Shi'ah community. IS militants continue to try and provoke a backlash from the Shi'ah community by attacking religious interests.
A total of 34 non-suicide bomb attacks left 30 people dead and 111 injured countrywide. As Ramadan drew to a close three additional suicide bombings left 101 people dead and 53 injured.
Small arms attacks left eight people dead and eight injured, although it is likely that many more members of the security forces were shot during clashes with militants. The reporting climate is very poor amid the violence which makes it difficult to cross reference and verify all reports.
Indirect fire incidents (rockets, mortars and military artillery shelling) left 46 people dead and 67 injured.
At least eight people were reportedly abducted. Some are likely to be murdered rather than held for a ransom. At least 41 bodies were also recovered by the authorities in different parts of the central region.
As the fighting rages on, the heavily divided parliament managed to appoint a new president. The Kurd Fouad Massoum faces a very difficult challenge in trying to help form a unity government in Baghdad. With Nuri al-Maliki intent on retaining his position as prime minister, with numerous Sunni and Kurdish politicians staunchly opposed to his candidacy, the government-formation process will remain very slow, which will hinder any efforts at resolving the current violence in the country.
Amid the protracted fighting AKE affirmed the security risk rating for Iraq last week at 45 (Highly Dangerous Business Environment). AKE also affirmed the security risk rating for KRG territory at 19 (Elevated Risk).
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Source: AKE GROUP.
Monday, July 21, 2014
Iraq remains in Crisis, New Security Weekly Roundup
- Total number of violent incidents: 625 (slight rise from previous week)
- Total fatalities (not including militants): 146 (decrease from previous week)
- Total injured (not including militants): 495
- Average weekly number of violent incidents: 57 (2012) and 98 (2013)
- Average weekly fatalities: 60 (2012) and 140 (2013)
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Iraq Security Weekly Roundup
Monday, July 7, 2014
##Iraq remains in crisis, Another weekly roundup with analysis
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Iraq in Crisis, Iraq Security weekly report
Violence remains concentrated in urban parts of Anbar, Salah ad-Din, Diyala, Ninawa, Babil and Ta'mim province, as well as along the Syrian border. Baghdad and Kirkuk also continue to suffer sporadic terrorist attacks as the terrorists will want to maintain pressure on the federal and Kurdish authorities. The southern region and northern Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) territory remain relatively quiet but they are nonetheless still at risk of terrorist violence. With support, now from Israel, for an independent Kurdish state, the borders of Iraq appear increasingly fragile, but any re-drawing of the map is unlikely to be easy, straightforward or peaceful. Last week a total of 21 non-suicide bomb attacks left 10 people dead and 21 injured countrywide. Four additional suicide bombings left 40 people dead and 116 injured, a rise from recent weeks. Suicide bombings may become particularly common for the duration of Ramadan due to last until around 28 July. Small arms attacks left 42 people dead and 57 injured, including members of the security forces shot during clashes with militants. Indirect fire incidents (rockets, mortars and military artillery shelling) left 58 people dead and 158 injured (a notable rise). Militants appear to be using the tactic to target military facilities and intimidate populations in settlements which have not fallen under their control. --------------- Source: AKE |
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
#Iraq Security weekly roundup
Monday, March 31, 2014
#Iraq #Security weekly roundup
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Iraq Weekly Roundup
There was a fall in the total number of violent incidents reported in Iraq last week but conditions remain bad nonetheless.
At least 150 people were killed and 382 injured in nationwide incidents. In 2012, the average weekly fatality range was 20-80.
A total of 70 non-suicide bomb attacks left 67 people dead and 234 injured last week. Six additional suicide bombings left 31 more people dead and 130 injured. Small arms attacks left 49 people dead and 18 injured.
Violence was concentrated in the cities of Baghdad and Mosul. Incidents also occurred along a belt of Anbar province stretching from Anah to Abu Ghraib, and along a belt in Diyala province from Ba'qubah to Khanaqin.
Additional clusters of attacks were reported in Shirqat (Salah ad-Din province) and Qa'im (Anbar province), while the northern city of Kirkuk also saw several incidents, including a complex mass-casualty attack on a police building and shopping centre.
The south of the country was relatively quiet although a bomb targeted the convoy of a security company in Basrah province.
Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) territory also saw a handful of rare incidents, all of which occurred in the city of Sulaymaniyah.
Source: AKE
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Tuesday, December 3, 2013
#Iraq weekly roundup. Last week is the worst week since 2007 !
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
#Iraq #Security weekly roundup
Levels of violence rose in Iraq last week. At least 144 people were killed and 360 injured in nationwide incidents.
A higher than normal number of small arms attacks left 28 people dead and 34 injured. A total of 108 non-suicide bomb attacks left 85 people dead and 270 injured. Five additional suicide bombings left 30 more people dead and 55 injured.
Attacks were concentrated in the cities of Mosul, Kirkuk and Baghdad, as well as throughout the settlements roughly located between them. Incidents were concentrated throughout Salah ad-Din province (with a spike in the Tuz Khurmatu area), with further clusters around Fallujah and Hit (Anbar province), Mada'in (Babil province) and Ba'qubah (Diyala province).
A spate of attacks targeted Shi'ah religious worshippers gathering to mark Ashura. Further attacks on the community are to be expected. The next major religious event in the Shi'ah religious calendar is Arba'een, due around 23 December.
In the south of the country two altercations around Rumailah oilfield prompted a large number of foreign personnel to leave the country, with at least one service company declaring force majeure on its operations.
While levels of violence in the central region were bad, this energy-related development may be much more concerning for foreign investors.
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Source: AKE
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Tuesday, November 5, 2013
#Iraq #security #weekly roundup, week 45
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
#Iraq #Security #Weekly roundup , week #43
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Source: AKE Group
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Iraq Security Weekly Roundup week #29
However, while this is a reduction from the previous week, overall levels of violence remain very high in the country. Last week's fatality figure is well above average.
Violence was concentrated around Mosul, Kirkuk and the wider area surrounding Baghdad (especially in Fallujah, Ba'qubah and Muqdadiyah districts).
There were additional incidents reported around Basrah in the south, while clusters were also reported around Tuz Khurmatu and Shirqat in the north.
A total of 57 non-suicide bomb attacks left 58 people dead and 205 injured, a high figure for the country.
At least 10 additional suicide bombings left 29 more people dead and 155 injured. This is also a very high number, possibly linked to the belief amongst some radical Islamists that the holy month of Ramadan is ideally suited to martyrdom.
Small arms attacks left 30 people dead and 18 injured. A rise in indirect fire attacks (rockets and mortars) also left eight people dead and 24 injured.
On 21 July militants also conducted two complex attacks against prisons in Abu Ghraib and Taji, both in the outskirts of Baghdad, in an attempt to free prisoners held at the institutions. Reports differ as to the number of inmates released during the deadly attacks but several suspected members of al-Qaeda-affiliated organisations could be among the escapees.
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Source: AKE Group
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
#Iraq violence escalates
Levels of violence have risen consistently in Iraq over recent months. AKE documented at least 1,090 separate violent incidents between April and June, averaging at around 12 per day.
This is an increase from the first quarter of the year (January-March), which saw at least 879 separate attacks. What is particularly noteworthy, however, is that both the first and second quarters of this year saw more violent incidents than any quarter in 2012.
According to AKE's Iraq specialist John Drake the intensification of attacks over the last six months is very worrying.
"This is a very sustained deterioration, which is more concerning than some of the spikes in violence we have seen over recent years.”
AKE believes that levels of violence have risen because of social tensions on the ground.
"There is rising animosity amongst the Sunni community towards the predominantly Shi'ah government, while radical Islamist terrorists have increased the pace of their attacks, in part to try and capitalise on the public mood and to gain support from the Sunni population.”
AKE raised the risk rating for Iraq in May after a deterioration in security conditions, particularly in the central provinces. This came after the security forces stormed an anti-government protest camp in Ta'mim province in April. The incident left several people dead and provoked a violent backlash by armed residents of the central region.
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Source: AKE
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Iraq Weekly Roundup, Week #25
Incidents were concentrated in Ninawa province and the central region but a series of attacks also took place around the south of the country on 16 June, leaving dozens of casualties.
A total of 51 non-suicide bomb attacks left 70 people dead and 274 injured. This is a very high figure on its own, but there were also four additional suicide bombings, which left four people dead and 31 injured. Terrorists have evidently increased the pace of their attacks.
Small arms attacks left 22 people dead and 18 injured, a more standard figure for the country.
Security is likely to be heightened in Anbar and Ninawa provinces over the coming days ahead of delayed provincial elections but this may not deter militants who may attempt to conduct further political assassinations and terrorist attacks aimed at intimidating would-be voters who might otherwise go to the polls.
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Source: AKE Group
Monday, June 17, 2013
Iraq weekly roundup, week #24
Levels of violence rose considerably in Iraq last week. In total, at least 103 people were killed and 334 injured in nationwide incidents, a very high figure for the country
Incidents were concentrated in Ninawa province and the central region but a series of attacks also took place around the south of the country on 16 June, leaving dozens of casualties.
A total of 51 non-suicide bomb attacks left 70 people dead and 274 injured. This is a very high figure on its own, but there were also four additional suicide bombings, which left four people dead and 31 injured. Terrorists have evidently increased the pace of their attacks.
Small arms attacks left 22 people dead and 18 injured, a more standard figure for the country.
Security is likely to be heightened in Anbar and Ninawa provinces over the coming days ahead of delayed provincial elections but this may not deter militants who may attempt to conduct further political assassinations and terrorist attacks aimed at intimidating would-be voters who might otherwise go to the polls.
Yesterday many southern cities been hit by car bombs in Basra, Nasiriyah and Baghdad left more than 100 causalities.
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Source: AKE & National news.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Iraq Weekly Roundup Week# 23
Levels of violence fell in Iraq last week but conditions remain tense and the situation could escalate quickly once again. The coming week could see a rise in violence, particularly in the centre of the country.
Sectarian tensions, anti-government protests, terrorist attacks and divisions between the Kurdish and federal authorities remain intense.
Last week violent incidents were concentrated around Anbar, Baghdad and Diyala provinces, as well as through Salah ad-Din province and in the city of Mosul further north. These areas will likely remain the main flashpoint over the coming weeks and months. Conditions were quiet in the south although notable incidents relating to violence and crime took place in the region nonetheless.
At least 76 people were killed and 220 injured in nationwide incidents, which is a fall from recent weeks, but still a relatively high figure when compared to recent years.
A total of 36 bomb attacks left 30 people dead and 130 injured. Three additional suicide bombings left 19 people dead and 84 injured.
Although there was a decline in the number of small arms attacks they still left 26 people dead and six injured.
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Source: AKE Group.
Friday, June 7, 2013
Iraq Review
The UN Assistance Mission in Iraq (UNAMI) reports that more than 1,000 people were killed in Iraq
in May, making it the deadliest month since the widespread sectarian violence of 2006-2007, reports
BBC. The vast majority of deaths were civilian. Baghdad was the worst-hit region of the country. The
increase in attacks has been accompanied by rumours of sectarian militias roaming Baghdad seeking
revenge-killings. UN Special Representative in Iraq Martin Kobler warned, “[s]ystematic violence is
ready to explode at any moment if all Iraqi leaders do not engage immediately to pull the country out
of this mayhem”, reports United Press International (UPI). Later, Kobler reported that a weekend
meeting with political leaders included the Prime Minister, religious leaders and key administrative
officials addressing the uptick in violence, reports UPI.
Deputy Prime Minister for Energy Affairs Hussein al Shahristani warned Israel on 03 June that
Baghdad would respond to any attempts to use Iraqi airspace for a strike against Iran’s controversial
nuclear energy programme, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP). Iraq’s defence ministry reports
it interrupted an al Qaeda cell operating in Baghdad, working to produce poisonous gas for terrorist
attacks, according to Al Jazeera. The five-man cell used instructions obtained from another al Qaeda
group to build two facilities for production of sarin and mustard gas. The cell intended to launch
domestic attacks, as well as attacks in Europe, Canada and the United States. An al Qaeda plot to pack
tanker trucks with explosives and attack a key Baghdad oil facility was thwarted by Iraqi security,
reports Al Jazeera.
Russian oil company Lukoil Vice President Andrei Kuzyaev stated that his company will invest USD 4 billion in West Qurna, the oil complex near the Iraqi port city of Basra, one of the largest undeveloped oil fields in the world, according to UPI. Lukoil predicts the first oil from the West Qurna-2 oil field will flow within six months. The New York Times (NYT) reports that China is now Iraq’s largest oil customer, purchasing nearly 1.5 billion barrels per day (bpd). China continues to move aggressively towards expanding its role in Iraq’s petroleum industry, as the Iraqi government is increasingly at odds with some foreign oil companies that previously cut deals with the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan.
One of the world’s most famous wetlands is enjoying a major restoration, after being drained and destroyed under Saddam Hussein in the 1980s, reports BBC. Some regard the lush Iraqi marshes as the original Biblical Garden of Eden. Also, BBC reports that although the Kurdish region of Iraq has progressed economically and socially, the northern region continues to be a very patriarchal and conservative society where women continue to experience domestic violence, social injustice and discrimination. As a result, doctors report that each month they see “hundreds of cases of self-immolation”.
- Daily Star Reports: on 28-May; 28 people were killed during an attacks in Baghdad and villages north of capital.
- Aljazeera reports on 29-May; a weeding party in southern Jihad district of baghdad was attacked. Resulting 16 deaths and 42 wounded.
- CNN reported on 29-May; In the Abu Graib district, 20 people were killed when a roudside bomb and a subsequent car bomb exploded near market. In Musol an anti-government sunni activist assassinated, he was one of ten people found dead from act violence on 29-May.
- AP reports on 30-May; string of bombings at north of Mosul killed at least 30 people.
- Same day Daily Star reports; at least 26 people were killed in baghdad.
- Aljazeera Reports: on 2-June; 6 people were killed and five kidnapped in series attacks in Anbar province.
- Routers Reports: on 3-June; PKK militants fired on Turkish troops in south east Turkey, the first such accident since announcements of the PKK withdrawal from Turkey.