Washington has declared the beheading of an American journalist a
“terrorist attack”, upping the stakes in its confrontation with the
Islamic State (IS) group, as militiamen gunned down 70 people at an
Iraqi mosque.
The apparent revenge attack at the mosque in Diyala province Friday
will increase already significant anger among Iraq´s Sunni Arab minority
with the Shiite-led government, undermining an anti-militant drive that
requires Sunni cooperation to succeed.
It came as the US, which is carrying out airstrikes against IS,
ramped up its rhetoric over the grisly killing of journalist James
Foley, which was carried out by the terrorist group and shown in a video
posted online.
In Washington, Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes said the
beheading of Foley “represents a terrorist attack against our country”.
Rhodes also said that paying ransoms to free hostages is “not the
right policy”, confirming Washington´s long-standing position amid
claims from IS that other countries had paid to have their nationals
freed.
In an unanimous statement Friday, the UN Security Council strongly condemned Foley´s murder as “heinous and cowardly”.
Army and police officers said the attack on the Musab bin Omair
Mosque in Diyala Friday came after Shiite militiamen were killed in
clashes, while other sources said it followed a roadside bomb near one
of their patrols.
Doctors and the officers put the toll from the attack, in which
worshippers were sprayed with machine gun fire, at 70 dead and 20
wounded.
Two officers had earlier blamed IS for the attack, but the preponderance of accounts point to militiamen.
The government turned to militiamen to bolster its flagging forces
during the IS offensive, sparking a resurgence of groups involved in
brutal sectarian killings in past years that will be difficult to
dislodge.
Ibrahim Aziz Ali, whose 25-year-old nephew was among those killed,
told he and other residents heard gunfire and rushed to the mosque,
where they were fired on by snipers.
“We found a massacre” at the mosque, he said.
Five vehicles with images of revered Imam Hussein were parked at the
mosque, Ali said, adding that residents clashed with the militiamen who
withdrew when the Iraqi army arrived.
Iraqi premier designate Haidar al-Abadi issued a statement calling
for unity and condemning the killings, which may complicate the
already-contentious process of forming the country´s next government.
US Vice President Joe Biden said Friday that Washington would back a federal system in Iraq.
Writing in a Washington Post opinion piece, Biden pointed to
“functioning federalism” as an approach to breach the divisions in the
country. Biden is a longtime supporter of the plan under which Iraq
would be divided into three semi-autonomous regions for Shiites, Sunnis
and Kurds, respectively.
(AFP)
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