The speaker of Iraq’s parliament says an investigation is under way
into an attack on a Sunni Muslim mosque that killed scores of people and
escalated sectarian violence.
Salim al-Jabouri told reporters Saturday in Baghdad an investigative
team has been given two days to find out who is responsible for what he
called “the vicious crime and massacre.”
Friday’s attacks on a Sunni mosque northeast of Baghdad appeared to
undermine the Shi’ite-led central government’s effort to bridge Iraq’s
sectarian divides and forge a united front against Islamic State
militants. At least 60 people were killed as they attended weekly
prayers.
Witnesses and Sunni religious officials blamed members of a hardline
Shi’ite militia for the attack, but some government military commanders
said they suspect Islamic State militants were responsible for the
carnage.
A U.S. State Department spokeswoman, Marie Harf, condemned the attack
and said Iraqi leaders from across the political spectrum should help
to unify the country against violent extremist groups. U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also condemned the attack “in the
strongest terms.”
In another development Friday, President Barack Obama’s
administration said the killing of American journalist James Foley by
militants from the Islamic State group amounts to a direct terrorist
attack on the United States.
Obama’s deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes, said the U.S.
is ready to take additional action against Islamic State fighters to
protect Americans, and because the group poses a much greater threat
today than it did six months ago. In deciding on further airstrikes,
Rhodes said, U.S. military activity will not be “restricted” by borders.
“We have seen them posing a threat to our interests in the region, to
our personnel and facilities in the region, and clearly the brutal
execution of Jim Foley represented an affront, an attack – not just on
him, but he’s an American – and we see that as an attack on our country,
when one of our own is killed like that,” he said.
Islamic State fighters have gained control of a large swath of
territory in northern Iraq and eastern Syria during the past six weeks,
and they have moved freely between the two nations.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry spoke by telephone Friday with
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari about the situation in Iraq. The
State Department said Kerry expressed his strong support for the
formation of a new government and encouraged Zebari to press all parties
on the need to work together. The State Department said the two also
agreed that Iraq, the U.S., the region and the international community
must work together to face the threat posed by the Islamic State.
Also Friday, Vice President Joe Biden called on Iraqis to overcome
their differences and unite to fight the Islamic State. In an opinion
article in The Washington Post, Biden said Iraq’s survival depends on
the ability of Iraqis to unite in a common effort. He said forming a
government in Iraq is critical. Biden also praised the spirit of
cooperation between security forces in Iraq, and said that Iraqi and
Kurdish forces showed their ability to work together when they fought
Islamic State militants at the Mosul dam.
U.S. aircraft launched at least three airstrikes Friday against
Islamic State positions near the Mosul dam in northern Iraq, a crucial
source of power and water for more than a million people. Militant
fighters gained control of the dam this month, but combined Iraqi and
Kurdish forces have since counterattacked and forced the extremists to
withdraw.
Since August 8, U.S. forces have carried out 93 airstrikes against
Islamic State militants, about two-thirds of them near the dam. The
chief U.S. military spokesman at the Pentagon, Rear Admiral John Kirby,
declined to answer reporters’ questions Friday about whether the air
campaign against the Islamic State group will be extended into Syria.
“I’m not going to get ahead of planning that hasn’t been done or
decisions that haven’t been made. We don’t telegraph our punches,” he
said.
Foley, a freelance photojournalist, was kidnapped in Syria in 2012.
The Islamic State group has its headquarters in Syria, and that is where
Foley is believed to have been beheaded. Rhodes said the U.S. did
everything it could to free Foley and bring home other Americans held by
terrorists, and he said an unsuccessful rescue attempt last month
inside Syria was a “tragic” failure.
U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel says the Islamic State group is a
terrorist threat “beyond anything we have seen.” He describes the
militants as better trained, armed, organized and financed than any
other terrorist organization, including al-Qaida.
(VOA)
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