Showing posts with label US-Iraqi relations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US-Iraqi relations. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Inaugural F-16 fighter plane built for Iraq crashes in Arizona

 
Above: burning crash site in Arizona of Iraqi Air Force F-16IQ

According to F-16.net on 25JUN15:
An Iraqi F-16 assigned to the 162nd Wing, Arizona ANG, crashed sometime around 20.00h today, five miles east of Douglas Municipal Airport, while partaking in a night training mission. The Iraqi pilot was killed in this mishap.
The crash of the F-16 occurred near Douglas close to the border between Arizona and New Mexico. The jet was the inaugural F-16D block 52 #1601 (RB-01) for the Iraq Air Force which first took flight on May 2nd, 2014.
[...]
The Iraq government ordered 36 F-16s and while delivery of them is on hold, the pilots who will fly them have been learning the ropes of the aircraft with the 162nd FW since 2012.
Commentary: Iraqi sources identify the pilot as IqAF Brig. Gen. Rafid Mohammed Hassan.

Loss of the inaugural IqAF F-16 and its pilot represent another setback to the Iraqi Air Force, which had expressed the expectation of a much delayed deployment to Iraq on 21JUL15 for war against ISIL.

An accurate critique by Tyler Rogoway of U.S. policy towards the Iraqi Air Force can be accessed HERE.

Undated image of the late Brig. Gen. Rafid Mohammad Hassan

File image of lost IqAF Lockheed Martin F-16IQ (D Block 52) Fighting Falcon, serial 1601

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Prime Minister Abadi says Iraq needs tanks

Better times: Iraqi Army receives last five M1A1 tanks in 2011 from its batch order of 140
Photo: Staff Sgt. Edward Daileg, 305th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

According to Reuters:
"Arms, we need them all. If they [the United States] can supply us with heavy weapons, with tanks, we need them badly," Abadi told a small group of reporters ahead of talks with U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter.
Asked about when Baghdad would pay: "Iraq can pay for it later, not now... I think there can be an arrangement for deferred payment."
COMMENTARY: Photos below emerged 15APR15 on social media, of ISIL posing before knocked out Iraqi Army tanks during attacks in the vicinity of Baiji oil refinery:

Knocked out Iraqi Army M1A1M main battle tank near Baiji oil refinery. Turret unit marking obscured. 

Knocked out Iraqi Army T-72M main battle tank. Note U.S.-origin assault rifle leaning against starboard track. Burn seen in the distance.

COMMENTARY: In the opinion of this writer, an unfortunate consequence of the command dispute during the final phase of the Battle of Tikrit is the enabling of ISIL again resuming the initiative, at Baiji and Ramadi. In marked contrast, scenes such as those above were not to be seen during the recent Salahaddin campaign.

Compounding this adverse turn of events, the New York Times reported the following:
The dueling Iraqi and Saudi narratives began when Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi of Iraq, who this week is making his first official visit to Washington, spoke early in the day to a small group of reporters at Blair House, the White House guest residence for visiting dignitaries. He said the Saudi campaign and the fighting in Yemen had created huge humanitarian problems.
“There is no logic to the operation at all in the first place,” Mr. Abadi said. “Mainly, the problem of Yemen is within Yemen.”
“They want to stop this conflict as soon as possible,” Mr. Abadi said. “What I understand from the [Obama] administration, the Saudis are not helpful on this. They don’t want a cease-fire now.”
“The dangerous thing is we don’t know what the Saudis want to do after this,” Mr. Abadi said. “Is Iraq within their radar? That’s very, very dangerous. The idea that you intervene in another state unprovoked just for regional ambition is wrong. Saddam has done it before. See what it has done to the country.”
COMMENTARY: There's a bit of "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" in PM Abadi's remarks. That the Iraqis are traumatized by the Saddam years is beyond dispute. From their perspective they are still affected by Saddam's invasion of Iran, his invasion of Kuwait, Operation Iraqi Freedom, the insurgency against the U.S. military occupation and now the war against ISIL. To see the conflagoration now being generated by the sharp escalation embarked upon by their southern neighbor is having an effect on the Baghdad government, as demonstrated by Adadi's responses to reporters.

It's also unfortunate that Abadi's urgent request for tanks and heavy weapons serves as an echo of Iran-backed Badr President Amiri, in comments Amiri made during the Battle of Tikrit when photos appeared of Iranian T-72S main battle tanks being operated by elements of the Iraqi Army.

Turning again to the above imagery of burning Iraqi tanks, it is the opinion of this writer that the beneficiary of this tug of war between Iran and the United States over Iraq is ISIL. Such runs counter to the interests of both countries, and Iraq.

Meanwhile, Iran's Soleimani PR campaign continues:
Image turning up this week on social media depicting IRGC-QF Commander Soleimani accompanying the air medical transport of Khadeer Al-Matrouhi, leader of "21st Brigade" who was reportedly WIA during Battle of Tikrit.