http://online.wsj.com/articles/u-s-plan ... 3?mod=e2twU.S. Planes Start Airstrikes on Iraq Militants
WASHINGTON—U.S. jet fighters hit Islamic State artillery positions in northern Iraq on Friday, the first of what is expected to be a series of American strikes meant to halt the Sunni extremist advance on the Kurdish capital of Erbil, the Pentagon said.
The U.S. F/A-18 jet fighters dropped 500 pound laser-guided bombs on mobile artillery positions outside Erbil, said Pentagon press secretary John Kirby.
The strikes were the first since President Barack Obama authorized U.S. military action to target radical Islamic forces in the Kurdish city, where the U.S. has diplomatic and military personnel aiding the Kurds.
Mr. Obama said Thursday night he had authorized targeted airstrikes and emergency-assistance missions in northern Iraq, saying the U.S. must act to protect American personnel and prevent a humanitarian catastrophe. Mr. Obama said the goal of strikes would be to stop militants closing in on the northern city of Erbil, a Kurdish stronghold, or to allow local forces to aid the Yazidis, the religious minority.
The strikes bring to a head soaring concern about militant advances in Iraq, where extremist fighters seized control of areas long considered safe and took over the Mosul Dam, the country's largest.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/ ... 8V20140808U.S. expediting military aid to Iraq's Kurds: U.S. senior administration official
(Reuters) - The United States is expediting military assistance to Iraq's Kurdish peshmerga forces, a senior U.S. administration official said on Thursday, supplementing the Hellfire missiles, ammunition, and anti-tank ammunition that it has been delivering to Iraqi security forces.
"We are now expediting assistance to the Kurds," the official told reporters. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, did not describe what type of assistance would be provided to Kurdish forces.
There are many aspects to this whole situation that are complex, but this is a very simple, straight forward no-brainer...
Kurdistan represents one of the very few success stories in the region,as well as one of our most reliable partners and allies in the area. Recently they've been forced to withdraw from key positions not because they were unwilling to fight, (like much of the Iraqi Army) but because they were running out of ammunition. Doing everything we can to support them against a savage gang of blood thirsty nihilists like ISIS is a clear-cut "good guys" versus "bad guys" situation, with no ambiguities whatsoever.
My only concern is that our air operations to degrade ISIS capabilities will be insufficiently thorough and robust. This organization, with it's murderous philosophy (and numerous members with Western passports) represents not only a genocidal threat to the region, but an existential terrorist threat to the West. It must be put to rout.


