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IRAQ WARS
IS attack in Baghdad kills at least 20: officials
By Jean Marc MOJON
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 11, 2016


Air strike in Iraq's Mosul targets 'millions' in IS cash: US official
Washington (AFP) Jan 11, 2016 - A US-led coalition air strike has destroyed a cash storage facility used by Islamic State jihadists in the Iraqi city of Mosul, a US defense official said Monday.

Two 2,000-pound (900-kilogram) bombs struck the facility, destroying "millions" of dollars worth of cash, the official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"We estimate in the millions of dollars... from all their illicit stuff: oil, looting, extortion," the official said. The strike came early Monday.

CNN, which first reported the strike, said the US military believed between five and seven civilians had been killed.

The US-led coalition carrying out plane and drone strikes against the IS group in Iraq and Syria has been increasingly targeting the jihadists' money-making capabilities, including by bombing trucks that ferry illicit oil across Syria.

Under pressure from critics who say the campaign is moving too slowly, the Pentagon has indicated it would consider a wider array of targets even if these might cause civilian deaths, provided these attacks yield significant gains against the jihadists.

The defense official said the coalition had targeted cash-holding facilities once or twice in the past year, but the most recent action was "probably" the biggest to date.

It was not immediately clear if the money had been in US dollars, some other foreign currency, or local dinars, the official added.

An attack by the Islamic State group involving a car bomb, a gunfight and a hostage-taking left at least 20 people dead in Baghdad Monday, security and medical sources said.

The exact sequence of the attack in the Baghdad al-Jadida area of the Iraqi capital was not immediately clear but security officials and an AFP reporter described scenes of chaos.

The attack, which IS claimed in a statement posted online, was a departure from the jihadist organisation's usual modus operandi of suicide car bombings.

According to an official from the interior ministry, gunmen blew up at least one car bomb before spraying gunfire in the street and storming a mall called Zahrat Baghdad.

"At least one of the attackers had a suicide vest and blew himself up inside the mall," the official said.

Several people were held hostage inside the mall and three of them were killed as security forces attempted to neutralise the attackers, a police colonel said.

"When the security forces got too close, they killed three hostages," he said.

"The attackers at one stage released at least nine hostages, women and children," he also said.

The police officer said at least two members of the security forces were killed during the attack and nine wounded, including three officers.

A hospital official confirmed the death toll and said at least three attackers either killed themselves or were killed by the security forces.

Security forces at one stage in the attack reported that gunmen had full control of the mall and it was not clear how the standoff ended.

- New modus operandi -

The area around the mall, located in a busy commercial area of Baghdad al-Jadida, a populous Shiite-majority area on the eastern edge of the Iraqi capital, suffered extensive damage.

Police said a counter-terrorism force from the intelligence services was deployed to the scene of the attack.

"The security forces are now fully in control, the gunmen have been killed and the hostages have been freed," the police officer said.

Helicopters flew overhead as security forces searched the scene and the roads gradually reopened.

The IS statement said the attack was carried out by "four soldiers of the caliphate" and targeted Shiites.

It said one of the IS members blew himself up in an explosives-laden vehicle when "the apostates sent reinforcements".

IS claimed that a total of 90 people were killed or wounded but the group has exaggerated the number of casualties caused by its attacks in previous such statements.

IS has suffered a number of military setbacks across Iraq in the past year. Security officials say fierce battles and relentless air strikes have depleted its manpower.

Analysts see that as a reason for the drop in attacks targeting civilians in the capital which were an almost daily occurrence two years ago.

The Iraqi intelligence services announced on December they had detained 40 IS members as part of major swoop in the Baghdad area.

They described the arrests as the continuation of an operation that saw them bust a car bomb-making cell in Baghdad earlier in 2015.


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Sectarian attacks south of Baghdad have aroused local fears that an escalating row between the region's Sunni and Shiite powerhouses could plunge Iraq back into all-out civil conflict. Wedged between Saudi Arabia and Iran, Iraq is the only country to have borders with both of the feuding giants - but analysts say a return to the kind of communal bloodletting that raged a decade ago was unli ... read more


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