Obama: No timetable for Iraq airstrikes
August 9, 2014 -- Updated 1537 GMT (2337 HKT)
U.S. airstrikes have
"successfully destroyed arms and equipment" that terrorists with ISIS
could have used against the Kurdish regional capital of Irbil in Iraq,
U.S. President Barack Obama said Saturday.
"We feel confident" that
military efforts can prevent ISIS from slaughtering people on Mount
Sinjar, where ISIS has been killing many members of the Yazidi minority,
Obama said in remarks at the White House.
He declined to give a
timetable for U.S. airstrikes and humanitarian air drops in Iraq.
"Wherever and whenever (U.S.) personnel are facilities are threatened,
it is my obligation ... to make sure they're protected," he said.
The Iraqi government and
military will need to take a series of steps to improve the security
situation, Obama said. "I don't think we're going to solve this problem
in weeks. I think this is going to take some time."
There's a lesson in this
situation for Afghanistan, the president said: If leadership wants a new
government to work, then people of different factions and ethnicities
have "got to accommodate each other."
After a reporter asked
Obama if he felt ISIS had been underestimated, Obama said the advance of
the Sunni Islamic extremists has been "more rapid" than intelligence
officials and policymakers in and outside Iraq had predicted.
But he said ISIS' advance
was made possible in part by the lack of an inclusive and functioning
Iraqi government -- a dig at the Shiite-led government that he says has
alienated Sunnis in recent years.
This was illustrated, he
said, by Iraqi security forces' capitulation to ISIS in northern Iraq
earlier this year. The government forces, "when they (were) far away
from Baghdad, did not have the incentive or the capacity to ... hold
(their) ground against an aggressive adversary," Obama said.
"That's one more reason why" the formation of a functioning Iraqi government is so important, he said.
While the U.S. can
assist Iraqi security forces in fighting ISIS with airstrikes,
ultimately it's up to Iraqis to secure their country, the president
said. That will take an inclusive government, he said. "All Iraqi
communities need to unite to defend their country," Obama said.
Obama said he spoke with
French President Francois Hollande and British Prime Minister David
Cameron about the situation in Iraq, and that both have agreed to join
the United States in providing humanitarian assistance to Iraqis
endangered by ISIS.
The British government
will contribute aid worth 8 million pounds ($13.4 million), and its air
force will start air-dropping supplies in northern Iraq soon,
particularly for the Yazidis trapped on the mountain, UK Foreign
Secretary Philip Hammond said Saturday.
[Previous version, published at 6:01 a.m. ET]
U.S. fighter jets, drones target ISIS fighters, convoys in Iraq
(CNN) U.S. fighter jets
and drones repeatedly bombed Sunni Islamic extremists in northern Iraq,
targeting what officials described as ISIS artillery units and convoys
advancing on the Kurdish regional capital of Irbil.
The airstrikes Friday
ramped up America's involvement in Iraq where ISIS, which calls itself
the Islamic State, is seizing control of towns and key infrastructure in
an advance that has forced hundreds of thousands to run for their
lives.
News of the second round
of U.S. airstrikes came just after the governor of Irbil told CNN that
ISIS may be as close as 30 kilometers (just over 18 miles) from the city
of more than a million people.
The operation began
hours after President Barack Obama authorized "targeted airstrikes,"
saying in a televised address late Thursday that the United States had
an obligation to protect its personnel in Iraq and prevent a potential
genocide of minority groups by ISIS.
Obama said there will be
no buildup of U.S. combat troops in Iraq. "As commander in chief, I
will not allow the United States to be dragged into fighting another war
in Iraq," the President said.
During his weekly radio address Saturday, the President reiterated his stance.
"American combat troops
will not be returning to fight in Iraq, because there's no American
military solution to the larger crisis there," Obama said.
Hitting ISIS
Two U.S. F/A 18 fighters
first struck an ISIS artillery unit outside of Irbil, dropping two
500-pound laser-guided bombs about 6:45 a.m. ET Friday, Pentagon
spokesman Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby said.
Later, a drone targeted
an ISIS mortar position, Kirby said. When ISIS fighters returned to the
site a short time later, the drone struck the target again, he said.
That was followed a
short time later by a second round of airstrikes, carried out by four
U.S. fighter jets, which targeted an ISIS convoy of seven vehicles and
another mortar position, Kirby said.
The F/A 18s made two passes, dropping a total of eight laser-guided bombs, he said.
The United States has
hundreds of military personnel in Iraq, including advisers sent in
recent weeks to coordinate with Iraqi and Kurdish military officials in
response to the ISIS rampage. The USS George H.W. Bush and other Navy
ships also are in the region.
Airstrikes are crucial
because ISIS fighters are well-armed and are outgunning the Kurdish
forces, thanks to the weapons the militants seized from the Iraqi
military in Mosul, Irbil Gov. Nawzad Hadi said.
Militants using U.S.-made weapons
Even as the airstrikes
were under way, there was news that ISIS militants captured Iraq's
largest hydroelectric dam, just north of Mosul, Iraq's second-largest
city. According to a senior Kurdish official, the militant fighters have
been using U.S.-made weapons seized during fighting from the Iraqi
army, including M1 Abrams tanks.
There had been
conflicting reports about who controlled the dam on the Tigris River,
with heavy fighting under way between ISIS fighters and Kurdish forces,
known as Peshmerga. U.S. officials have warned that a failure of the dam
would be catastrophic, resulting in flooding all the way to Baghdad.
In other fighting, an
Iraqi airstrike killed 45 ISIS fighters and injured 60 Friday in the
northern town of Sinjar, the country's state-run National Media Center
said.
U.S. flights prohibited
In other signs of a
growing regional conflict: The Federal Aviation Administration issued a
notice prohibiting U.S. airlines from flying through Iraqi airspace "due
to the hazardous situation created by the armed conflict."
The developments showed
that the lightning advance by ISIS fighters across northern Iraq this
year has become a battle for the nation's future and overall stability
in a part of the world wracked for decades by periodic war.
Kurdish pleas
In announcing his airstrike decision Thursday night, Obama said the militants would get hit "should they move towards the city."
Kurdish leaders have
been pleading for the United States or NATO to buttress their forces
against ISIS from the air. The President seems to have heard their
appeal.
"We do whatever is necessary to protect our people," Obama said, adding, "We support our allies when they're in danger."
Before Obama announced
the airstrikes, two U.S. military cargo planes airdropped 5,300 gallons
of water and 8,000 meals onto Mount Sinjar, where some Yazidi children
had died from dehydration.
A Predator drone flying
overhead indicates the Yazidis have 63 of the 72 pallets dropped with
aid supplies. It's not clear if the other pallets missed the drop zone
or are in ISIS hands.
ISIS overran Sinjar last
weekend, forcing tens of thousands of Yazidis to flee into surrounding
mountains without food, water or shelter, and prompting concerns of a
potential genocide. The Yazidis are of Kurdish descent, and their
religion is considered a pre-Islamic sect that draws from Christianity,
Judaism and Zoroastrianism.
"The thousands—perhaps
tens of thousands—of Iraqi men, women and children who fled to that
mountain were starving and dying of thirst," Obama said during his
weekly address. "The food and water we airdropped will help them
survive. I've also approved targeted American airstrikes to help Iraqi
forces break the siege and rescue these families. Earlier this week, one
anguished Iraqi in this area cried to the world, 'There is no one
coming to help.' Today, America is helping."
Beheadings
ISIS has executed people
who don't share their fanatical interpretation of Sunni Islam and
posted videos of their killings to the Internet. "Convert to Islam or
die" is the militants' ultimatum to those captured.
Its members have also
have beheaded victims and placed their heads on spikes to strike terror
in the population, a senior administration official said.
CNN's Barbara Starr and Tom Cohen reported
from Washington and Chelsea J. Carter reported and wrote from Atlanta.
CNN's Ivan Watson, Catherine E. Shoichet, Ben Brumfield, Jim Sciutto,
Niki Cook, Elise Labott, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Jim Acosta, Jamie Crawford,
Mohammed Tawfeeq and Hamdi Alkhshali contributed to this report.
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