Tuesday, 16 August 2016

Trump addresses ISIS threat to West, but blood spilled every day in Syria, Iraq

Donald Trump, the Republican Party's presidential nominee, has been in the spotlight for years. From developing real estate to producing and starring in TV shows, see how he's shaped his empire.


Pentagon: 26,000 ISIS fighters killed in U.S. airstrikes



U.S. strikes ISIS chemical weapons program



Top ISIS leader possibly dead in U.S. airstrike



Navy SEAL killed in Iraq identified



Ash Carter: Navy SEAL death shows risk of ISIS campaign



Iraq: The battle for Mosul



Vintage warplane used to bomb ISIS



What weapons does ISIS have?



ISIS hates this religious group the most



Head of ISIS chemical weapons program interrogated



U.S. airstrike on ISIS cash depot sends money into air



The name ISIS hates to be called



Official: ISIS terrorist fake deaths to get into Europe



How does ISIS govern its territory?



Spain seizes 20,000 ISIS, al-Nusra uniforms



ISIS tunnels under Ramadi to evade airstrikes



Where are the Arab nations in the fight against ISIS?



Is this man the new 'Jihadi John' seen in ISIS video?



Iraqi forces try to rescue families from ISIS



Feds: N.Y. man planned ISIS attack on New Year's Eve



2 arrested in alleged New Year's Eve attack plot



Iraqi military declares Ramadi 'liberated'



Why does ISIS want Ramadi?



Defense Secretary: We have not contained ISIS



Obama challenges media on ISIS coverage


Now Playing

Watch Donald Trump evolve on ISIS



U.S. sending more troops to Iraq



Aspiring star killed by ISIS



Muslims react to ISIS attacks on social media



U.S. airstrike kills 2 ISIS commanders



U.S. airstrikes hit ISIS convoys, hundreds killed



CIA Director's grave warning: ISIS as dangerous as ever



Obama: 'Our mission is to destroy ISIL'



Orlando gunman Omar Mateen was on FBI radar



Iraqi DM: This is the beginning of the end of ISIS



ISIS loses control of Libyan stronghold



Officials: Iraqi forces retake Falluja neighborhood



U.S. carrier on round-the-clock ISIS bombing mission



U.S. forces play key role in retaking ISIS stronghold



Inside ISIS controlled Raqqa, Syria



Why Libya matters to ISIS



Why is ISIS heading to Libya?



U.S. waging growing number of 'small wars' against ISIS



U.S. Navy Seal killed by ISIS in Iraq



Is the U.S. doing enough to help Iraq fight ISIS?



Ash Carter: U.S. to 'accelerate' fight against ISIS



U.S. special ops troops will head to Syria



ISIS calls on Saudi supporters to kill relatives



Iraqi town suffering from ISIS chemical attack



Pentagon: 26,000 ISIS fighters killed in U.S. airstrikes



U.S. strikes ISIS chemical weapons program



Top ISIS leader possibly dead in U.S. airstrike



Navy SEAL killed in Iraq identified



Ash Carter: Navy SEAL death shows risk of ISIS campaign



Iraq: The battle for Mosul



Vintage warplane used to bomb ISIS



What weapons does ISIS have?



ISIS hates this religious group the most



Head of ISIS chemical weapons program interrogated



U.S. airstrike on ISIS cash depot sends money into air



The name ISIS hates to be called



Official: ISIS terrorist fake deaths to get into Europe



How does ISIS govern its territory?



Spain seizes 20,000 ISIS, al-Nusra uniforms



ISIS tunnels under Ramadi to evade airstrikes



Where are the Arab nations in the fight against ISIS?



Is this man the new 'Jihadi John' seen in ISIS video?



Iraqi forces try to rescue families from ISIS



Feds: N.Y. man planned ISIS attack on New Year's Eve



2 arrested in alleged New Year's Eve attack plot



Iraqi military declares Ramadi 'liberated'



Why does ISIS want Ramadi?



Defense Secretary: We have not contained ISIS



Obama challenges media on ISIS coverage



Watch Donald Trump evolve on ISIS



U.S. sending more troops to Iraq



Aspiring star killed by ISIS



Muslims react to ISIS attacks on social media



U.S. airstrike kills 2 ISIS commanders



U.S. airstrikes hit ISIS convoys, hundreds killed



CIA Director's grave warning: ISIS as dangerous as ever



Obama: 'Our mission is to destroy ISIL'



Orlando gunman Omar Mateen was on FBI radar



Iraqi DM: This is the beginning of the end of ISIS



ISIS loses control of Libyan stronghold



Officials: Iraqi forces retake Falluja neighborhood



U.S. carrier on round-the-clock ISIS bombing mission



U.S. forces play key role in retaking ISIS stronghold



Inside ISIS controlled Raqqa, Syria



Why Libya matters to ISIS



Why is ISIS heading to Libya?



U.S. waging growing number of 'small wars' against ISIS



U.S. Navy Seal killed by ISIS in Iraq



Is the U.S. doing enough to help Iraq fight ISIS?



Ash Carter: U.S. to 'accelerate' fight against ISIS



U.S. special ops troops will head to Syria



ISIS calls on Saudi supporters to kill relatives



Iraqi town suffering from ISIS chemical attack



Pentagon: 26,000 ISIS fighters killed in U.S. airstrikes


Story highlights
Republican presidential nominee addresses fight against ISIS in speech
Talked in detail about ISIS or ISIS-inspired attacks in the United States and Europe
Wedeman: Syrian, Iraqis fight and die every day in the war against ISIS


Ben Wedeman has reported extensively from the Middle East, especially on the impact of the campaign against ISIS in Syria and Iraq.


(CNN)The air was thick with the stench of burnt flesh.
Dozens of people stood outside the gutted buildings in the Baghdad neighborhood of Karrada, desperately searching for missing relatives. Volunteers sifted through the ashes looking for human remains. More than 300 died on the night of July 3 when ISIS set off a car bomb at a time when the area was crammed with shoppers.
Those who died were Muslims -- Sunni and Shia -- and Christians, a cross section of Iraqi society.
A few weeks before, I was crammed into a hot Iraqi army Humvee, driving into the city of Falluja with battle-hardened Iraqi soldiers who had been fighting ISIS for almost two years. And the fighting in Falluja still raged.







Search for loved ones in rubble of Baghdad attack 01:41
In March last year, I watched as doctors in a hospital south of Tikrit struggled frantically to save a fighter severely wounded in the battle to drive ISIS out of the city.
READ: ISIS: Everything you need to know
It was too late. He died.
The point is this: Iraqis fight and die every day in the war against ISIS. As do Syrians, and Libyans, and Egyptians and others.

Trump speech
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump began his much-anticipated address on how to fight ISIS.
Trump started his speech devoting more than 300 words to describing in detail specific ISIS or ISIS-inspired attacks in the United States and Europe. Attacks he said had taken place "outside the war zones of the Middle East."
OPINION: Trump's half-baked plans to combat ISIS
But he used only broad strokes, without specifics and many fewer words, to address the suffering ISIS has inflicted elsewhere, specifically on the Muslim world, where the war against the extremist group is raging.






Iraqi troops retake Falluja as refugee crisis worsens 02:35
In Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice, Shylock asked, "if you prick us, do we not bleed?"
Trump doesn't seem to realize that the people of the Middle East, most of who are Muslim, have bled a river's worth of blood. They are on the front lines of this war against ISIS.

Long, complicated history
I won't go into the historical background the led to the creation of ISIS. The story is long and complicated and goes back decades, and there is plenty of blame to go around. The Middle East is complicated, and even by Middle Eastern standards Iraq is particularly complicated.
But campaign speeches don't do complicated.
What's not complicated, however, is the antipathy a majority of Iraqis, and Muslims, have toward ISIS. Its dark, nihilistic ideology is repugnant and that is why they fight and die.
The people of Iraq and Syria have been traumatized.

Women mourn at the site of a suicide bombing on July 3 in Baghdad's Karrada neighborhood.
Iraq has suffered through wars and hardship and upheaval since the early 1980s. Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have been killed since the country's civil war began in 2011. Millions in both countries have been displaced or driven into exile.
Jubilation as ISIS loses control of key city
ISIS is a nightmare, but only the latest.
In his speech, Trump said, "All we got from Iraq -- and our adventures in the Middle East -- was death, destruction and tremendous financial loss."
That statement may perhaps be true.
But ponder what the people of Iraq and Syria have experienced in recent years: death, destruction and tremendous financial loss on a scale most Americans, and certainly not Trump, could ever imagine in their wildest dreams.

No comments:

Post a Comment