News Dump Saturday: Fall of the Caliphate Edition

Last major IS city in Iraq is falling fast

(AP) — Iraq's military said Saturday it has driven Islamic State militants out of 90 percent of the northern town of Tal Afar and retaken the town center.
Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasool, a military spokesman, spoke hours after Iraq's foreign minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, said that 70 percent of the town west of Mosul had been retaken. Al-Jaafari spoke during a news conference with his French counterpart.

IS chased out of central Syria

(Reuters) - The Syrian army and allied forces have captured one of the last major Islamic State enclaves in the central Syrian desert, a monitor and a Hezbollah military media unit said on Saturday.
The pocket of territory totals around 2,000 square km (770 square miles), said the media unit run by Hezbollah, which fights alongside Syrian government forces in the war.
The Syrian army -- supported by Russian air power and Iran-backed militias -- secured al-Sukhna this month. It was the last major town in Homs province that Islamic State held.

U.S. bombs another hospital

U.S.-led airstrikes on Friday destroyed parts of the general hospital of Raqqa city in northeastern Syria, a monitor group reported, as the Islamic State (IS) group launched a counter offensive against the Syrian army in eastern Raqqa, killing 34 soldiers.
The "violent" shelling by the U.S.-led coalition also led to an electricity outage in other parts of the hospital, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The SDF has already captured 60 percent of Raqqa city since unleashing an attack on the city two and a half months ago.
In an earlier report, the observatory said that as many as 773 civilians have been killed by U.S.-led strikes and shelling of the SDF since the operation against Raqqa began in June of this year.
The London-based watchdog group said 197 children and 119 women were among those killed during the battles in Raqqa.

U.N. asks U.S. to stop killing civiians

The soaring civilian death toll from US airstrikes against the ISIS capital city of Raqqa has gotten so bad that yesterday, it actually fueled a statement from the UN requesting the US pause their airstrikes to allow more civilians to flee the city.
US officials are rejecting this call, however, with SPecial Envoy Brett McGurk insisting that the war against ISIS is going very well, and that the “number one thing that we have to do to” to help civilians in Raqqa is continue the war and defeat ISIS outright.

Killing civilians in Somalia

Ten civilians, including three children, were killed in a raid by foreign and Somali forces on a farm in southern Somalia, a deputy governor said Friday, as the U.S. military confirmed it supported a counter-terror operation in the area and said it would look into the allegations.
The deaths raise questions about growing U.S. military involvement in the Horn of Africa nation after President Donald Trump approved expanded operations against the al-Qaida-linked extremist group al-Shabab, often in support of Somali forces.
The farmers were killed “one by one” after soldiers stormed into Barire village early Friday, the deputy governor of Lower Shabelle region, Ali Nur Mohamed, told reporters in the capital, Mogadishu, as victims’ bloodied bodies were on display.

No way out in Afghanistan

We’ve tried killing terrorists. Lots and lots of them. As many as 42,000 Taliban and other insurgents have been killed and another 19,000 wounded in fighting since 2001, according to one rough 2016 estimate. The United States has also carried out more than 400 drone strikes in Pakistan, decimating Al Qaeda’s core leadership. Last year a drone took out the Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Muhammad Mansour.
Result: The Taliban’s numbers in 2005 were estimated at anywhere between 2,000 and 10,000 fighters. Within a decade, those numbers had grown to an estimated 60,000 fighters.

Boris Johnson is welcomed in Libya (yes, this is real)

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Here’s another reason to be leery of the initial coin offerings being done at a staggering pace in the cryptocurrency world: there’s a one-in-10 chance you’ll end up a victim of theft.

Phishing scams have helped push up criminal losses to about $225 million this year, according to Chainalysis, a New York-based firm that analyzes transactions and provides anti-money laundering software. In such scams, investors are tricked into sending money to internet addresses pretending to be funding sites for digital token offerings related to the ethereum blockchain technology.

More than 30,000 people have fallen prey to ethereum-related cyber crime, losing an average of $7,500 each, with ICOs amassing about $1.6 billion in proceeds this year, Chainalysis estimates.

“It’s a huge amount of money to generate in such a short period of time,” said Jonathan Levin, co-founder of Chainalysis, whose software and database are used by some of the largest bitcoin companies and U.S. law enforcement agencies. “The cryptocurrency phishers are doing pretty good against all the other types of criminals that are out there.”

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dervish's picture

The Lebanese Army has retaken most of the real estate held by the takfiris, and has captured or killed most of their fighters. The takfiris have been reduced to few pockets still holding out, and operations continue against them. This offensive was coordinated with a push to the west by the Syrian Army and HZB, trapping Daesh's potential escape.

They are literally between a rock and a hard place.

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"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."

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dervish's picture

@LaFeminista make for easy targets, apparently.

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"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."

@dervish

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divineorder's picture

Which country, which group or thorn in the side of neolib plans will be next? Got to keep those weapons factories ginnin' dontcha know! /s

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

Meteor Man's picture

First I heard of Boris Johnson, so I googled this:

Boris Johnson says UK was 'over-optimistic' about Libya

Though it is six years since the removal of Col Gaddafi, he said: "There's been a complete breakdown of government authority - Libya is not in a state of civil war - it would be more accurate to describe it as in a state of anarchy.

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-41045099

Do ya think?

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

Deja's picture

@Meteor Man
I didn't know either. So, thanks for posting this.

Side note: reason 10,643,912 of why this place is miles above GOS. You posted it, and even if you hadn't, I could've asked who he was and no one here would've sniped me and shittily said Google is your friend. Yay c99 and the people here!

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