“The men were all members of a militia created during the height of the sectarian conflict of Sunnis who used to be aligned with al-Qaida but later turned on them.”
Even if the jihadists eliminate everyone else, they’ll always have each other. Lacking an outside enemy against whom to make common cause, and a figurehead with exactly the right balance of personality cult and sheer brutality who could hold things together for a time, even a restored caliphate would collapse on itself from infighting and revenge-seeking.
“7 pulled from Iraqi mosque, killed execution-style,” by Hamid Ahmed for the Associated Press, August 15:
BAGHDAD (AP) “” Gunmen wearing military uniforms pulled seven people from a Sunni mosque south of Baghdad and then shot and killed them execution-style, officials said Tuesday, raising the death toll to 70 in Iraq’s deadliest day this year.
The killings late Monday came at the end of a day that saw a wave of crushing violence sweep across Iraq, from the northern city of Mosul to the Shiite heartland “” including suicide bombings, roadside bombs and shootings. The violence was reminiscent of the bloodletting that used to plague Iraq daily a few years ago and a stark warning that al-Qaida in Iraq is still a force to be reckoned with.
The fact that militants were able to pull off such a wave of violence is especially disturbing considering that U.S. forces are scheduled to leave Iraq at the end of this year, leaving the country’s security in the hands of still-struggling Iraqi security forces.
Iraqi officials announced earlier this month that they would discuss with the U.S. having a small group of trainers in the country past Dec. 31 but no deal has been finalized.
In the execution-style attack late Monday, the gunmen walked into a Sunni mosque in the town of Youssifiyah during evening prayers, took the seven men outside and shot them, said officials with the Ministry of Interior and the town hospital.
The men were all members of a militia created during the height of the sectarian conflict of Sunnis who used to be aligned with al-Qaida but later turned on them.
Youssifiyah is about 12 miles (20 kilometers) south of Baghdad and used to be one of the country’s most violent regions, nicknamed the Triangle of Death. It’s a Sunni-dominated area that is also home to many Shiite families. Sunni militants used to find easy hiding places among the region’s date palm groves.
After the killings, the gunmen shouted they were fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq, a front group for al-Qaida in Iraq….