From the BBC:
"What else happened in the Middle East as Gaza burned?"
The Middle East is going through such turmoil that much
has been going on during the month Gaza dominated the headlines. Here's my
summary of the five key events.
1. The onward march of the Islamic
State in Iraq
The jihadist movement has attacked and routed Kurdish forces on the Syrian
border. This has resulted in the Islamic State (IS), previously known as the
Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis), securing the last significant
border crossing into Syria and gaining control of Iraq's biggest dam, near
Mosul. It has also produced what the UN in Iraq has described as "a humanitarian
tragedy". Up to 300,000 people may have fled the town of Sinjar and newly captured
lands around it, and there have been unconfirmed reports of up to 2,000 people
being killed by the militants. Attention is now focused on about 40,000 of the refugees stranded on a
mountainside without food, water, or shelter. Like most of those who have fled,
they are from Iraq's Yazidi religious minority and are terrified they will be
persecuted by IS. Christians from Qaraqosh, estimated to number 50,000, have
also fled the jihadists.
The administration of Nouri al-Maliki, meanwhile, is tottering in Baghdad,
with fresh signs that both Iran and Iraq's Shia clerical leadership have
withdrawn their support for him. All of this leaves what passes these days for
central government in Baghdad struggling to coordinate a response to the IS
advance, let alone reverse its gains of the spring.
2.
The Syrian civil war rages
During late July there were claims that 1,700 people had been killed in Syria
in a single week. Certainly, NGOs (non-governmental organisations) and observers
of the conflict believe the toll there during the past month surpasses that in
Gaza. The fighting has been raging over a gas field in the centre of the country
and in the Qalamoun mountains near Damascus. During the latter offensive, there
have been claims of close cooperation between IS and the Nusra Front (Jabhat
al-Nusra). The two groups both grew out of al-Qaeda in Iraq and have at times
engaged in a murderous internecine rivalry. Were they able to cooperate
effectively on a long term basis, it could be a game changer in Syria.
3. Lebanon is buckling under the strain of Syria's war
The difficulty of hosting so many refugees from the conflict has been
apparent for years in Lebanon, but in the past few days a stand-off has
developed between militant fighters and the Lebanese army in the town of Arsal.
The gunmen, also a combined force from IS and the Nusra Front, have captured 27
members of the Lebanese security forces there, and more than 40 people are
thought to have died in the fighting. They attacked Arsal from across the nearby
Syrian border, apparently because they consider the Lebanese security forces to
be hostile. While there have been many previous occasions since the Syrian conflict began
on which people have feared for the stability of Lebanon, with its fragile
balance of ethnic groups, the siege in Arsal is worrying many. In addition to the loss of life during this week, there are concerns that
Sunni militant groups - who have previously fought Shia Lebanese units from the
militant group Hezbollah that have intervened in the Syrian conflict on the side
of President Bashar al-Assad - may come to regard incursions into Lebanon or
attacks on its security forces as a new part of their struggle. There are fears that the country's army could buckle if such pressure
increased and Sunni-Shia clashes escalate in cities such as the northern
Lebanese city of Tripoli, where sporadic clashes have been going on for
years.
4. Libya has stepped closer to complete
collapse
Fighting between rival militias has intensified - and few expect current UN
ceasefire efforts to give more than a temporary respite. Since last month,
fighting in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, has claimed more than 200 lives and
closed the airport, where airliners have been burnt and the control tower
shattered. This triggered the evacuation of diplomatic missions and by UK
citizens earlier this week.
Meanwhile, in the east of the country, there has also been fighting in
Benghazi, where Islamist militias have claimed successes against the disparate
forces collected by former army general Khalifa Hafter. However, the reverses suffered recently by Gen Hafter seem to be stimulating
Egyptian military involvement in the crisis. There have already been reports,
from reliable sources, of money and equipment flowing across the border. Egypt's
ruler, President Abdul Fateh al-Sisi, apparently sees Gen Hafter's attempt to
battle the militias and bring order to eastern Libya as an extension of his own
fight against the Muslim Brotherhood. Now there are suggestions that Egyptian troops may be operating inside Libya
as part of this effort. This escalating battle is also spilling into Egypt, with
nine soldiers killed near Mersah Matruh, close to the Libyan frontier earlier
this week.
5. Iran and Russia step closer
While the two countries have long enjoyed good commercial and defence ties,
there have been some important developments in recent weeks. They have now
reached an £11bn agreement on oil that could see Russia taking up to half Iran's
exports of crude. Why, when Russia is also a major producer? It seems that the deal might allow
Russia to get Iranian oil to market, by-passing Western sanctions, while the two
countries would also share technology needed to modernise their production of
crude and power grids more generally. Russia is concerned that new Western
sanctions could hit modernisation of its energy sector, and Iran has plenty of
experience of doing it alone. In addition to this new oil deal, reports in recent weeks have suggested that
Russia has stepped up arms deliveries to Iraq, as it struggles against the
advance of IS. Huge amounts of kit were lost to the militant advance, and the US
has been slow to help. So the Russians have flown in items like heavy artillery.
Russia and Iran have also apparently been jointly operating a force of Su-25
bombers on behalf of Iraq. The aircraft have come from both countries and so,
reportedly, have pilots and ground crew.
^ These events just reaffirm my belief that there's nothing worth saving in this part of the world (except for Israel.) Africa and the Middle East seem to be the most unstable places on the whole planet and the majority of that is inner-fighting. If we could only find more oil resources in other places as well as other fuel options then we could completely forget the region and let them do whatever they want. Israel has no oil and yet they are the most technically-advanced and democratic country in the world - that's what I respect from them. Their neighbors just seem like they should always be on the show "Cops" because they have no clue how to get their lives together. ^
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-28691901
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