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TERROR WARS
Netanyahu supports Obama in IS fight, but cautions on Iran
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 16, 2014


Bomber targets UN convoy near Baghdad airport
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 16, 2014 - A suicide car bomb attack targeted a United Nations convoy near Baghdad international airport Sunday, causing no injuries among UN staff, a statement and security officials said.

The UN said a three-vehicle convoy was hit by an explosion on its way from the airport to Baghdad's highly-fortified Green Zone, where its headquarters are located.

"No UN personnel were killed or injured in the incident and all proceeded safely back to the UN compound. One of the vehicles sustained serious damage," it said.

"The unfortunate incident this morning will not deter the UN from continuing its work in support of Iraq and its people, who have lived with violence for too long," UN Iraq envoy Nickolay Mladenov said.

Security and medical officials said the attack was a suicide bombing and occurred on the airport road near the facility's usually highly-secured perimeter.

At least three people were wounded in the blast, officials said.

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed support Sunday for the US fight against Islamic State militants, but cautioned against any softening toward Iran.

"We want them both to lose. The last thing we want is to have any one of them get weapons of mass destruction," Netanyahu said in an interview with CBS Face the Nation.

His comments came shortly after IS claimed the beheading of another Western hostage, US aid worker Peter Kassig, along with that of 18 men described as Syrian soldiers.

In an undated video, a masked black-clad jihadist seen standing above a severed head says: "This is Peter Edward Kassig, a US citizen of your country."

Netanyahu expressed support for US President Barack Obama's leadership of a coalition against IS and said "we're with all the American people who understand the savagery that we're all up against."

IS "has to be defeated and it can be defeated," he said.

But Netanyahu portrayed the situation as a "global conflict" against militant Islam, not just Sunni-based IS and Al-Qaeda but also Shiite Iran-backed Hezbollah.

"We want them both to lose," he said, insisting: "Iran is not your ally. Iran is not your friend. Iran is your enemy."

The United States and other Western powers have been negotiating with Iran to limit its nuclear program, with a November 24 deadline for a deal fast approaching.

Netanyahu reiterated Israel's opposition to any agreement that leaves Iran with a residual capacity to enrich uranium, and urged tougher sanctions on Tehran as an alternative to a deal.

"The alternative to a bad deal is not war. The alternative to a bad deal are more sanctions, tougher sanctions, that will make Iran dismantle its capacity to make nuclear bombs," he said.


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TERROR WARS
Baghdadi: jihadist 'caliph' terrorising two countries
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 13, 2014
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the self-proclaimed "caliph" terrorising Iraq and Syria, is a preacher who rose from obscurity to lead the world's most feared jihadist organisation. His Islamic State group on Thursday released an audio recording purporting to be of Baghdadi, days after rumours that air strikes may have killed or wounded him. Like much about Baghdadi, little is known about the stri ... read more


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