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IRAQ WARS
Iraq inks deal for $2.7 billion US military loan
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) June 29, 2016


Iraq says 260 IS vehicles destroyed in Fallujah flight
Baghdad (AFP) June 30, 2016 - Air strikes on Islamic State group fighters fleeing after their defeat in Fallujah have destroyed more than 260 vehicles and killed at least 150 jihadists, Iraqi officers said on Thursday.

The strikes began late on Tuesday as hundreds of vehicles carrying weapons and ammunition attempted to leave the jihadists' last positions to the west of the city, the Joint Operations Command said.

"Our heroes in the military aviation destroyed more than 200 vehicles," JOC spokesman Yahya Rasool said.

He said commandos had also seized large quantities of weapons and ammunition.

Rasool said at least 150 IS militants were killed in the strikes, although it was not clear how the dead were counted and identified.

He was referring to a first series of strikes on a massive convoy of several hundred vehicles heading south of Fallujah toward the desert, apparently to areas IS still controls near the border with Syria.

At least another 60 IS vehicles were destroyed later by air strikes conducted by Iraqi and US-led coalition aircraft on a convoy heading northwest of Fallujah, Anbar Operations Command chief Ismail Mahalawi told AFP.

He could not provide an estimate for the number of IS fighters killed in the strikes.

Iraqi forces have retaken full control of Fallujah, an emblematic jihadist bastion just 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Baghdad, after a vast operation that was launched in May.

Iraq secured a deal Wednesday for a $2.7 billion US loan to finance the buying of ammunition and maintenance of tanks and fighters used in the fight against the Islamic State group.

A US embassy statement said the declaration of intent was signed by Ambassador Stuart Jones and Iraqi Finance Minister Hoshyar Zebari.

The US Foreign Military Finance credit facility will help Iraq "defer payment for the purchase of ammunition and maintenance of its F-16s (jets) and M1A1 (Abrams) tanks," Jones said.

The deal gives Iraq eight-and-a-half years to pay for its military purchases, in what the statement said was part of Washington's efforts to ensure Baghdad's economic difficulties do not affect the fight against IS.

Iraq, whose economy is overwhelmingly reliant on oil, is facing a bruising budget crunch caused by the drop in crude prices and the ongoing cost of the war on IS.

The United States, which occupied Iraq for eight years, is the lead nation in a coalition providing Iraq with assistance in the form of air strikes, military advising and training.

U.S. to provide $2.7 billion credit for Iraq
Baghdad (UPI) Jun 29, 2016 - The U.S. will extend a $2.7 billion foreign military finance credit facility to Iraq under a deal announced by the U.S. Embassy in Iraq Wednesday.

The deal, signed by U.S. Ambassador Stuart Jones and Iraqi Minister of Finance Hoshyar Zebari, will allow Iraqi security forces to defer payment for the purchase of ammunition and maintenance of its F-16 aircraft and M1A1 Abrams tanks.

The agreements grants Iraq a one-year grace period and 8 1/2 years in all to pay for military purchases, the embassy statement said.

Under the current strategic framework agreement between the U.S. and Iraq, work is being done to ensure that Iraq's current economic challenges do not affect the continuing campaign to defeat the Islamic State terrorist group, the embassy said.

The announcement comes after news Sunday that the Iraqi army had "fully liberated" the city of Fallujah, which IS took over in 2014.

Last week, the U.S. Army awarded a $30.9 million contract to BH Defense for work on the Iraq International Academy in Baghdad.

Also this month, the U.S. State Department approved a possible foreign military sale to Iraq for AC-208 Combat Caravan sustainment, logistics and spares support worth $181 million.


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Previous Report
IRAQ WARS
Despite fears, Iraq militiamen joined battle inside Fallujah
Fallujah, Iraq (AFP) June 27, 2016
Iraqi Shiite militiamen fought alongside interior ministry forces inside Fallujah to recapture it from the Islamic State group, commanders say, despite earlier assurances they would not enter the Sunni city. Shiite militiamen are widely feared by Iraqi Sunnis, who worry they will carry out reprisal attacks as the country's forces battle to retake areas seized by IS, which overran swathes of ... read more


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