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Maliki blames 'conspiracies' for Iraq losses

Published: 13 Jun 2015 - 08:38 pm | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 11:37 pm

 

Baghdad - Iraq's former premier and current vice president, Nuri al-Maliki, blamed "conspiracies" Saturday for the loss of major cities to jihadists and said Baghdad should prioritise paramilitaries over the army to fight them.

But Maliki, who was prime minister when the Islamic State jihadist group began a brutally effective offensive last year, failed to mention the role he and his government played in the debacle.

"Mosul would not have fallen except for a conspiracy, and Ramadi would not have fallen except for a conspiracy," he said in televised remarks, referring to two major cities lost to IS.

He blamed politicians who opposed him and said a plot to weaken the army was hatched in a neighbouring country, but did not name names.

And he even said that denying the existence of a conspiracy amounts to one: "It is a conspiracy to say that there is not a conspiracy."

Maliki, a Shiite, pursued policies while premier that angered and isolated Iraq's Sunni Arabs, who make up the backbone of IS' support, making it easier for the group to operate and expand.

And as commander-in-chief, he sought to centralise control of the military in his office and played a significant part in its degradation, including by appointing commanders because of loyalty over skill.

On Saturday, he said Iraq should give priority to paramilitaries known as Hashed al-Shaabi, or "popular mobilisation" forces, instead of the army.

"Today, we must focus our effort on the Hashed al-Shaabi until we are liberated and end (IS) and free our lands, and then return to building the army," Maliki said.

AFP