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Iraq crisis: Hundreds answer PM's call to fight as Islamist militants advance towards Baghdad Iraq crisis: Baghdad prepares for the worst as Islamist militants vow to capture the city
(about 4 hours later)
Trucks carrying volunteers in Iraq have been heading towards the front lines to defend the capital, after Islamist militants overran two cities and warned a battle will rage as it marched onto Baghdad. Iraq is breaking up. The Kurds have taken the northern oil city of Kirkuk that they have long claimed as their capital. Sunni fundamentalist fighters vow to capture Baghdad and the Shia holy cities further south.
Hundreds of young men crowded in front of the main army recruiting centre in Baghdad on Thursday after authorities urged Iraqis to help battle the insurgents. Government rule over the Sunni Arab heartlands of north and central Iraq is evaporating as its 900,000-strong army disintegrates. Government aircraft have fired missiles at insurgent targets in Mosul, captured by Isis on Monday, but the Iraqi army has otherwise shown no sign of launching a counter-attack.
Fighters of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis) have seized control of Mosul and Tikrit in less than 48-hours, but government forces have managed to stall their advances near Samarra, a city just 110km (68 miles) north of Baghdad. The nine-year Shia dominance over Iraq, established after the US, Britain and other allies overthrew Saddam Hussein, may be coming to an end. The Shia may continue to hold the capital and the Shia-majority provinces further south, but they will have great difficulty in re-establishing their authority over Sunni provinces from which their army has fled.
In Mosul, Iraq’s second biggest city, Sunni militants staged a parade of American Humvees seized from the collapsing Iraqi army, just a day after 500,000 people were forced to flee the area. It is unlikely that the Kurds will give up Kirkuk. “The whole of Kirkuk has fallen into the hands of peshmerga [Kurdish soldiers],” said the peshmerga spokesman Jabbar Yawar. “No Iraqi army remains in Kirkuk.”
Two helicopters, also seized by the militants, flew overhead, witnesses said, apparently the first time the militant group has obtained aircraft in years of waging insurgency on both sides of the Iraqi-Syrian frontier. Foreign intervention is more likely to come from Iran than the US. The Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said that Iran would act to combat “the violence and terrorism” of Isis”. Iran emerged as the most influential foreign power in Baghdad after 2003. As a fellow Shia-majority state, Iraq matters even more to Iran than Syria.
State television showed what it claimed was aerial footage of Iraqi aircraft firing missiles at insurgent targets in Mosul. The targets could be seen exploding in black clouds. Iran will be deeply alarmed by the appearance of a fanatically Sunni proto-state hostile to all Shia in western Iraq and eastern Syria. Abu Mohamed al-Adnani, the Isis spokesman, said today that the Shia, 60 per cent of the Iraqi population, “are a disgraced people”, accusing them of being “polytheists”.
Further south, the fighters extended their advance to towns only about an hour's drive from Baghdad, where Shia militia are mobilising in order to protect their country and fight back. Iraq’s Shia may well conclude that their army has failed them and they must once again rely on militias like the Mehdi Army which was responsible for the slaughter of Sunni in 2005 and 2006. At that time, much of Baghdad was cleansed of Sunni. The loss of Baghdad has never been forgotten or forgiven by Sunni states such as Saudi Arabia, which has long hoped to reverse the Shia dominance in Iraq.
The army of the Shia Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government in Baghdad has essentially evaporated in the face of the onslaught, and abandoned their uniforms and weapons to flee on foot. In Mosul, Isis has so far been careful not to alienate the local population which on the west bank of the Tigris River is Sunni. There are large Kurdish neighbourhoods in the east of the city. Refugees are finding it difficult to enter the Kurdistan Regional Government zone because of stringent checks and single men, suspected of being insurgents, are not allowed entry.
Mohammed al Adnani, the spokesperson for Isis, warned "the battle is not yet raging but it will," in a statement posted online. “It will rage in Baghdad and Karbala. So be ready for it. Put on your belts and get ready.” Inside Mosul people reached by The Independent say they are afraid. One woman described how a local petrol station was burnt down by looters though Isis tried to protect it. She said her younger brother had gone to repair it. She says that when her two brothers came back from doing the repair job, “I was horrified that they might have been photographed, their names known and they might be punished when the defeated forces come back.” A reason why many people are fleeing Mosul or are terrified by the prospect of a successful counter-attack by the government is that all the Sunni population is liable to be mistreated as Isis supporters, regardless of their sympathies.
Today, peshmerga fighters, the security forces of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish north, stormed into bases in Kirkuk abandoned by government troops, a peshmerga spokesman said. Isis has tried to show that it can run Mosul and the electricity supply has improved to six hours a day since the Iraqi army left. The Isis spokesman Abu Mohamed al-Adnani has told victorious fighters “not to bother those who do not bother you”. But other proclamations announce the full application of Isis’s fundamentalist creed. 
"The whole of Kirkuk has fallen into the hands of Peshmerga," Jabbar Yawar told Reuters. "No Iraqi army remains in Kirkuk now." The Kurds are taking advantage of the disarray of the government in Baghdad to seize territories along the “trigger line”. This stretches from north-east of Baghdad to the Syrian frontier west of Mosul. The Iraqi Kurds have advanced further towards establishing an independent state, but it is unclear how far they will commit troops to rescue the Baghdad government.
Militants also attacked an Iraqi security checkpoint on Thursday in the town of Tarmiyah, 50 kilometres (31 miles) north of Baghdad, killing five troops and wounding nine, officials told the Associated Press. Iranian intervention would probably come through massively strengthening Shia militias. But the Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki will find it very difficult to reverse the defeats of the last week. 
Lawmakers tried to hold a session to vote on declaring a state of emergency on Thursday, following a request by the PM, but too few MPs showed up and they were unable to reach quorum to vote.
Britain has deployed a humanitarian team in Iraq to assess the needs of civilians fleeing the violent takeover. The US has said it is “deeply concerned” about the continued aggression and is considering providing further assistance to Iraq in fighting the militants, but did not give further details on what this would entail.
Iran's foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, offered his country's support to Iraq in its "fight against terrorism" during a phone call with his Iraqi counterpart, Iranian state TV reported.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Wednesday blasted the Islamic State as "barbaric" and said that his country's highest security body will hold an immediate meeting to review the developments in neighbouring Iraq.
It came as the UN Security Council said it deplored the attacks of Tikrit and Mosul "in the strongest terms" and demanded the immediate return of all hostages abducted from the Turkish consulate.
The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon echoed the council's condemnation, saying that "terrorism must not be allowed to succeed in undoing the path towards democracy in Iraq as determined by the will of the Iraqi people."