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Militants Attack Iraq's Largest Oil Refinery As Sectarian Clashes Spread

An Iraqi boy and other civilians look at the aftermath of a car bomb in Baghdad's Sadr City on Wednesday. The violence in the Shiite district comes as Sunni militants advance in northern Iraq.
Karim Kadim
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AP
An Iraqi boy and other civilians look at the aftermath of a car bomb in Baghdad's Sadr City on Wednesday. The violence in the Shiite district comes as Sunni militants advance in northern Iraq.

The Sunni militant group that has stormed across Iraq invaded the country's largest oil refinery today, hitting it with mortars. The government is using limited air attacks to strike back at ISIS, which now controls large areas of Iraq's north.

"The oil refinery in Beiji has been under siege since the militant fighters of ISIS seized the town of Beiji in their sweep through northern Iraq," NPR's Deborah Amos reports from Irbil, Iraq. "In an offensive at dawn, ISIS fighters attacked the refinery with machine-gun fire and mortars, according to Iraqi security forces."

Amos says the facility was closed earlier this week and its German technical staff told to leave. She adds that the closure has already spurred fuel shortages, with long gas lines forming at gas stations.

Militants of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria are now in control of 75 percent of the Beiji refinery, according to Reuters.

The news agency also says Iranian President Hassan Rouhani went on national TV last night to say the Shiite country won't allow the Sunni extremists to harm holy shrines in Iraq. And while he said that many Iranians were eager to fight in Iraq, "Thanks be to God, I'll tell the dear people of Iran that veterans and various forces — Sunnis, Shias and Kurds all over Iraq — are ready for sacrifice."

You can read about the origins of the Sunni-Shiite rift at our Parallels blog.

As we've reported, ISIS has advanced to the city of Baqouba, less than an hour's drive from Baghdad. It has already taken the large city of Mosul, along with Tikrit. Other cities are being fiercely contested.

Men carry the coffins of Iraqi soldiers who were killed in the clashes with militants in northern Iraq, during a funeral procession in Najaf on Wednesday. More than 2 million Iraqis have volunteered to fight against militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, officials say.
Khider Abbas / EPA /LANDOV
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EPA /LANDOV
Men carry the coffins of Iraqi soldiers who were killed in the clashes with militants in northern Iraq, during a funeral procession in Najaf on Wednesday. More than 2 million Iraqis have volunteered to fight against militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, officials say.

Iraqi security forces have reportedly fought to retake parts of Tal Afar, but the country is seeking help: Its ambassador has pleaded for U.S. airstrikes, and its Shiite leader, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, went on state television with Kurdish and Sunni officials to appeal for national unity.

The crisis in Iraq has prompted President Obama to meet with congressional leaders at the White House today, when they'll discuss possible ways to help Iraq's central government survive.

It's unclear what those options are. In a story Monday in which NPR's David Welna asks the question, "What, exactly, are U.S. interests in Iraq's turmoil?" he cites some experts who "question whether oil, terrorism or anything else justifies U.S. military action in Iraq."

An article at the BBC's site suggests it may be too late to help Baghdad.

"ISIS's takeover of most of the so-called Sunni Triangle, as well as Mosul, the second largest city with almost 2 million people, hammers a deadly nail in the coffin of the post-Saddam Hussein nation-building project," writes Fawaz A. Gerges of the London School of Economics. "Fragile Iraqi institutions now lie in tatters."

Gerges says the possible outcomes now range from a power-sharing agreement with the Sunni and Shiite sects, along with the Kurdish region — or a split of the country's territory into three separate states.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.