The withdrawal of United States troops from Iraq in 2011 is part of the process made for the Iraqis government preparation to take control of their own affairs. It is a part of a process to build an inclusive democracy and political system that fully respects the right of all Iraqi communities in the political process and in government administration. However this move, and the failure of Iraqi leaders to accommodate the process, has led to the movement of militants across Iraq led by the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, or ISIS. "ISIS was composed of and supported by a variety of Sunni Arab terrorist insurgent groups, including its predecessor organizations, Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) (2003 “2006), Mujahideen Shura Council (2006 “2006), the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) (2006 “2013) and beside a number of Iraqi tribes that profess Sunni Islam. ISIS is a jihadist group, widely regarded as a terrorist organization. Its main goal is to establish self-proclaimed caliphate and claims religious authority over all Muslims across the world and aspires to bring much of the Muslim-inhabited regions around the world under its direct political control. 1 With the recent success of the taking over the city of Mosul and Kirkuk, an oil-rich city in northern Iraq, ISIS fighters are now within reach of capital city of Baghdad. United States fear that additional ISIS victories could lead to the disintegration of Iraq and cause sectarian civil war as well as giving birth to an extremist Sunni militant extending over Iraqi and Syrian territories.2 On August 8th, 2014, United States President Barrack Obama has approved an airstrike, after having dispatched the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush to the Persian Gulf in a response to the ISIS action over the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) capital of Erbil,and Mount Sinjar, where the ISIS is surrounding thousand of civilians who are member of ethno-religious minority known as Yazidis. It is an effor