WASHINGTON, Nov 08, 2014 (AFP) - President Barack Obama on Friday
unveiled plans to send 1,500 additional troops to Iraq to help Baghdad
government forces strike back at Islamic State
jihadists, roughly doubling the number of US soldiers in the country.
The
move marked a deepening US commitment in the open-ended war against the IS
group, three months since American aircraft launched air strikes against the
Sunni extremists.The move extends the US training and advising mission to new
areas as Iraqi and Kurdish forces prime themselves to recapture ground lost to
the IS group, including in the volatile Anbar province in the west where the
Iraqi army has been on the retreat.
The
reinforcements were "part of our strategy for strengthening partners on
the ground" but the troops would have a "non-combat role," the
White House said in a statement.The United States already is carrying out air
strikes against the IS group in Iraq and Syria but officials insisted the
decision did not signal "mission creep" towards another all-out
ground war.
"They
will not be introduced into combat," a senior administration official told
reporters.The US forces will be carrying out the same mission that has been
outlined from the start -- to help the Iraqi forces on the ground, the official
said.
"The mission is not
changing at all for our service members," the official said. "We are
adding personnel to better carry out the mission."
- Iraq request -The 1,500 troops will include roughly 600 advisors to help Iraqi
forces plan operations and nearly 900 trainers who will be deployed across the
country, as Washington steps up the pressure on IS militants who have grabbed
large areas of Iraq and Syria in a brutal campaign marked by atrocities.
To fund the growing war effort, Obama also
planned to request $5.6 billion from Congress, including $1.6 billion to train
and arm the Iraqi forces, officials saidThe additional troops would not deploy
until Congress approved the funding.The White House presented the troop plan
only days after Obama's fellow Democrats suffered a sweeping defeat in midterm
elections with Republicans gaining full control of Congress.
Republican Buck McKeon, chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee, voiced doubts that the president was doing enough to
counter the IS group and other extremists"I remain concerned that the
president's strategy to defeat ISIL (IS) is insufficient," McKeon said.
Obama opted to send more troops after
discussions with commanders -- including the officer running the air war,
General Lloyd Austin -- and aides over the last several weeks, officials said. -
More to come? -Skeptics of Obama's strategy question if the Iraqi army can be
salvaged as long as Sunni tribes feel alienated by the Shiite-led government in
Baghdad.
But officials said they were hopeful a new
Iraqi defense minister would reinvigorate the army, which virtually collapsed
earlier this year against the onslaught of the IS group. "One of the
reasons why we think this is a good idea right now is because the Iraq security
forces have stiffened their spine and have gone on the offense," Pentagon
spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said.
The
US training will focus on 12 Iraqi brigades -- nine army and three Kurdish
Peshmerga brigades -- with at least four training sites located in northern,
western and southern Iraq. Sunni tribes eventually would be trained as well and
officials suggested the Shiite-led Baghdad government was moving to arm the
Sunnis in Anbar.
Other
countries in the anti-IS coalition would also send up to 700 troops to help
train and advise the Iraqi forces. Denmark's defense minister committed to
provide 120 trainers on Friday in talks at the Pentagon, Kirby said. There are now about 1,400 American troops in
Iraq, including 600 advisors in Baghdad and Arbil, and 800 troops providing
security for the US embassy in the capital and the Baghdad airport.
Obama had previously authorized up to 1,600
troops in Iraq and his decision Friday will raise the maximum troop footprint
to 3,100.US officials would not rule out sending more troops beyond those
announced, but said the prohibition against combat would remain in place.
Obama had resisted keeping troops in Iraq
earlier in his term, vowing to end the American presence that began with the
2003 invasion and continued as an occupation through 2011.Officials had weighed
keeping several thousand troops in Iraq after 2011, but talks with the Iraqi
government, then led by prime minister Nuri al-Maliki, broke down over the
issue of legal immunity, which Washington insisted on and Baghdad declined to
provide.
With Friday's
announcement, Obama will be deploying a force to Iraq along the lines of that
considered in 2011, under legal protections similar to those it rejected as
insufficient three years ago.
No comments:
Post a Comment