From News Nation:
“Biden, Iraqi PM to announce
end of US combat mission in Iraq”
President Joe Biden and Iraqi
Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi are expected to announce on Monday that
they’ve come to an agreement to end the U.S. military’s combat mission in Iraq
by the end of the year, according to a senior Biden administration official. The
plan to shift the American military mission, whose stated purpose is to help
Iraq defeat the Islamic State group, to a strictly advisory and training role
by year’s end — with no U.S. troops in a combat role — will be spelled out in a
broader communique to be issued by the two leaders following their White House
meeting on Monday afternoon, said the official, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity to discuss the yet to be announced plan.
The official said the Iraqi
security forces are “battle tested” and have proved themselves “capable” of
protecting their country. Still, the Biden administration recognizes that IS
remains a considerable threat, the official said. Indeed, the IS terror
organization is a shell of its former self since it was largely routed on the
battlefield in 2017. Still, it has shown it can still carry out high-casualty
attacks. Last week, the group claimed responsibility for a roadside bombing
that killed at least 30 people and wounded dozens in a busy suburban Baghdad
market.
The U.S. and Iraq agreed in April
that the U.S. transition to a train-and-advise mission meant the U.S. combat
role would end, but they didn’t settle on a timetable for completing that
transition. The announcement comes less than three months before parliamentary
elections slated for Oct. 10. Al-Kadhimi faces no shortage of problems.
Iranian-backed militias operating inside Iraq have stepped up attacks against
U.S. forces in recent months, and a series of devastating hospital fires that
left dozens of people dead and soaring coronavirus infections have added fresh
layers of frustration for the nation. For al-Kadhimi, the ability to offer the
Iraqi public a date for the end of the U.S. combat presence could be a feather
in his cap ahead of the election. Biden administration officials say al-Kadhimi
also deserves credit for improving Iraq’s standing in the Mideast.
Last month, King Abdullah II of
Jordan and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi visited Baghdad for joint
meetings — the first time an Egyptian president has made an official visit
since the 1990s, when ties were severed after Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait. In
March, Pope Francis made an historic visit to Iraq, praying among ruined
churches in Mosul, a former IS stronghold, and meeting with the influential
Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in the holy city of Najaf. The
U.S. and Iraq have been widely expected to use the face-to-face meeting to
announce plans for the end of the combat mission, and al-Kadhimi before his
trip to Washington made clear that he believes it’s time for the U.S. to wind
down the combat mission. “There is no need for any foreign combat forces on
Iraqi soil,” al-Kadhimi told The Associated Press.
The U.S. troop presence has stood
at about 2,500 since late last year when former President Donald Trump ordered
a reduction from 3,000. The announcement to end the U.S. combat mission in Iraq
comes as the U.S. is in the final stages of ending its war in Afghanistan,
nearly 20 years after President George W. Bush launched the war in response to
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. The U.S. mission of training
and advising Iraqi forces has its most recent origins in former President
Barack Obama’s decision in 2014 to send troops back to Iraq. The move was made
in response to the Islamic State group’s takeover of large portions of western
and northern Iraq and a collapse of Iraqi security forces that appeared to
threaten Baghdad. Obama had fully withdrawn U.S. forces from Iraq in 2011,
eight years after the U.S. invasion.
The distinction between combat troops and those involved in training and advising can be blurry, given that the U.S. troops are under threat of attack. But it is clear that U.S. ground forces have not been on the offensive in Iraq in years, other than largely unpublicized special operations missions aimed at Islamic State group militants. Pentagon officials for years have tried to balance what they see as a necessary military presence to support the Iraqi government’s fight against IS with domestic political sensitivities in Iraq to a foreign troop presence. A major complication for both sides is the periodic attacks on bases housing U.S. and coalition troops by Iraqi militia groups aligned with Iran.
The
vulnerability of U.S. troops was demonstrated most dramatically in January 2020
when Iran launched a ballistic missile attack on al-Asad air base in western
Iraq. No Americans were killed, but dozens suffered traumatic brain injury from
the blasts. That attack came shortly after a U.S. drone strike killed Iranian
military commander Qassim Soleimani and senior Iraqi militia commander Abu
Mahdi al-Muhandis at Baghdad International Airport. The U.S. military mission
since 2014 has been largely focused on training and advising Iraqi forces. In
April, in a joint statement following a U.S.-Iraqi meeting in Washington, they
declared, “the mission of U.S. and coalition forces has now transitioned to one
focused on training and advisory tasks, thereby allowing for the redeployment
of any remaining combat forces from Iraq” at a time to be determined later. Monday’s
communique is also expected to detail U.S. efforts to assist the Iraqi
government’s COVID-19 response, education system and energy sector.
^ American troops in Iraq have
been used in non-combat training roles for a long time now so this announcement
is really only adding to that training. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/world/biden-iraqi-pm-to-announce-end-of-us-combat-mission-in-iraq/
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