US to send 560 more troops to aid Iraq’s anti-ISIL fight

US to send 560 more troops to aid Iraq’s anti-ISIL fight

by Joseph Anthony
112 views

Pentagon
chief Ashton Carter said July 11 that Washington will deploy 560
additional troops to aid Iraq’s fight to retake Mosul from jihadists,
further deepening U.S. military involvement in the country.

The announcement, which will bring the total authorized number of American
military personnel in Iraq to more than 4,600, came two days after
Baghdad announced the recapture of a base south of Mosul that is seen as
an important step toward the eventual battle for the city.

Iraq’s
second city Mosul has been under the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant (ISIL) control since June 2014, when the jihadists overran large
parts of Iraq, carrying out atrocities including summary execution-style
killings, mass kidnappings and rape.

ISIL also holds territory
in neighboring Syria, but has lost significant ground in both countries,
and Carter wants to highlight successes, even as the jihadists have
struck back with devastating attacks in Iraq and abroad.

“I am
pleased to report today that… we agreed for the United States to
bolster Iraqi efforts to isolate and pressure Mosul by deploying 560
additional troops,” Carter said at the Baghdad airport following
meetings with the Iraqi premier and defense minister.

U.S.
President Barack Obama made ending the US’s nearly nine-year war in Iraq
a centerpiece of his presidency, but Washington has been drawn ever
deeper back into the country by the war against ISIL.

“The
additional troops will provide a range of support for Iraqi security
forces, including infrastructure and logistical capabilities at the
airfield near Qayyarah,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

Iraqi
Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced July 9 that Iraqi forces had
recaptured the Qayyarah airbase, some 60 kilometers south of Mosul,
which ISIL seized in June 2014.

The base “will become a vital springboard for the (Iraqi forces’] offensive into Mosul,” the Pentagon said.

Earlier in the day, Carter held meetings with Abadi as well as Defense Minister Khalid al-Obeidi.

“Let
me begin… by expressing the condolences of myself and the United
States for the terrorist attacks against the people of Iraq in recent
weeks,” Carter told Abadi on his fourth visit to the country since
becoming defense secretary in 2015.

ISIL has carried out bloody
attacks against civilians as they lose ground, including a bombing in
Baghdad earlier this month that killed 292 people, one of the deadliest
to ever hit the country.

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