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IRAQ WARS
US weighs more troops to train Iraqi forces, Sunnis
By Dan De Luce
Washington (AFP) June 9, 2015


Obama okays 450 more troops for Iraq training mission
Washington (AFP) June 10, 2015 - US President Barack Obama on Wednesday approved the deployment of 450 more US military trainers to Iraq, a cautious bid to reverse gains by the Islamic State group.

The White House said the forces will join an already 3,100-strong mission to "train, advise and assist" the Iraqi army and Sunni tribal fighters.

The new contingent will focus on wresting back control of provincial capital Ramadi.

Islamic State seized the predominately Sunni city near Baghdad in May, punching a giant hole in Obama's strategy to "defeat and degrade" the jihadist group.

Obama has ruled out putting combat troops on the ground, instead offering air support, arms and training to an amalgam of disparate Iraqi forces.

There will now be "expedited delivery of essential equipment and materiel" for those tribal and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters -- in coordination with the central government in Baghdad.

While senior Obama military and civilian aides indicate he "hasn't ruled out any additional steps," such as providing field advisors or personnel to call in airstrikes, they say the current strategy will remain in place.

"The president has made it clear that he will look at a range of different options," said Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes.

"Our overriding focus here is making sure that there is Iraqi capacity on the ground."

- Fight for Anbar -

The new US training contingent will be based at Taqaddum Air Base, perched between jihadist-held Ramadi and Fallujah.

That puts US non-combat troops within striking distance of Islamic State fighters, but officials say it also makes recruitment of Sunni tribal fighters easier.

"There is always a risk whenever we're in Iraq that we could be hit with indirect fire, as we have in the past, that we could be attacked," said senior Pentagon official Elissa Slotkin.

"We felt like we could sufficiently mitigate the risk to make it worthwhile to go out there to perform this important mission."

Iraq's Sunni Muslim community -- likely to be key to victory in Anbar -- has yet to join the fight against Islamic State in large numbers.

After years of sectarian tensions, there remains a simmering distrust of the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

There may also be lingering suspicion of the United States, which in previous campaigns recruited Sunni fighters before leaving them to the mercy of Shiite sectarian rulers.

Obama's Republican political adversaries seized on his announcement.

"It's a step in the right direction, but as the president admitted the other day, he has no strategy to win. And this is another tactical move," said House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner.

"I support the tactical move the president is taking, but where's the overarching strategy?"

The Pentagon is drawing up plans to expand the training of Iraqi forces and Sunni tribal fighters in a step that could mean deploying hundreds of additional US troops, officials said Tuesday.

But President Barack Obama's administration is not contemplating a radical change in war strategy or sending American forces into ground combat -- despite advances by the Islamic State group on the battlefield.

"We've determined it is better to train more Iraqi security forces. We are now working through a strategy on how to do that," Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren told reporters.

"Because the forces we've trained are performing better than expected, we feel it's in everyone's interest to train more."

Warren acknowledged that an expanded training effort -- if approved -- could require additional American troops deploying to Iraq, beyond the current force of roughly 3,000 advisers and trainers.

Defense officials told AFP several hundred additional US forces might be required.

"It's very incremental," a defense official said on condition of anonymity.

A ramped up training program could mean deploying "less than a thousand" troops at most, as well as increasing the number of training sites from the four currently being used, the official said.

The training effort would carry "a particular emphasis on the Sunnis," the official said.

Iraq's Sunni community has yet to join the fight against the IS group in large numbers, amid lingering distrust of the Shiite-led government in Baghdad. And the IS jihadists have sought to exploit the Sunnis' sense of alienation from Baghdad.

Until now, the Baghdad government has overseen the training of Sunni tribal fighters and Washington has been frustrated at what it considers the slow pace of the program.

But for the first time, the Obama administration is now looking at American troops directly training Sunni volunteers.

Weapons deliveries to the Sunnis, however, would continue to flow through the Iraqi central government.

- No talk of spotters -

The administration was looking at a mere "refinement" of the current strategy, which has relied on US-led air power in support of local forces on the ground, officials said.

And there was no serious talk of sending forward air controllers to the front with Iraqi or Kurdish forces, or of dramatically expanding the American military presence.

Republican lawmakers have blasted Obama over his approach to the conflict, with some hawks demanding a more aggressive stance that would include spotters on the ground to direct bombing raids and a larger-scale air war.

Although the US military was considering broadening its training effort, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's government has had difficulties providing enough recruits for courses and ensuring units show up properly equipped, officials said.

"We'd like to see... more Sunnis come into the pipeline and be trained," Warren said. "This is what we have urged Abadi to help solve."

After meeting Abadi on Monday in Germany, Obama said the Iraqi side needed to show it could make use of extra help being offered by the United States and other members of the anti-IS coalition.

"All the countries in the international coalition are prepared to do more to train Iraq security forces if they feel that additional work is being taken advantage of," Obama said on the sidelines of the G7 summit.

"And one of the things we're still seeing in Iraq is places where we have more training capacity than we have recruits."

Obama said he was waiting for final plans to be presented by the Pentagon.

US concerns about the Iraqi army's ability to absorb the training were highlighted by the absence of trainees at al-Asad air base in Anbar province, where several hundred American troops are stationed to help with combat instruction.

The Pentagon said Baghdad had pulled out the trainees and redeployed them to help provide security for a religious pilgrimage.

The US-led coalition has trained 8,920 Iraqi troops so far in basic combat skills and 2,601 are going through courses now.

The US-trained troops have deployed to Samarra, north of Baghdad, to a front line in the north with Kurdish peshmerga forces, and in al-Karmah in Anbar province, Warren said.

Other units that completed the training are at the ready for an eventual counterattack to retake the western city of Ramadi, which fell to IS jihadists on May 17.


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IRAQ WARS
US weighs expanded training for Iraqi forces, Sunnis
Washington (AFP) June 9, 2015
The Pentagon is drawing up plans to expand the training of Iraqi forces and Sunni tribal fighters in a step that could mean deploying more US troops, officials said Tuesday. The review of possible options comes in the wake of the Islamic State group's damaging defeat of Iraqi troops in the western city of Ramadi and after President Barack Obama said he was waiting for a Pentagon proposal to ... read more


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