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IRAQ WARS
US-led anti-IS coalition ends Iraq combat mission
By Laure Al Khoury
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 9, 2021

Timeline: US involvement in Iraq since 2003 invasion
As Iraq says the US-led coalition's combat mission against the Islamic State group there is over, we look back on American involvement in the oil-rich country since it invaded in 2003 to depose Saddam Hussein.

- 2003: Invasion -

On March 20, 2003, the US leads an invasion of Iraq after then president George W. Bush accuses Saddam of holding "weapons of mass destruction".

By April 9, US troops capture Baghdad, where a statue of Saddam is toppled by a US tank with the help of a crowd of jubilant Iraqis.

Bush announces the end of major combat operations on May 1.

On October 2, the US admits no weapons of mass destruction have been found.

On December 13, Saddam is captured near his hometown of Tikrit after nine months on the run. He is hanged three years later.

- 2004: Abu Ghraib -

The broadcast in April 2004 of images of torture and other abuse of Iraqis detained at the US-run Abu Ghraib military prison shocks the world, undermining the position of the Americans in Iraq.

Power is transferred to an interim government in June.

- Insurgency, sectarian bloodbath -

In November 2004, more than 10,000 American and 2,000 Iraqi soldiers attack the Sunni Arab city of Fallujah, which has become a symbol of resistance to the occupation, after the lynching of four Americans in March.

In February 2006, Al-Qaeda-linked Sunni extremists blow up a Shiite shrine in Samarra, sparking a wave of sectarian killings that rages until 2008 and leaves tens of thousands dead.

In January 2007, Bush announces the deployment of 30,000 more troops, bringing the total to 165,000, saying the surge is needed to restore control.

- 2009: US starts to go -

In February 2009, new US president Barack Obama, who had opposed the invasion, says most troops will be withdrawn by August 2010.

On December 18, 2011, the last US soldiers leave.

More than 100,000 civilians have been killed since the invasion, according to the Iraq Body Count database. The US lost nearly 4,500 troops.

- 2014: Fighting IS -

In January 2014, jihadists from the Islamic State group capture Fallujah and parts of nearby Ramadi.

In June, they seize the northern city of Mosul and by the end of 2014 hold one-third of Iraq.

The US bombards positions of jihadists that threaten Iraqi Kurdistan and thousands of Christians and Yazidis.

With the help of the US-led coalition, Iraqi forces drive IS from the country's urban centres and, in December 2017, declare victory.

- 2019: Jousting with Iran -

Since the invasion, America's arch-foe Iran has strengthened its influence over Iraq, backing the Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary force that played a key role in driving out IS.

On December 31, 2019, thousands of Iraqis attack the US embassy in Baghdad to protest a deadly bombing against a Hashed faction.

On January 3, 2020, top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani and senior Hashed commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis are killed in a US drone strike in Baghdad.

Iran responds with missile strikes on bases hosting US soldiers in Iraq.

- 2020: US troops start to go -

The Iraqi parliament calls for an end to the presence of foreign troops in the country.

In August, then president Donald Trump says US forces will leave Iraq but gives no date. Troop numbers are reduced from 5,200 to 3,000 in September.

- 2021: Combat mission over -

In July 2021, President Joe Biden said US combat operations in Iraq would end this year, but that soldiers would continue to train, advise and support Iraq's military in the fight against IS.

Some 2,500 US troops remain in Iraq but pro-Iran groups want them out by December 31.

Iraq announces that the coalition's combat mission is over on Thursday, with the transition to a "non-combat mission" to be completed by the end of the year.

The US-led coalition against the Islamic State group has finished its combat mission in Iraq and will shift to a training and advisory role, the alliance and its host country said Thursday.

The change of the mission for around 2,500 American troops stationed in the war-battered country by the end of the year was first announced by US President Joe Biden in July when he hosted Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi.

The Iraqi government has been under pressure from powerful pro-Iranian political groups with armed wings that have vehemently demanded all US troops leave the country.

"We are officially announcing the end of the coalition forces' combat mission," national security adviser Qassem al-Aaraji wrote on Twitter.

"The relationship with the international coalition continues in the areas of training, advising and capacity building" of Iraqi forces, he added.

Aaraji was speaking after a meeting between the coalition and the Joint Operations commanders of the Iraqi security forces.

The coalition confirmed it had "completed its transition to a non-combat mission".

In a statement, it said Iraqi forces "protect Coalition personnel who are invited guests" and that while "Coalition personnel do not have a combat role, they maintain the inherent right of self-defence".

In effect, the about 2,500 US and 1,000 other coalition troops deployed in Iraq will remain in the country. They have been acting as advisers and trainers since mid-2020.

IS established a so-called caliphate across swathes of Syria and Iraq from 2014.

It was defeated in Iraq in 2017 after offensives by Iraqi forces with the support of the coalition that has included more than 80 countries, among them Britain, France and several Arab nations.

Even though Iraq declared victory against the IS jihadists in December 2017, the group's remnants still carry out attacks against security forces and civilians and in recent weeks killed several Kurdish fighters in northern Iraq.

- 'Change in messaging' -

The Hashed al-Shaabi, a former coalition of Iraqi paramilitary groups now integrated into the regular forces, an influential political player and ally of Tehran, is particularly virulent about the departure of American troops.

On social media networks, groups close to pro-Iranian factions have been issuing threats and reminding Washington of a December 31 deadline they have set for a full US withdrawal.

Dozens of rocket and drone attacks have targeted American troops and interests in Iraq in recent months. Never claimed, these attacks are systematically blamed by the United States on pro-Iranian factions.

Washington does not plan to abandon Iraq to the influence of its arch enemy Tehran, with whom it is engaged in a standoff over the Iranian nuclear programme.

Analyst Nicholas Heras of the Newlines Institute in Washington said the United States "continues to have the same military role in Iraq as before, with the major change being the messaging of that role".

"Put simply, the political and security environment in Iraq is so charged that the Biden team wants America to keep a low profile and avoid crises, especially with Iran.

"The White House is well aware that if the United States rocks the boat too much in Iraq, Iran-backed militias will attack US forces, which could ruin American public opinion on staying in the nuclear talks with Iran."

- 'Clandestine presence' -

Iraqi interior ministry media official General Saad Maan told a news conference on Thursday that "the coalition will have completely finished the transition to a non-combat mission before the end of the year".

He was quoting what the coalition commander, Major General John W. Brennan Jr., had said during their meeting.

The majority of US troops sent to Iraq in 2014 as part of the coalition were withdrawn under president Donald Trump.

But Iraq remains an important link for Washington's strategic posture, particularly for anti-jihadist operations in neighbouring Syria.

A UN report early this year said the IS maintains some 10,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria and conducts a sustained insurgency on both sides of the border.

The coalition insists it is in Iraq at the invitation of the government, its troops now stationed at three Iraqi bases managed by Iraqi forces.

In recent months, it has made numerous announcements highlighting its change of mission.

In November, it underlined in a press release the departure from Iraq of more than 2,100 trucks carrying military equipment.


Related Links
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century


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IRAQ WARS
Three Turkish soldiers killed in Iraq: ministry
Istanbul (AFP) Dec 9, 2021
Three Turkish soldiers died Thursday in an attack in northern Iraq launched by outlawed Kurdish militants, prompting a retaliatory air strike, the Turkish defence ministry said. "Three of our heroic soldiers were killed in an attack staged by the terrorists in the north of Iraq," the ministry said, referring to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). "There's an ongoing operation in the region." Turkish forces routinely conduct military strikes against PKK hideouts in the mountains of northern ... read more

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