Iraqi officials say Baghdad wants to minimize reliance on US

Iraqi officials say Baghdad wants to minimize reliance on US
In this Jan. 8, 2020 file photo, protesters hold a banner with Arabic that reads, "Iran out, US out, Baghdad is free" during a sit-in at Tahrir Square in Baghdad, Iraq. The Iraqi government has told its military not to seek assistance from the US-led coalition forces in operations against Daesh, two senior Iraqi military officials said. (AP)
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Updated 05 February 2020
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Iraqi officials say Baghdad wants to minimize reliance on US

Iraqi officials say Baghdad wants to minimize reliance on US
  • Iraqis are seeking to minimize coalition assistance against Daesh, based on government orders
  • The US-led coalition paused its mission to fight Daesh in Iraq on Jan. 5 in the wake of the strike

BAGHDAD: The Iraqi government has told its military not to seek assistance from the US-led coalition in operations against the Daesh group, two senior Iraqi military officials said, in the latest tensions between Washington and Baghdad after an American strike killed a top Iranian general and Iraqi militia commander.
Officially, the Iraqi military announced Jan. 30 that it and the coalition resumed joint military operations after a three-week halt. The pause was called amid soaring tensions following the Jan. 3 US airstrike ordered by President Donald Trump that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani and senior Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi Al-Muhandis.
But in practice, Iraqis are seeking to minimize coalition assistance against Daesh, based on government orders, two Iraqi military officials and one militia official said this week.
“After the killing of Soleimani, the Iraqi government decided to inform us formally not to cooperate and not to seek assistance from the US-led international coalition in any operation,” a senior military intelligence official told The Associated Press.
The US-led coalition paused its mission to fight Daesh in Iraq on Jan. 5 in the wake of the strike. That same day Shiite lawmakers, irate by what they called a flagrant violation of sovereignty, pushed a non-binding resolution requesting that the government cancel legal agreements that provide the basis for US troop presence in the country.
Outgoing Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi has stated publicly that US troops must go, but has stepped back from unilaterally canceling existing agreements, saying the matter was up to the next prime minister to decide. Prime Minister-designate Mohammed Allawi has not made his policy toward the troop presence known.
Some 5,200 US soldiers are stationed in Iraqi bases to support local troops fighting Daesh. They are part of a larger international coalition invited by the Iraqi government in 2014.
A commander in Iraq’s elite US- trained Counter-Terrorism Services in western Anbar province said some training continues, but “as for military operations and carrying out operations, there is no support.”
According to coalition spokesperson Col. Myles Caggins, no airstrikes have been conducted since the killing of Soleimani.
“The Iraqis have not requested assistance with airstrikes in recent weeks, while our operations are paused. All Coalition airstrikes have been coordinated with the Iraqi Security Forces for years,” he said.
US Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie, the top American commander for the Middle East, met Tuesday with Iraqi leaders and acknowledged that joint military operations and training have been scaled back, though he said US special operations forces are doing some missions with Iraqi commandos.
“We’re still in a period of turbulence. We’ve got a ways to go,” he said.