US to send around 600 more troops to Iraq for Mosul offensive

US to send around 600 more troops to Iraq for Mosul offensive

ALBUQUERQUE
US to send around 600 more troops to Iraq for Mosul offensive

REUTERS photo

The United States will send about 600 extra troops to Iraq to train local forces for an offensive on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) stronghold of Mosul, U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Sept. 28.
ISIL seized Mosul along with other areas in June 2014, but the country’s forces have since regained significant ground from the jihadists and are readying for a drive to retake Iraq’s second-largest city.

“These [U.S.] forces will be primarily to enable Iraqi security forces, and also peshmerga, in the operations to isolate and collapse ISIL’s control over Mosul,” Carter told reporters on a work trip to New Mexico. Peshmerga are Kurdish fighters.

“Also to protect and expand Iraqi security forces’ gains elsewhere in Iraq,” he added.

The U.S. forces will head to Qayyarah, a strategically vital air base 65 kilometers (40 miles) south of Mosul that will help funnel supplies and troops toward the city, as well as to other locations including the joint Iraqi-U.S. Al Asad air base. 

They notably will beef up flight capabilities at Al Asad for night operations and operations in low visibility, such as poor weather.

A U.S.-led coalition is carrying out air strikes against ISIL in Iraq and Syria, and Washington has already authorized the deployment of more than 4,600 military personnel to Iraq.

Most are in advisory or training roles, working with Iraqi and peshmerga forces, but some American troops have fought ISIL on the ground, and three members of the U.S. military have been killed by the jihadists in Iraq.

Earlier on Sept. 28, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s office indicated it had requested “a final increase in the number of American trainers and advisers” to support Iraqi troops in the northern city.

The statement from Abadi’s office noted that U.S. forces are helping Iraq in its battle against the jihadists. But their presence remains extremely politically sensitive due to the nine-year war the United States fought in the country.

The statement said the number of trainers and advisers would start to be reduced as soon as Mosul is retaken from ISIL, and also asserted that no American troops had fought alongside Iraqi troops.

In reality, American special forces have fought ISIL alongside Iraqi Kurdish forces on several occasions that have been made public, and likely in other operations that have not come to light.

Carter said the additional U.S. forces would be tasked with training Iraqis, gathering intelligence and providing logistical support for the Mosul push.

“But I need to make clear... American forces combating ISIL in Iraq are in harm’s way... no one should be in any doubt about that,” Carter said.

How long they will stay is up to the Iraqis, Carter insisted.

“We are certainly to continue to help the Iraqi security forces in whatever measure and manner they wish to consolidate the control over their country after they’ve recaptured this last major ISIL center,” he said.

According to Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis, the new deployment is for 615 troops. That would bring total U.S. forces in Iraq to 5,262.

The actual number would be higher than that because the tally does not include certain assignments.
The troops “will move very soon,” Davis said.

Carter expects the Mosul offensive to begin in the coming weeks, but stressed the decision was an Iraqi one.