US vows to continue effort as anti-ISIL group meets

US vows to continue effort as anti-ISIL group meets

WASHINGTON-Anadolu Agency

The U.S. on Nov. 14 vowed to continue leading the ISIL coalition on its "essential security effort" while acknowledging significant milestones the multinational body has accomplished.

Addressing a meeting of the coalition's foreign ministers, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said all partner nations "should all be very proud" of the elimination of the terror group's territorial presence, but warned that the coalition must remain vigilant "to ensure ISIL cannot gain new footholds."

That includes stabilizing liberated areas and ensuring the delivery of humanitarian aid, he said.

"American leadership continues on each of these missions today," he said. "This is not our story alone. This coalition, the group assembled here today, has been one of the most successful multilateral undertakings of the century.”

The international coalition counts 81 partner nations, including the whole of NATO.

Jens Stoltenberg, the trans-Atlantic alliance's top official, hailed the killing of former ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as a "milestone in our efforts against international terrorism," but cautioned that the fight is not yet complete.

"ISIL is still a threat," he said, making special mention of the situation in northern Syria where he acknowledged differences between NATO allies.

"But at the same time we agree on the need to safeguard the gains that were made against our common enemy ISIS, and to support UN efforts to achieve a sustainable political solution," he added.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu is expected to address the international meeting on Nov. 14 morning. The remarks will be closed to the press.

The meetings will conclude with a press briefing by U.S. special envoy, James Jeffrey, and Nathan Sales, the State Department's counterterrorism coordinator, early in the afternoon.