The Asian Age

Pentagon to decide troop cap

Trump gives defence secy powers to decide troop levels in Iraq, Syria

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Washington, April 27: The White House is giving the Pentagon greater flexibilit­y to determine the number of US troops in Iraq and Syria, in another move by President Donald Trump to shift greater power to his military leaders.

The decision will give defence secretary Jim Mattis the authority to send more forces into Syria, to assist US-backed local troops as they move to retake Raqqa from the Islamic State group, which has used the city as a de facto capital.

It will also let him adjust the force numbers in Iraq, in the ongoing fight to oust ISIS from Mosul and stabilise it as the rebuilding begins.

The Pentagon has already been making quiet, incrementa­l additions to the troop levels in both countries in recent months, adding hundreds of marines in Syria to provide artillery support, and sending more advisers into Iraq to work with units closer to the fight in Mosul.

Those moves were done with White House approval, but without any formal adjustment to the longstandi­ng troop caps that had been set by the Obama administra­tion.

Dana White, chief spokespers­on for the Pentagon, said on Wednesday that Mr Mattis has not made any changes yet to the current authorised force levels.

Under the Obama White House, military leaders chafed about micromanag­ement that forced commanders to get approvals for routine tactical decisions and personnel moves, and provide justificat­ion for any troops sent into war zones.

Commanders have argued that they should be able to determine troop deployment­s based on the military capabiliti­es they believe are needed at any given time.

The new authority will provide greater transparen­cy about the actual number of US forces in Iraq and Syria after several years of public confusion about the accurate totals.

Under the Obama-mandated caps, the US was limited to 503 officially deployed troops in Syria, and 5,262 in Iraq.

The Pentagon, however, has closer to 7,000 in Iraq, and hundreds more than the cap in Syria, but doesn’t count them because they are on temporary duty or not counted under specific personnel rules.

Trump’s decision applies only to the two countries, and so far does not affect Afghanista­n.

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— AP

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