The Asian Age

US-led coalition troops start leaving Iraqi bases: Officials

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Baghdad, March 17: The US-led coalition will redeploy hundreds of troops from bases in Iraq including to outside the country, coalition and US officials said Tuesday, with one calling it a “historic” move. The announceme­nt came hours after another rocket attack targeted an Iraqi base where foreign troops are located, the 24th such attack in less than six months.

“The coalition is re-positionin­g troops from a few smaller bases,” said coalition spokesman Myles Caggins. The first redeployme­nt was taking place Tuesday from Qaim, the western base along the border with Syria, a coalition official said.

“A transfer ceremony is taking place today to hand over the facilities to Iraqi forces, and the intent is that all coalition troops will be leaving Qaim,” the official said.

“It’s historic,” the official added, saying about 300 US-led coalition troops would be moved out of the base. Some had already been redeployed to coalition positions in neighbouri­ng war-ravaged Syria along with artillery, while others would be sent to other bases in Iraq or to Kuwait.

The official denied that the redeployme­nt was a response to a spike over the last week in rocket

A soldier sits atop a vehicle in Iraq’s southern city of Basra on Tuesday. — AFP

attacks targeting foreign troops stationed across Iraq. Early Tuesday, two Katyusha rockets hit an Iraqi base south of the capital hosting Spanish units of the US-led coalition as well as NATO troops.

On March 11, a volley of rockets killed two US military personnel and a British soldier at the Taji airbase, which was hit again three days later.

The US responded with air strikes on five positions controlled by Kataeb Hezbollah, a Iran-backed group and member of the Hashed al-Shaabi military network.

The Hashed has been formally integrated into the Iraqi state’s security forces but more hardline groups continue to operate independen­tly.

Some 5,200 US forces are positioned across Iraq and form the bulk of the coalition

set up in 2014 to help local forces battle the Islamic State jihadist group. They are deployed at about a dozen bases in Iraq alongside local forces.

A US official said that coalition troops would leave three bases. In addition to Qaim, troops at the Qayyarah and Kirkuk bases in northern Iraq were set to be withdrawn by the end of April.

“There was no trigger but the violence helped keep the (withdrawal) pace fast,” the official added, saying overall troop numbers in Iraq would remain the same.

In January, Iraq’s parliament voted to oust all foreign forces from the country after a US drone strike in Baghdad killed top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani and the Hashed’s deputy chief, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. — AFP

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