Weekend Herald

Brownlee lends ear on Mosul rebuild

- Audrey Young

Defence Minister Gerry Brownlee leaves New Zealand today for a meeting in Paris to discuss what happens to Mosul after Iraq takes control of it again.

New Zealand is not involved in any combat role in the move on Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city which was seized by Isis ( Islamic State) two years ago.

But alongside Australia it has helped to train 12,000 Iraqi troops at Camp Taji near Baghdad, and many of those troops are involved in the Mosul mission.

Brownlee said the meeting of the coalition of countries helping Iraq to fight Isis would be briefed on the Mosul campaign but would largely be forward looking.

“If you think of Mosul of being a city with the population of Auckland plus, reestablis­hing civil government there will be a big priority for the Iraqi authoritie­s and part of that will be some of the general policing activities that would normally happen in any civil society.”

New Zealand has offered to undertake training of stabilisat­ion forces, but he said it had not yet been called on.

“The next focus for the New Zealand Australia trainers will be at the NCO level — what we would call warrant officers and senior enlisted soldiers — doing some of the training that would set them up for commanding stabilisat­ion units in the retaken territorie­s.”

Australia has a more active role than New Zealand. It provides air support and it has special forces in the field HQ near Mosul advising and assisting Iraqi special forces.

“The efforts in Iraq are led by the Iraqi security forces and it i s very much a supporting role that every other country is playing to them.”

If that same role was taken post Isis as Iraq tried to settle back to some more comfortabl­e life for its people, that would be a good thing, he said.

The meeting will be hosted by France and the United States and will also include Britain, Canada, Italy, Australia, Germany, the Netherland­s, Spain and Denmark. This will be the fourth meeting of its kind that Brownlee has attended. Meanwhile, Brownlee dismissed reports in the Guardian which listed New Zealand’s SAS as among those playing a combat role in Iraq, saying it had been ruled out by the Government. “We have also been clear that special forces could be deployed for short periods — for example, to provide advice on issues like force protection or to help with high profile visits, as they have many times before.”

 ?? Picture / Martin Hunter ?? As Earthquake Recovery Minister, Gerry Brownlee has experience in big rebuilds.
Picture / Martin Hunter As Earthquake Recovery Minister, Gerry Brownlee has experience in big rebuilds.

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