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Iraqi VP asks for arms, training for Sunnis in his country Al-Nujaifi calls on US to disarm pro-Iran militias

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WASHINGTON: Iraq’s highest-ranking Sunni is in Washington this week pleading for more military aid for his community’s militias, hoping the Trump administra­tion will deliver on pledges to counter Iran’s growing power across the Middle East.

Osama Al-Nujaifi is one of Iraq’s three vice presidents, and his brother heads a prominent Iraqi defense faction. Both have been represente­d in Washington by the same lobbyist employed last year by Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump’s first national security adviser. In February, Trump fired Flynn, who is now under investigat­ion by special counsel Robert Mueller.

Al-Nujaifi met Monday with a team of State Department and other officials, kicking off a week of efforts to bolster the influence of Iraq’s minority Sunni Muslims — and shore up his power base ahead of national elections next year.

His requests for equipment and training face resistance: While Trump has tweeted warnings about Shiite Iran’s expanding control over Iraq, American officials are not yet providing military aid directly to Iraq’s Sunni fighters.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Al-Nujaifi recalled the US military support for militias during the “Sunni Awakening” against Al-Qaeda in Iraq a decade ago and said Sunni forces once again “need the ground support of the United States” as Daesh is driven from Iraqi territory. He said the US and Iraq also need to press for the disarmamen­t of Shiite militias, many of which are supported by Iran.

Al-Nujaifi’s push comes with a family complicati­on. His brother, Atheel, is the former governor of the recently liberated city of Mosul and heads a prominent Sunni militia.

Sunnis represent about 40 percent of Iraq, but consistent­ly complain about being underrepre­sented in Iraq’s Shiitedomi­nated government.

Al-Nujaifi said that more attention should be paid to the strengthen­ing of military capabiliti­es of communitie­s wrested from Daesh’s control, like majority Sunni Mosul, which may require sending more American military forces.

A significan­t ramp-up in direct US aid to Iraq’s Sunni militias — let alone American troops — is not likely, analysts say.

“I presume his pleas will be met with collective eye-rolling,” said Michael Knights, a Mideast analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Two years of lobbying in Washington did not win much support for Al-Nujaifi’s brother. After fleeing Mosul when Daesh captured the city in 2014, Atheel Al-Nujaifi turned to Turkey’s government for training and other aid for his militia. US support remained minimal, Knights said.

In 2015 and again last year, Atheel Al-Nujaifi lobbied Congress and other US officials for a long list of weapons and other aid to equip 10,000 fighters.

His sole lobbyist last year was Washington lawyer Robert Kelley, who also worked in 2016 as general counsel for Flynn’s consulting firm. Flynn Intel Group was hired by a Turkish business client seeking to develop a criminal case against a Turkish Muslim cleric whose extraditio­n from the US has been sought by Turkey’s government.

Kelley also helped set up Osama Al-Nujaifi’s meetings this week with Trump administra­tion officials.

Last October, Kelley registered Flynn Intel Group with Congress for its lobbying on behalf of the Turkish-owned company, Inovo BV. But in March, Flynn’s firm abruptly filed instead as a foreign agent with the Justice Department, acknowledg­ing that its work likely aided Turkey’s government. That filing is now under scrutiny as part of Mueller’s probe.

 ??  ?? Osama Al-Nujaifi speaks during an event in Washington in a file photo. (AFP)
Osama Al-Nujaifi speaks during an event in Washington in a file photo. (AFP)

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