The National - News

US starts to withdraw troops from Iraq after victory over ISIL

- MINA ALDROUBI

Iraq’s government yesterday announced that US troops have started to scale down their presence after Baghdad’s declaratio­n of victory over ISIL.

Weapons, equipment and dozens of soldiers have been moved out of the country to Afghanista­n, according to western contractor­s at a US-led coalition base in Iraq.

Government spokesman Saad Al Hadithi told The National that the “American presence will be reduced gradually now that the battle against Daesh has ended”. Mr Al Hadithi said the developmen­t is still in “early stages” and that Iraq will continue “to seek American support, while co-ordination is still ongoing”.

Iraqi politician­s said that the US-led coalition and Baghdad’s central government had formed an agreement to withdraw troops for the first time since the war against ISIL was launched over three years ago, but declined to disclose the exact size of the drawdown.

US Army colonel and coalition spokesman Ryan Dillon said that a “continued coalition presence in Iraq will be conditions-based, proportion­al to the need and in co-ordination with the government of Iraq”.

Michael Stephens, a research fellow at London’s RUSI think tank, believes the US reasoning is mostly related to the country’s needs.

“Extended deployment­s on the ground are expensive, and given that combat operations are now greatly reduced, there is no need for such a big deployment,” he said.

Mr Stephens said there was never a question as to whether the US would retain anything like current force levels in a post-ISIL environmen­t.

The move gives Iraq’s prime minister, Haider Al Abadi “the space to say that he has encouraged the US to lessen its presence in the country, and as a result takes some wind out of the sails of harder line Shia militias who consistent­ly demand that the US leave Iraq immediatel­y”, Mr Stephens told The National.

The withdrawal will “serve prime minister Abadi well in the forthcomin­g elections, burnishing his nationalis­t credential­s and putting more meat on his claims of victory in the war against ISIL”, said Fanar Haddad, senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore.

The drawdown reflects positive shifts in Iraq’s security situation, despite recent operations to push the remaining ISIL cells out of some areas, including Kirkuk, Tuz Khurmatu, Anbar and Diyala.

“Insurgent violence persists and is likely to do so for some time, but militants are no longer able to threaten cities and hold urban terrain.

“The drawdown may also be part of the change in focus the US defence secretary announced last month away from terrorism and more towards ‘great power competitio­n’,” Mr Haddad told The National.

A Pentagon report released in November said there were approximat­ely 9,000 US troops in Iraq as of late September.

The move allows Iraq’s prime minister to say that he has encouraged the US to reduce its presence

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