Albany Times Union (Sunday)

U.S. set to announce drawdown

Iraqi prime minister wants withdrawal now

- By Jane Arraf and Eric Schmitt

Iraq’s prime minister is heading to Washington this weekend to demand that President Joe Biden withdraw all U.S. combat troops from Iraq, announcing to Iraqi media that the visit would “put an end to the presence of combat forces.”

U.S. officials say the United States is likely to oblige the request from Prime Minister Mustafa al-kadhimi, setting a deadline to be announced Monday for the withdrawal of U.S. combat forces by the end of the year.

Pentagon and other administra­tion officials say they will achieve this by removing a small but

number of the 2,500 U.S. forces currently stationed in Iraq and reclassify­ing on paper roles of other forces. Al-kadhimi will have a political trophy to take home to satisfy antiameric­an factions in Iraq, and the U.S. military presence will remain.

“There will be no U.S. military forces in a combat role by the end of the year,” said a senior U.S. official familiar with ongoing discussion­s. “We anticipate some force adjustment­s in line with that commitment.”

What appears to be a set piece of diplomatic theater is the latest effort by al-kadhimi to tread between the needs and demands of Iraq’s two closest allies, the United States and Iran. Pro-iranian factions have been clamoring for a U.S. departure, while Iraqi officials concede they still need the help of U.S. forces.

The Biden administra­tion is grappling with how to operate in a country that since the U.S. invasion 18 years ago fell increasing­ly under the grip of Iran-backed militias and corrupt politics that has brought Iraq’s government institutio­ns to the brink of collapse.

Al-kadhimi’s government, along with many senior Iraqi military officials, quietly favor the roughly 2,500 U.S. troops in Iraq staying in their current form. But the killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, Iran’s top security and intelligen­ce commander, along with a senior Iraqi security official and eight others in a U.S. drone strike in 2020, has made the U.S.’ current presence politicall­y impossible, and politicall­y undesirabl­e in the United States. After the U.S. drone strike, Iraq’s parliament demanded the government expel U.S. forces — a motion that was nonbinding but sent a strong message to any politician who wanted to stay in power, including the prime minister.

Grappling with the coronaviru­s pandemic, a budget crisis and powerful Iranian-backed militias largely beyond his control, al-kadhimi has accomplish­ed little since taking office two years ago. His advisers argue that if only he were given more time, he could rein in the militias, cut corruption and arrest more killers of hundreds of unarmed protesters and activists.

Most of Iraq’s paramilita­ry units were formed in 2014 in response to a call by the country’s most revered Shiite cleric for Iraqis to mobilize against the Islamic State group. Those militias were later absorbed into Iraq’s official security forces, but the most powerful are tied to Iran, only nominally under control of Iraq.

The United States has repeatedly blamed Iranian-backed militias for the persistent attacks on U.S. targets in Iraq. U.S. and many Iraqi officials believe the militias are also responsibl­e for most assassinat­ions of activists.

Monday’s announceme­nt comes as the Pentagon nears the end of its withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanista­n, ending a 20-year presence there, even as the Taliban have captured dozens of districts around the country in a military offensive.

After President Barack Obama withdrew troops from Iraq in 2011, some remained, under the authority of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. Three years later, with Islamic State group fighters capturing territory across much of Iraq and Syria, the Iraqi government requested U.S. military support to help fight the terrorist group.

Since the Islamic State group was driven from its last Iraqi stronghold in 2017, U.S. officials have maintained that since there are currently no combat operations authorized in Iraq and no combat troops in the country. But a small number of U.S. Special Operations Forces serving as advisers, and trainers occasional­ly accompany Iraqi counterter­rorism forces on combat missions against Islamic State fighters.

In Washington on Friday, Pentagon officials said they expected the troop levels in Iraq to remain at their current level of about 2,500 and that the role of some U.S. forces would be redefined.

But while giving alkadhimi temporary political cover, a reclassifi­cation of U.S. forces rather than a drawdown likely will not satisfy the militias and political parties calling for a withdrawal of all troops, Iraqi officials say.

“Changing their name from combat forces to trainers and advisers — we consider it as an attempt at deception,” said Mohammad al-rubai’e, spokesman for Asaib Ahl al-haq, of a huge Iranianbac­ked militia, with d16 seats in Iraqi parliament.

Those militias and many Iraqi politician­s linked to them contend that the real purpose of U.S. forces in Iraq is to counter Iran, not threats from the Islamic State group. Iran this year has carried out increasing­ly sophistica­ted attacks, including drone strikes, on U.S. targets in Iraq, and America retaliated.

“The dialogue with the United States is, how can we think about maintainin­g a presence that is useful without incurring a high political cost?”said Thanassis Cambanis, senior fellow at Century Foundation, a U.S. think tank, during a visit to Iraq this week. “The interests of the two sides don’t really align because the U.S. isn’t going to see it in its interests to continue to be attacked by these militias that the government of Iraq can’t curtail.”

Iran denies responsibi­lity for the attacks, but its leaders vowed to retaliate against America for killing Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-muhandis, Iraqi deputy commander overseeing militias.

The United States over the past year has increasing­ly focused on force protection, withdrawin­g from vulnerable bases in Iraq to consolidat­e its presence on three Iraqi military installati­ons.

Islamic State is no longer able to capture territory but still car bombs markets and streets.

“Within Iraq, ISIS is defeated as a significan­t military threat, but its radical ideology lives on,” said Mark Kimmitt, a retired U.S. Army brigadier general and ex-state Department official who consults for U.S. firms doing business in Iraq.

The U.S. occupation of Iraq convulsed the country, not only toppling its dictator in 2003 but also disbanding the army, hollowing out its government institutio­ns and helping returned Iraqi exiles create a political system along sectarian and ethnic lines that haunts the nation to this day.

For years, that corrupt system has awarded government ministries to political parties that siphon off money meant for public services. The result is barely functionin­g hospitals, ongoing electricit­y cuts, millions of jobless Iraqis and a government that cannot pay its bills.

Before the war, electricit­y barely functioned after more than a decade of U.s.-led sanctions and has never been fully repaired.

Falling 2020 oil prices meant Iraq had trouble meeting its huge government payroll, which tripled since 2004 as political parties in power create jobs for loyalists.

 ?? Ayman Henna / Getty Images ?? Iraqi security soldier stands by destroyed vehicle that was carrying rockets amid sacks of flour, in al-baghdadi in al-anbar province. A nearby base hosting U.S. troops was hit by 14 rockets July 7. Iraq’s prime minister wants Pres. Joe Biden to name a U.S. withdrawal date.
Ayman Henna / Getty Images Iraqi security soldier stands by destroyed vehicle that was carrying rockets amid sacks of flour, in al-baghdadi in al-anbar province. A nearby base hosting U.S. troops was hit by 14 rockets July 7. Iraq’s prime minister wants Pres. Joe Biden to name a U.S. withdrawal date.

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