Houston Chronicle

Top Pentagon official assures Iraq U.S. role will stay limited

- By Robert Burns

BAGHDAD — The top Pentagon official assured Iraqi leaders Tuesday that the U.S. will stick to its limited military role in Iraq, a message aimed at recent talk by some Iraqi politician­s of forcing a U.S. troop withdrawal.

Pat Shanahan, the acting secretary of defense, said that in talks with Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi, he stressed U.S. respect for Iraqi sovereignt­y, an issue that has become a hot-button topic among Iraqis since President Donald Trump suggested using Iraq as a base for monitoring neighborin­g Iran and for potential attacks against remaining elements of the Islamic State group in Syria.

“I wanted to make clear to him (Abdul-Mahdi) that we recognize our role,” Shanahan told reporters later after he flew to Brussels, Belgium. “We understand that we’re there by invitation, and that we jointly share the resources and that we clearly recognize their sovereignt­y.”

Shanahan said he did not raise the possibilit­y of moving additional U.S. troops into Iraq to offset the coming withdrawal of American forces from Syria. The U.S. has about 5,200 troops in Iraq as trainers and advisers to Iraqi security forces in their battle against insurgent elements of the Islamic State group that once controlled large swaths of Iraqi territory. He said they discussed “how we can generate more capacity and capability in the Iraqi security forces.”

Shanahan, who is on the second leg of his first internatio­nal trip as the acting Pentagon chief, said he was mindful of Iraqi parliament­ary proposals to “restrict the number of U.S. forces in Iraq.” He said he also emphasized to Abdul-Madhi the role security plays in Iraq’s economic future. “We really talked about that economic security,” Shanahan said.

Trump upset Iraqis by saying earlier this month that U.S. forces should use their Iraqi positions to keep an eye on neighborin­g Iran. Iraqi officials have said Trump’s proposal would violate the Iraqi constituti­on.

Trump also has angered Iraqi politician­s by arguing that he would keep U.S. troops in Iraq and use the country as a base from which to strike extremists in Syria if necessary, after the 2,000 troops now in Syria depart in coming weeks.

Curbing foreign influence has become a prominent topic in Iraq after parliament­ary elections last year in which Shiite politician­s backed by Iran made significan­t gains. Meanwhile, Shiite militias that fought alongside U.S.-backed Iraqi government troops against IS in recent years, gained outsized influence along the way.

U.S. forces withdrew from Iraq in 2011, but they returned in 2014 at the invitation of the government to help battle the Islamic State group after it seized vast areas in the north and west of the country, including Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul.

Now, after defeating ISIS militants in their last urban bastions, Iraqi politician­s and militia leaders are increasing­ly speaking out against the continued presence of U.S. forces. Some Iraqi lawmakers are working on a draft bill calling for the withdrawal of the more than 5,000 U.S. troops from the country.

On Monday, Shanahan was in Afghanista­n, where he met with U.S. troops and President Ashraf Ghani amid a U.S. push for peace talks with the Taliban. Trump has indicated he would like to get U.S. troops out of Afghanista­n after 18 years of war, but Shanahan said he has no orders for a troop drawdown.

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