Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden: Iraq mission ending this year

Troops are focusing on assisting, not fighting

- By Robert Burns, Aamer Madhani and Qassim Abdul-zahra

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said Monday the U.S. combat mission in Iraq will conclude by the end of the year, an announceme­nt that reflects the reality on the ground more than a major shift in U.S. policy.

Even before Biden took office, the main U.S. focus has been assisting Iraqi forces, not fighting on their behalf. And Biden did not say if he planned to reduce the number of troops in Iraq, now about 2,500.

The announceme­nt comes on the heels of Biden’s decision to withdraw fully from Afghanista­n nearly 20 years after the U.S. launched that war in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Together, the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq have heavily taxed the U.S. military and kept it from devoting more attention to a rising China, which the Biden administra­tion calls the biggest longterm security challenge.

For years, U.S. troops have played support roles in Iraq and in neighborin­g Syria, which was the origin of the Islamic State group that swept across the border in 2014 and captured large swaths of Iraqi territory, prompting the U.S. to send troops back to Iraq that year.

Speaking to reporters during an Oval Office session with Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-kadhimi, Biden said his administra­tion remained committed to a partnershi­p with Iraq — a relationsh­ip that has been increasing­ly complicate­d by Iranian-backed Iraqi militia groups.

The militias want all U.S. troops out of Iraq immediatel­y and have periodical­ly attacked bases that house American troops.

Dan Caldwell, a senior adviser to Concerned Veterans for America, said U.S. troops will remain at risk.

“Regardless of whether their deployment is called a combat mission, U.S. troops will remain under regular attack as long as they remain in Iraq,” Caldwell said in a statement.

 ?? Susan Walsh The Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden, right, speaks Monday as Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-kadhimi listens during their Oval Office meeting.
Susan Walsh The Associated Press President Joe Biden, right, speaks Monday as Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-kadhimi listens during their Oval Office meeting.

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