Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Iraqi officials: U.S. troops should go

- By Philip Issa

Iraqi lawmakers angry Trump didn’t meet with prime minister during visit, demand U.S. troop withdrawal.

BAGHDAD — President Donald Trump’s surprise trip to Iraq may have quieted criticism at home that he had yet to visit troops in a combat zone, but it has infuriated Iraqi politician­s who on Thursday demanded the withdrawal of U.S. forces.

“Arrogant” and an “a violation of national sovereignt­y” were but a few examples of the criticism emanating from Baghdad following Trump’s meeting Wednesday with U.S. servicemen and women at the al-Asad Airbase.

Trips by U.S. presidents to conflict zones are typically shrouded in secrecy and subject to strict security measures, and Trump’s was no exception. Few in Iraq or elsewhere knew the U.S. president was in the country until minutes before he left again.

But this trip came as curbing foreign influence in Iraqi affairs has become a hot-button political issue, and Trump’s perceived presidenti­al faux-pas was failing to meet with the prime minister in a break with diplomatic custom for any visiting head of state.

On the ground for only about three hours, the American president told the men and women with the U.S. military that Islamic State forces have been vanquished, and he defended his decision against all advice to withdraw U.S. troops from neighborin­g Syria,

He declared: “We’re no longer the suckers, folks.”

The abruptness of his visit left lawmakers in Baghdad smarting and drawing unfavorabl­e comparison­s to the occupation of Iraq after the 2003 invasion.

“Trump needs to know his limits. The American occupation of Iraq is over,” said Sabah al-Saidi, the head of one of two main blocs in Iraq’s parliament.

Trump, he said, had slipped into Iraq, “as though Iraq is a state of the United States.”

Qais Khazali, the head of the Iran-backed Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia that fought key battles against ISIS in northern Iraq, promised on Twitter that Parliament would vote to expel U.S. forces from Iraq, or the militias would force them out by “other means.”

Khazali was jailed by British and U.S. forces from 2007 to 2010 for managing sections of the Shia insurgency against the occupation during those years.

 ?? NABIL AL-JURANI/AP ?? Qais Khazali promised Parliament would vote to expel U.S. forces from Iraq or would force them out by other means.
NABIL AL-JURANI/AP Qais Khazali promised Parliament would vote to expel U.S. forces from Iraq or would force them out by other means.

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