The Denver Post

U.S.-led forces pull out of another military base

- By Samya Kullab

The U.S.-led coalition in Iraq withdrew Sunday from a military base in the country’s north that nearly launched Washington into an open war with neighborin­g Iran.

The K1 Air Base is the third site coalition forces have left this month, in line with U.S. plans to consolidat­e its troops in two locations in Iraq.

A rocket attack on the base in late December killed one American contractor and led to a series of tit-for-tat attacks between the U.S. and Iran-backed Iraqi militia groups. The attacks culminated in the U.S.-directed killing of top Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani and a senior Iraqi militia leader, Abu Mahdi alMuhandis.

Coalition forces handed over the K1 base in the northern Iraqi province of Kirkuk to Iraq’s military, according to a coalition statement. At least $1.1 million of equipment was transferre­d to the Iraqis as 300 coalition personnel departed.

Until last month, there were some 7,500 coalition troops based in Iraq, including 5,000 U.S. forces.

Withdrawal­s are planned “in the coming days” from two bases in western Iraq, said Col. Myles Caggins, a coalition spokesman. He said troops have so far been relocated to other bases in the country and some will head home in the coming weeks, but did not specify how many.

He said the two bases are the Nineveh Operations Command in Mosul — Iraq’s second-largest city and which was under the Islamic State group’s control from 2014 until 2017 — and the Taqaddum military airport outside the city of Habbaniya, on the Euphrates River.

K1 has hosted coalition forces since 2017 to launch operations against the Islamic

State in nearby mountainou­s areas. Areas south of Kirkuk, and north of neighborin­g provinces of Diyala, Salahuddin and Nineveh remain hotbeds of Islamic State activity.

The stretch of territory is also disputed between the federal Iraqi government and the autonomous Kurdish region, which has created security gaps benefiting Islamic State militants. The coalition’s presence had at times been a mediating force between the two competing authoritie­s.

A senior coalition official earlier this month claimed Islamic State forces weren’t as able to exploit the “security gap” between Iraqi and Kurdish forces, as the militants did in the past.

“That (gap) doesn’t necessaril­y mean that Daesh is free to operate in the way that they wish,” said the official, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State. “They’re still pretty constraine­d.”

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