Gulf Today

US forces to stay in Iraq as long as needed: Official

-

BAGHDAD: US forces will stay in Iraq “as long as needed” to help stabilise regions previously controlled by Daesh, a spokesman for the USled internatio­nal coalition fighting the militants said on Sunday.

“We’ll keep troops there as long as we think they’re needed ... The main reason, after Daesh is defeated militarily, is the stabilisat­ion efforts and we still need to be there for that, so that’s one of the reasons we’ll maintain a presence,” Colonel Sean Ryan told a news conference.

The number of American soldiers could go down, however, depending on when other forces from the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato) deploy to help train the Iraqi army, he said, adding that about 5,200 US troops are currently based in Iraq.

Nato defence ministers agreed in February to a bigger “train-and-advise” mission in Iraq after a US call for the alliance to help stabilise the country after three years of war against Daesh.

“Possibly, there could be a drawdown, it just depends on when Nato comes in and they help train the forces as well,” Ryan said.

Iraq officially announced victory over the militants in December, five months after capturing their stronghold Mosul.

The United States also has about 2,000 troops in Syria, assisting the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) clear pockets still under the control of Daesh along the border with Iraq.

“We’re starting to see a lot of collaborat­ion between the SDF and ISF (Iraqi Security Forces) because it used to be that they would just come to the coalition, but now, we have them talking to each other as well,” said Ryan.

The Iraqi military has carried out several air strikes against Daesh in Syria since last year, the last of which a few days ago, with the approval of President Bashar Al Assad and the Us-led coalition.

SDF operations to finish off the militants on the Syrian side have been delayed by hundreds of explosive devices planted by Daesh, according to Ryan.

Separately, it is reported that in the middle of Baghdad’s busy commercial neighbourh­ood of Karrada, where most retail outlets sell home appliances, shoppers can now also buy handguns and semi-automatic rifles legally for the first time in decades.

After the toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003, illegal weapons trade flourished across the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain