Daily Dispatch

Carter makes surprise trip to Iraq

-

US DEFENCE Secretary Ash Carter made a surprise visit to Baghdad yesterday to make a first-hand assessment of the campaign against Islamic State as Iraq tries to retake the fallen capital of Sunni-dominated Anbar province.

Carter, on his first visit since becoming defence secretary in February, said he would meet US commanders as well as Iraqi political leaders, including Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.

His unannounce­d visit coincides with attempts by Iraqi forces to lay the groundwork for an eventual push to try to recapture Ramadi, isolating parts of the city with help from US-led airstrikes ahead of a full offensive.

Islamic State seized Anbar’s capital Ramadi two months ago, extending its control over the Euphrates valley west of Baghdad and dealing a major setback to Abadi and the US-backed army he entrusted with its defence.

Carter said he sought to form own“on-the-ground assessment” of campaign. his the

“I will be doing my own conferring with our military commanders,” Carter told reporters ahead of his trip.

The loss of Ramadi was the Iraqi army’s worst defeat since Islamic State militants swept through north Iraq last summer.

The onslaught further exposed the shortcomin­gs of Iraq’s mainly Shi’ite forces and raised questions about the ability of the Shi’ite-led government in Baghdad to overcome the sectarian divide that has helped fuel the Islamic State’s expansion in Anbar.

US President Barack Obama responded last month by ordering 450 more US troops to set up at Taqaddum base, which is closer to the fighting in Anbar province and only about 25km from Ramadi.

One of the goals of a new US deployment to Taqaddum is to encourage Sunni tribes to join the battle against Islamic State, complement­ing efforts at the Ain al-Asad air base, also in Anbar.

A Pentagon spokesman estimated that as many as 1 800 Sunni recruits had been trained at Taqaddum since the base was set up.

The Sunni forces will play a key role in helping secure terrain but are not expected to lead any advance into Ramadi, something that could happen within the next two months depending on Iraq’s own assessment­s, the spokesman said.— Reuters

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? TACKLING ISSUES: Saudi Arabia’s King Salman, right, during talks with US defence secretary Ashton Carter, left, in Jeddah on Wednesday
Picture: EPA TACKLING ISSUES: Saudi Arabia’s King Salman, right, during talks with US defence secretary Ashton Carter, left, in Jeddah on Wednesday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa