Baltimore Sun

If requested, U.S. ready to assist Iraq in Ramadi retake

Carter says attack copters, military advisers available

- By W.J. Hennigan

WASHINGTON — U.S. troops will advise the Iraqi army and provide Apache attack helicopter­s to help retake the strategic city of Ramadi from Islamic State militants if the Iraqi government requests the help, Defense Secretary Ash Carter told Congress on Wednesday.

The U.S. advisers are not expected to engage in combat, but their direct role closer to the front lines of a potential major battle indicates another escalation of U.S. involvemen­t in the conflict in Iraq and Syria.

Iraqi security forces have struggled for seven months to recapture Ramadi, a provincial capital about 60 miles west of Baghdad. Militants who overran the city last spring have planted hundreds of booby traps and installed other defenses that have slowed a direct assault.

Iraqi forces managed to retake Anbar Operations Center, a military command facility on the northern bank of the Euphrates River, across from the city center.

“There is still tough fighting ahead,” Carter told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

He added that the Pentagon would assist the Iraqi army “with additional unique capabiliti­es to help them finish the job ... if requested” by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.

Carter did not say if U.S. or Iraqi pilots and crews would fly the Apaches.

President Barack Obama has vowed not to reintroduc­e American ground troops to Iraq, but Carter’s comments suggest U.S. troops may play a more direct role in Iraqi ground and air assaults than in the past.

The 3,500 U.S. troops deployed to Iraq over the last 16 months have been largely limited to headquarte­rs buildings at six training sites. They have played an advisory and backup role, helping to collect intelligen­ce, target airstrikes, train troops and provide equipment and other support to Iraqi and Kurdish forces.

In a prime time address to the nation Sunday, Obama repeated his vow not to put U.S. troops into another ground war in the Middle East. He has approved a handful of targeted raids by special operations forces against militant leaders in Iraq and Syria, but the U.S. combat role otherwise is limited chiefly to airstrikes.

But the U.S. military role has steadily grown since the first advisers returned to Iraq in mid-2014.

The Pentagon said last month it would deploy about 100 more special operations troops to Iraq as a “specialize­d expedition­ary targeting force” to conduct raids, free hostages, gather intelligen­ce and capture Islamic State leaders in Iraq.

The move came weeks after the military said fewer than 50 U.S. special operators would be sent to Kurdish- controlled areas in northeaste­rn Syria to advise Syrian and Kurdish rebel groups.

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