Joe Biden announces end of US combat operations in Iraq
- Announcement comes more than 18 years after US forces invaded Iraq
- US President Joe Biden and Iraq PM Mustafa al-Kadhimi meet in Washington
Amid the threat of an Islamic State (Isis) resurgence and Iran’s powerful influence in Baghdad, Biden stressed that Washington remains “committed to our security cooperation” while Kadhimi reaffirmed their “strategic partnership”.
US troops in Iraq will “to continue to train, to assist, to help, to deal with Isis as it arises,” Biden said.
But, in a shift that comes as the United States pulls out of Afghanistan, the US leader confirmed that the 2,500 US troops still in Iraq won’t be fighting.
“We’re not going to be, at the end of the year, in a combat mission,” he said.
The announcement comes after Biden’s decision to withdraw fully from Afghanistan nearly 20 years after the US launched that war in response to the September 11 attacks. Together, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have heavily taxed the US military and kept it from devoting more attention to a rising China, which the Biden administration calls the biggest long-term security challenge.
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US President Biden seals deal with Iraq’s leader to end US combat mission in Iraq by late 2021
In Iraq. 18 years after the US invaded to remove strongman Saddam Hussein, and seven years after a US-led coalition battled Isis extremists who threatened the country, Washington has turned its focus to other types of assistance.
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Biden also emphasised US support for elections in October in Iraq, saying Washington is working closely with Baghdad, the Gulf Cooperation Council and the United Nations to ensure the elections are fair.
“We support strengthening Iraq’s democracy and we’re anxious to make sure the election goes forward,” he said.
Kadhimi said he was in Washington “to discuss the future of our nation”.
“America, they help Iraq. Together we fight, fight and defeat Isis,” he said.
“Today, our relation is stronger than ever – our partnership in the economy, the environment, health, education, culture and more.”
The face-to-face meeting, analysts said, was to give support and cover to Kadhimi, in power for little over a year and under pressure from Iran-allied political factions to push US troops from his country.
A senior US official who would not be identified praised Kadhimi for being pragmatic and “a problem solver rather than someone who tries to use problems for his own political interests”.
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The main concern from Washington is to lend enough support to Iraqi security forces to keep up the fight against the remnants of Isis- while also keeping a damper on Iran’s influence in Iraq.
Since last year the principal role of the remaining US troops in Iraq has been to train, advise and support their Iraqi counterparts to battle Isis.
But powerful pro-Iran political factions, which are crucial to Kadhimi retaining power, are overtly hostile to the US presence, and are accused of being behind rocket and drone attacks on bases in Iraq where US forces operate.
The Iraqi Resistance Coordination Committee, a group of militia factions, threatened to continue the attacks unless the United States withdraws all its forces and ends the “occupation”.
A drone attack was carried out Friday on a military base in Iraqi Kurdistan that hosts American troops, but did not cause any casualties.
A US State Department statement on the lower-level bilateral meetings that accompanied the Biden-Kadhimi summit emphasised US respect for Iraq’s sovereignty.
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“The bases hosting US and other Coalition personnel are Iraqi bases and are operating per existing Iraqi laws; they are not US or Coalition bases, and the presence of international personnel in Iraq is solely in support of the Government of Iraq’s fight against Isis,” it said.
Ramzy Mardini, an Iraq specialist at the University of Chicago’s Pearson Institute, said the meeting could be cosmetically “shaped” to help the Iraqi premier alleviate domestic pressures.
“But the reality on the ground will reflect the status quo and an enduring US presence,” said Mardini.
Additional reporting by Associated Press