By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 12, 2014 – Calling the situation in Iraq
“clearly an emergency situation,” President Barack Obama today said the Iraqi
government will need more help from the United States and the international
community to keep jihadists from getting a permanent foothold in the region.
“This is an area that we’ve been watching with a lot of
concern, not just over the last couple of days, but over the last several
months, and we’ve been in close consultation with the Iraqi government,” the
president said after a meeting with Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott at
the White House.
Jihadists with the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria – ISIS –
have taken control of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city as well as Tikrit and
are pushing south towards Baghdad.
Obama stressed the United States has been working with Iraqi
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s government to provide military equipment and
intelligence to contain the Sunni insurgency in Anbar province in the west as
well as in the northwest.
“But what we’ve seen over the last couple of days indicates
the degree to which Iraq is going to need more help,” Obama said. “It’s going
to need more help from us, and it’s going to need more help from the
international community.”
The national security team is working around the clock to
identify ways to provide effective assistance to Iraq, the president said. “I
don’t rule out anything, because we do have a stake in making sure that these
jihadists are not getting a permanent foothold in either Iraq or Syria,” he
said.
Internal divisions in Iraq are challenges, the president
said. “Frankly,” he added, “over the last several years, we have not seen the
kind of trust and cooperation develop between moderate Sunni and Shia leaders
inside of Iraq, and that accounts in part for some of the weakness of the
state, and that then carries over into their military capacity.”
Obama said the rapid developments should serve as a wake-up
call for the Iraqi government.
“There has to be a political component to this so that Sunni
and Shia who care about building a functioning state that can bring about
security and prosperity to all people inside of Iraq [can] come together and
work diligently against these extremists,” he said. “That is going to require
concessions on the part of both Shia and Sunni that we haven’t seen so far.”
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