By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 30, 2014 – The joint operations center
opened by U.S. forces in Baghdad to help the Iraqi government combat Sunni
insurgents is fully operational and assessments of Iraqi units have begun,
Defense Department spokesman Army Col. Steven Warren said today.
Warren provided Pentagon reporters with an update on the 180
personnel who arrived in Baghdad to establish the operations center.
“The six teams of advisers are on the ground beginning their
assessment of Iraqi units in and around Baghdad,” Warren said.
President Barack Obama ordered the teams to Iraq earlier
this month following gains made by Sunni militants of the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant who have overrun towns and cities across Iraq’s northern and
western provinces as they move closer to Baghdad.
The JOC team provides synthesis of information provided from
the six assessment teams and conducts liaison coordination, the colonel
explained.
“These are very well-trained personnel that are used to
operating in these types of environments,” Warren said of the six assessment
teams. “They are very skilled at protecting themselves.”
Additionally, the colonel said, the JOC is sharing
information with the Iraqis as assessments are made.
“We’ve long had an information-sharing arrangement with the
Iraqis,” Warren said. “That arrangement continues.”
There is a tentative plan for a second operations center to
be positioned in the north, he added. But that, he said, hasn’t happened yet.
“Right now, the JOC is collecting the information being
provided by the six assessment teams [and] collating it, so we’re still in the
assessment phase now,” Warren said.
“To be clear, we’re providing the Iraqis information that
will be useful to them in their fight against ISIL,” he added
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