By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, July 3, 2014 – The United States has sent troops
back to Iraq because it is in America’s interest for the country to remain
stable and to counter Sunni militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said today.
Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey told a Pentagon news conference
that Iraq’s leaders must form an inclusive government that respects the rights
of all groups.
Iraq can and should be a U.S. partner in countering
terrorism, Dempsey said. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which has
captured large sections of the country’s north and west over the past few weeks,
is a regional threat, Dempsey said, but could become a transnational and global
threat in the future. They have “made some pretty significant and rapid
advances.”
Yet “they’re stretched right now,” the chairman said,
“stretched to control what they have gained and stretched across their
logistics lines of communication.”
There are currently nearly 800 American service members in
Iraq, with some protecting the American embassy and other facilities. Other
U.S. troops are assessing the situation on the ground and have now opened a
second joint operations center in Erbil in northern Iraq after establishing one
in Baghdad last month. President Barack Obama ordered up to 300 U.S. special
forces to the country last month to provide advice on how best to assist the
Iraqi military in their fight against Sunni militants.
Meanwhile, Iraqi security forces have stiffened resistance
in face of the militants’ gains.
“I don’t have the assessment teams’ exact language, but some
initial insights are that the ISF is stiffening, that they’re capable of
defending Baghdad,” Dempsey said.
Iraqi forces would be challenged however, if they went on
the offensive against the militants, he added.
Dempsey emphasized the ability of Iraq’s military to defend
the country depends on political leaders in Baghdad uniting to form a
government of national unity.
In addition, what role the United States will play in Iraq
going forward, he said, depends on the conclusions of the U.S. military
assessment teams, as well as Iraq’s political progress.
Currently, U.S. advisors in Iraq are not involved in combat
operations, Dempsey said, but he did not rule that out.
“If the assessment comes back and reveals that it would be
beneficial to this effort and to our national security interests to put the
advisors in a different role, I will first consult with the secretary, we will
consult with the president,” he said. “We’ll provide that option and we will
move ahead.”
Even so, he said U.S. involvement in Iraq does not amount to
“mission creep.” Choosing to characterize it instead as “mission match.”
“We will match the resources we apply with the authorities
and responsibilities that go with them based on the mission we undertake, and
that is to be determined,” the chairman said.
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