U.S. forces mission in Iraq still focused on refugee aid
Posted by Unknown
on August 12, 2014
U.S. forces in Iraq remain committed to using airstrikes
to help refugees, though any attempts to seriously blunt the advance of
the Islamic State would require more ground resources, a senior officer
involved in the air effort told USA TODAY.
Those
ground forces would include special operators capable of getting closer
to Islamic State positions and directing the airstrikes in cooperation
with Iraqi ground troops, such as Kurdish peshmerga, said the officer,
who spoke on condition of anonymity because officials were not
authorized to speak publicly.
However, "there are no plans to
expand the air campaign," said Lt. Gen. William Mayville, the director
of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "We are gripped by the
immediacy of the crisis, and our focus right now is to provide immediate
relief to those who are suffering," he said.
During a news
conference Monday, Mayville said any thought of using U.S. ground troops
is "a little too speculative for me." There are no current plans to use
U.S. ground troops, he said.
President Obama announced Thursday
that the United States would start air operations in Iraq. Subsequent
comments from him and administration officials made the distinction
between ground and combat troops.
Iraqi
Prime Minister-designate Haider al-IbadiObama reiterated Monday that
any solution to the problems in Iraq would not be accomplished by U.S.
military force. He said that he and Vice President Biden both phoned
Haider-al-Ibadi.
U.S. teams in Baghdad and Irbil are working with
the Iraqi military, said an administration official. "We have said that
we are going to direct additional resources to both the Iraqi Security
Forces and to the peshmerga. And we've also made clear that after the
Iraqis form a government, we stand prepared to work with other partners
in the region in providing additional support — for instance, additional
resources and equipment to the Iraqis as they go on the offensive."
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record about U.S. military plans.
The
military officer's assessment about the need for forward air observers
makes sense, said Michael O'Hanlon, a military analyst at the Brookings
Institution.
Stopping the group's infiltration into
Kurd-controlled areas is the relatively easier task, O'Hanlon said.
Pushing the Islamic State from cities it controls, such as Mosul, will
require working closer with the Iraqi military. Before that can happen,
Iraq must form a more inclusive, effective government.
Rolling
back the Islamic State could require up to 15,000 U.S. troops, said
retired Army colonel Peter Mansoor, the executive officer to Gen. David
Petraeus during the 2007 surge in Iraq and now a professor of military
history at Ohio State University.
"You can't just snap your fingers and make it go away," Mansoor said.
The
geography in the region is well suited to U.S. air power. The desert
area surrounding the 4,000-foot ridgeline is open territory, and hostile
Islamic State ISIL forces are relatively easy to spot and kill, the
officer said. Meantime, the cracks and crevices of the mountain provide
adequate cover for the refugees.
The Pentagon is relying on F/A-18
warplanes for the bombing runs from the USS George H.W. Bush because it
operates in international waters, the officer said. Land-based attack
aircraft require the permission of the host country if they are to be
used in combat, and the green light for those operations can be
difficult to obtain.
Predator drones are also being used to fire
Hellfire missiles at Islamic State targets. Iraq has allowed drones and
other surveillance aircraft to be used from bases there.
There are
about 650 troops on the ground in Iraq now. They are protecting the
Baghdad airport and the U.S. Embassy there and training Iraqi special
forces.
Obama ordered airstrikes when it became apparent that
Islamic State rebels were advancing on Irbil, where there is a U.S.
Consulate and American personnel. The strikes are intended to protect
religious minorities holed up on the mountain and threatened by the
Islamic State.
Getting food, water and supplies to the refugees by
air, on a craggy mountain, has required sophisticated parachute
operations by Air Force C-17 and C-130 cargo planes, the officer said.
Tagged as: Iraq

World News, Politics, Health, Education and Technology
Get Updates
Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter to receive updates.
Share This Post
Related News
- U.S. forces mission in Iraq still focused on refugee aid
- Iraq crisis: Yazidis' mix of beliefs misunderstood, maligned
- UN chief Upset Over Beheading US journalist Sotloff by ISIS
- ISIS Show Beheading of U.S. Journalist Steven Sotloff
- Embattled Iraqi Premier Nouri al-Maliki Finally Steps Down, Supports Successor