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Foreign troop deployments in Iraq Baghdad, Sept 9 (AFP) Sep 09, 2020 Washington will slash numbers of American troops in Iraq to 3,000 in September, drawing down the bulk of the US-led coalition helping Baghdad root out jihadist sleeper cells. The announcement follows months of drawdowns by coalition partners, some of them temporary due to fears of Covid-19, and others more permanent as the fight against the Islamic State group winds down.
The US contingent is the largest in the coalition Washington has led in Iraq since 2014 to help fight IS. Over the last six months, the coalition has consolidated its troops from around a dozen bases across the country to three locations: the main command centre in Baghdad, a base in the northern regional capital of Arbil and the sprawling Ain al-Asad air base in the west. Other coalition members see the US presence as providing the necessary security and infrastructure for other foreign troops to deploy. "If the US were to fully withdraw, we would not have the logistical capability to be here," a Western diplomatic source told AFP.
They do not include combat troops, but are instead focused on training and helping Iraqi commanders build strategies to root out jihadist remnants. The British air force still carries out air strikes against those sleeper cells to prevent a resurgence.
But it has continued air raids against IS, and French defence minister Florence Parly told Iraqi officials in Baghdad in August that she wanted to expand surveillance support to local troops. French special forces will remain deployed in undisclosed locations in Iraq alongside their UK and US counterparts, diplomatic sources told AFP.
Canada had previously deployed around 850 troops -- 600 as part of the coalition and 250 in NATO. They had been helping train Iraqi troops, detonating explosive ordnance, and flying CH-146 Griffon helicopters for reconnaissance and search-and-rescue missions.
Spain also has around 150 troops in the country, a force which has shrunk due to base closures and coronavirus. The withdrawals were meant to be temporary but there are no clear timelines for the troops to return.
Top leadership of the US-led coalition were exploring handing over some tasks to NATO in order to alleviate the pressure on Iraq's government to oust US troops.
In June, Ankara launched a new cross-border ground and air assault into northern Iraq, targeting positions held by the Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK), considered a "terrorist" group by Turkey and the US. The new operation allowed Turkey to set up additional military posts in the autonomous zone, which has angered Baghdad.
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