Defense budget to provide broader Iraq security support – Al-Monitor

Members of the US Army Special Forces provide training for Iraqi fighters from Hashid Shaabi at Makhmur Camp, Iraq, Dec. 11, 2016. (photo byREUTERS/Mohammed Salem)

Author:Jack Detsch Posted July 7, 2017

The Senate Armed Services Committees defense budget proposal will give the United States greater authority to support Iraqi agencies tasked with securing the homeland.

The upper chambers version of the National Defense Authorization Act, set for release next week, allows the Office of Security Cooperation in Iraqa US office tasked with developing Iraqs militaryto extend their support to police and civilian security organizations, including the Ministry of the Interior, according to a committee aide.

The Office of Security Cooperation, housed in the US Embassy in Baghdad, has traditionally focused on supporting Iraqs Ministry of Defense and Counterterrorism service. The bill, aides say, will give US officials more leeway to support Iraqi police and homeland protection agencies as they develop a long-term strategy to secure the country.

Those plans are progressing as US-led troops and Iraqi forces clear out the final streets of the strategically vital city of Mosul after more than eight months of intense block-by-block combat that has left much of the city in ruins. On Thursday, officials for the US-led coalition said that Iraqi security forces had pushed into the last 500 square meters of Islamic State (IS) holdings in the city.

The multinational coalition fighting in Iraq is currently working on a two-year plan for the Ministry of Defense. It also is continuing to work with the Ministry of Interior on a plan that aims to prepare Iraqs police and border guards for duty in provinces that have been liberated from IS.

The specific amounts authorized for the office will appear in the full version of the Senate bill, set for release next week. But a summary of the bill that appeared last week authorizes nearly $1.3 billion for the US-led anti-IScoalition fulfilling an entire Defense Department request made in Mayto train and equip Iraqi troops and police units over the next year, providing them with thousands of M16 and AK-47 assault rifles, as well as hundreds of Humvees and armored vehicles.

That assistance could continue for some time. In a briefing on Thursday, Canadian Brig. Gen. D.J. Anderson, the director of force for the country coalition fighting ISin Iraq and Syria, told reporters that the effort had trained 106,000 Iraqi security force members, including 40,000 army soldiers, 15,000 policeand 14,000 counterterrorism fighters.

On Thursday, Anderson also announced a $50 million coalition initiative to provide police in a box to Iraq that will begin later this summer: Using 100 mobile shipping containers that include equipmentsuch as vehicles, weaponsand GPS trackers, that can help Iraqi quickly establish ad hoc police stations in areas devastated by ISfighters.

A Defense Department budget request submitted to Congress in May said Iraqi counterterrorism forces will require coalition financing for the next three years to grow to 20,000 members. The Pentagon expects its costs for training and equipping Iraqi forces to fall in next years budget and beyond as Baghdad gets better at sustaining its own military or those funds are shifted to other US security assistance programs.

But Anderson did not put exact timelines on coalition supportor when Iraqi security forces could fight on their own.

We'll be here as long as we need to be here, Anderson said. Our mission is to make sure that it's a self-sustaining force, and a self-sustaining force means that it's able to train itself, it's able to feed itself and it's able to fight by itself.

Read More: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2017/07/defense-budget-broad-support-iraq-security-services-police.html

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Defense budget to provide broader Iraq security support - Al-Monitor

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