Kerry Holds Iraq Talks On U.S. Strategy Against Jihadists

Kerry Holds Iraq Talks On U.S. Strategy Against Jihadists

Baghdad (AFP) — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry held talks with Iraq’s new leaders Wednesday on their role in a long-awaited strategy against Islamic State jihadists to be unveiled by President Barack Obama.

Iraq has been at the center of U.S. efforts to halt IS since its fighters spearheaded a lightning offensive in June seizing much of the Sunni Arab heartland north and west of Baghdad.

But in a keenly awaited policy speech later Wednesday, Obama was widely expected to announce the expansion of the month-old U.S. air campaign to neighboring Syria, where IS has seized a swathe of the northeast, bordering Iraq.

The U.S. administration has come under mounting domestic and international criticism for not taking stronger action against IS fighters who have committed a spate of atrocities in recent weeks, many of them paraded on the Internet.

Kerry’s unannounced talks in Baghdad were the first stop on a regional tour to build support for the new U.S. strategy which he has said will only work with the backing of the “broadest possible coalition of partners around the globe.”

He was to fly on to Saudi Arabia for talks on Thursday with 11 regional foreign ministers on a joint campaign against IS.

U.S. efforts to build a broad regional coalition had been complicated by the sectarian politics of the region, with Saudi Arabia and other Sunni states deeply suspicious of the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

But they were given a boost on Monday by the formation of a new government that Kerry has said has “the potential to unite all of Iraq’s diverse communities”.

Kerry met new Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, a Shiite regarded as far less divisive than his predecessor Nuri al-Maliki, who was criticized for driving many in the Sunni minority into the arms of IS.

U.S. officials have hailed a more constructive approach from Abadi to recapturing Sunni Arab areas from the jihadists after the heavy-handed security tactics of Maliki’s government.

Kerry praised the new premier’s “commitment to the broad reforms that are necessary in Iraq to bring every segment of the Iraqi society to the table.”

He welcomed the “military’s commitment to reconstituting itself” for the fightback.

But the scale of the security challenge facing Iraq was underlined by twin bombs that killed at least seven people in east Baghdad during Kerry’s visit.

– Locally recruited fightback –

Much of the regular army is drawn from Iraq’s Shiite majority who come from Baghdad and the south and are despised outsiders in Sunni areas.

U.S. officials have welcomed the new government’s acceptance that Sunnis need to take charge of the fightback against IS in Sunni areas.

“Abadi has said repeatedly since he was named the prime minister that he is not going to… take military units from the south and go into areas in the north and west to take on (IS)” a U.S. official told journalists travelling with Kerry.

Instead national guard units “grown from the provinces… locally recruited,” will take the “primary security responsibility” for the fightback in the five provinces where IS fighters hold sway in Sunni areas.

The official stressed that the new units would need to be “paid by national funds,” which was one of the areas where Baghdad would need the international help that Kerry intends to discuss with regional governments in Saudi Arabia on Thursday.

“The region and our partners in the Gulf can play a really important role… in terms of their encouragement, in terms of their financial contributions, in terms of lifting the burden that the government here has.

“Even for a country that’s still exporting about 2.6 million barrels of oil a day, the financial toll of the crisis is quite staggering,” the official said.

– Syria air strikes? –

In his speech later on Wednesday, Obama was expected to steel Americans for a prolonged battle against the jihadists, despite devoting much of his presidency to avoiding new entanglements in the Middle East.

But wary of repeating what he believes were the mistakes of the last decade, Obama was expected to renew his pledge not to send ground troops back to Iraq.

Both the New York Times and the Washington Post said Obama was preparing to authorize the expansion of the air campaign against IS that he launched in Iraq on August 8 to neighboring Syria.

An opinion poll published on Tuesday suggested 65 percent of Americans would approve such an expansion of air strikes, which would be without the authorization of the Damascus government.

But Brussels-based think-tank the International Crisis Group (ICG) warned “the resulting boost to IS recruitment might outweigh the group’s tactical losses.”

Washington has pinned its hopes of pegging back IS in Syria on rebel groups opposed to the jihadists, balking at cooperation of any sort with the regime of President Bashar al-Assad whose overthrow it has supported since 2011.

However the main anti-jihadist rebel alliance suffered a major blow late Tuesday when a blast in the northwest killed 47 of its top commanders.

AFP Photo/Brendan Smialowski

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Kerry In Kabul To Push For New President Within Weeks

Kerry In Kabul To Push For New President Within Weeks

By Nicolas Revise

Kabul (AFP) — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Kabul on Thursday to pressure feuding presidential candidates to resolve the disputed election result that risks triggering instability as NATO troops withdraw.

Allegations of massive fraud in Afghanistan’s June election tipped the country into a political crisis, with the United Nations voicing fears that the contested outcome could revive the ethnic divisions of the 1990s civil war.

Kerry last month negotiated a deal in which poll rivals Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah agreed to an audit of all eight million votes, and for the winner to form a national unity government.

But the deal has made little progress due to further disagreements between the candidates, and no date has yet been set for the delayed presidential inauguration.

The clock is now ticking for a new president to be in office before the end of this month ahead of a NATO summit on September 4-5, when member states will decide on future finance and support for the war-torn country.

“We would like to see the inauguration ideally by the end of the month,” said a U.S. official travelling with Kerry.

“It’s important for a new president to be able to go to NATO and ask for these commitments, including continued ANSF (Afghan National Security Forces) costs.

“It’s in all of our interests for that to happen. That is still the goal and we are all doing everything possible to ensure that it can stay the goal.

“It’ll be hard… but it’s possible.”

According to preliminary election results, former World Bank economist Ghani easily won the run-off vote.

But Abdullah, a former anti-Taliban resistance fighter, alleged massive ballot-box stuffing and refused to accept the result, with his supporters urging him to set up a “parallel government.”

– Increasing violence –

Outgoing President Hamid Karzai, who has ruled since the Taliban were ousted in 2001, has also called for his successor to be named by the end of the month, adding that the delay was damaging Afghanistan’s fragile security and economy.

The Taliban insurgents have launched new operations in the south and east in recent months, and violence is increasing across the country according to several independent reports.

A U.N. report out last month revealed that civilian casualties of the conflict soared by 24 percent in the first half of 2014.

Foreign troop numbers have declined from a peak of 150,000 in 2012 to just 44,300 now, and NATO’s combat mission in Afghanistan will end in December after 13 years of fighting than have failed to defeat the Taliban.

The new president is expected to sign a security deal that will allow a follow-up NATO “training and advisory” mission, with about 10,000 US troops staying into next year.

Kerry will hold meetings with both candidates and with Karzai to try to hammer out a schedule for election winner to be finally declared.

Only about 5,000 of the 23,000 ballot boxes have been audited so far, and the process has often ground to halt due to arguments over individual ballot papers.

Kerry’s visit was “to encourage both candidates to accelerate the audit process. We really want to see it moving faster,” the U.S. official said.

“We’re hopeful that the Secretary can obtain a commitment by both candidates to a timeline for completing the audit and agreeing on the details of a national unity government.”

Ethnic violence is a concern as Abdullah’s support is based among the Tajiks and other northern tribes, while Ghani’s loyalists are from the Pashtuns of the south and east.

Western nations that have sent troops and billions of dollars worth of aid to Afghanistan since 2001 had hoped a smooth transition of power would be a benchmark of progress made since the austere Taliban era.

The dangers of international military intervention were underlined on Tuesday when a rogue Afghan soldier shot dead a US general at an army training centre in Kabul, wounding more than a dozen others including a senior German officer.

AFP Photo/Alex Wong

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