This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/12/world/middleeast/us-iraq-mosul.html

The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 2 Version 3
U.S. Will Deploy 560 Troops to Iraq to Help Retake Mosul From ISIS U.S. Will Deploy 560 More Troops to Iraq to Help Retake Mosul From ISIS
(about 5 hours later)
BAGHDAD — President Obama will deploy 560 troops to Iraq to help retake Mosul, the largest city controlled by the Islamic State, Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter announced on Monday. It is the latest escalation of the United States’ role in the war here by Mr. Obama, who ran for office on a pledge to end America’s involvement in the conflict. BAGHDAD — President Obama will deploy 560 more troops to Iraq to help retake Mosul, the largest city controlled by the Islamic State, Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter announced on Monday. It is the latest escalation of the United States’ role in the Iraq war by Mr. Obama, who ran for office on a pledge to end America’s involvement in the conflict.
The additional troops will bring the official number of American service members deployed in Iraq to 4,647. Many will be based at an airfield about 40 miles south of Mosul that was seized by the Iraqis on Saturday. Many of the newly deployed troops will be based at an airfield 40 miles south of Mosul that was reclaimed by Iraqi soldiers on Saturday. The additional troops will bring the official number of American service members in Iraq to 4,647 far fewer than the 130,000 the United States had in the country about a decade ago.
“We need to move to this place to be as close to the fighting as we have been,” said Lt. Gen. Sean B. MacFarland, the commander of American forces in Iraq. American commanders plan to use the base, Qayyarah Airfield West, as a staging area to provide logistical support to Iraqi forces as they try to retake Mosul. The Iraqis have struggled to move troops, resources and equipment tasks that will become even harder as their forces move closer to Mosul, which is 250 miles from their major supply hubs in Baghdad.
American commanders plan to use the base, Qayyarah West Airfield, as a staging area to provide logistical support to Iraqi forces as they move toward Mosul. Some of the troops specialize in infrastructure support like building bridges, which the Iraqis will need for the assault on Mosul because the Islamic State has destroyed many around the city. The Islamic State seized Mosul in June 2014. “We need to move to this place to be as close to the fighting as we have been,” said Lt. Gen. Sean B. MacFarland, the head of American forces in Iraq, who addressed members of the news media with Mr. Carter after the announcement at the airport in Baghdad.
Mr. Carter made the announcement while addressing troops at the international airport in Baghdad. Earlier in the day, Mr. Carter met with Iraq’s prime minister, Haider al-Abadi. Some of the American troops who will be stationed at the airfield specialize in infrastructure support, such as building bridges a technical skill the Iraqis will need for the assault on Mosul because the Islamic State has destroyed many around the city since it took control of Mosul in 2014.
The Iraqi Army has been troubled by equipment, logistics and other problems, and it was stretched last month as it fought to retake the western city of Falluja from the Islamic State. American commanders have been particularly concerned about the Iraqis’ ability to move troops, supplies and equipment for the invasion of Mosul because it is 250 miles from the military’s major hubs in the Baghdad area. The new troop deployment comes two years after Mr. Obama said that while the United States would help the Iraqi military reclaim territory from the Islamic State, those efforts would “not involve American combat troops fighting on foreign soil.” Since then, he has steadily increased the number of troops in Iraq and given them more authority. Three service members have been killed.
“The point of seizing that airfield is to be able to establish a logistics and air hub in the immediate vicinity of Mosul under the control of the Iraqi security forces,” Mr. Carter said, describing the base as a “logistical springboard for their offensive in Mosul.” In April, Mr. Carter came to Baghdad on a similar trip to announce that Mr. Obama had given American military advisers the approval to work closer to the front lines of the conflict with smaller units of Iraqi forces. As part of that announcement, Mr. Obama deployed an additional 217 troops to Iraq. The increase has raised concerns among many Americans who believe that the United States is on a never-ending mission in Iraq.
General MacFarland said at a news conference that the additional forces would be used to expand operational capabilities at the airfield. “We have to bring in a wide array of capabilities to make those fully functional,” General MacFarland said. The troops are expected to arrive at the airfield in the coming weeks. The announcement occurred as Iraqi soldiers appeared to be gaining momentum on the battlefield. Mosul is now the only major city in the country that the Iraqis do not control, and the Islamic State has not seized any substantial new territory since May 2015. But the Iraqis do not seem to be able to prevent the Islamic State from carrying out devastating suicide attacks in Baghdad, including one earlier this month whose death toll has reached 300 people.
The escalation by Mr. Obama comes two months after he decided to send American military advisers closer to the front lines of the conflict, allowing them to work with smaller units of Iraqi forces. As part of that announcement, Mr. Obama deployed an additional 217 troops to Iraq. To help the Iraqis stop the bombings, Mr. Carter said a three-star American general in charge of the American military’s task force on improvised explosive devices would be sent to Baghdad to work with the Iraqis.
Although the official number of United States troops will rise to 4,647, that figure understates the actual number of service members in Iraq. The Pentagon uses a system for counting troops that excludes certain service members who are supposed to be stationed in the country for less than four months, and for commandos. Defense Department officials have said that there are probably more than 5,000 Americans presently in Iraq. Mr. Carter said the general and his staff would bring “that substantial experience and tradecraft that we learned by hard experience in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
American military commanders have begun calling the Qayyarah Airfield West “Q West,” or “Key West,” because its Iraqi name is difficult to pronounce. As the Iraqi military closed in on the airfield last week, Islamic State fighters quickly fled and the Iraqis, who lost control of the base in 2014, faced little resistance as they reclaimed it. Iraqi military officials, however, said in interviews on Monday that there was substantial damage to the air base that would require significant repairs.
“We were surprised by how destroyed the base was and how they had done it in an organized way,” said Lt. Gen. Abdul Ghani al-Asadi, the commander of Iraqi counterterrorism forces, who planned and participated in the operation to retake the airfield.
General Asadi said one of two runways at the airfield had been badly damaged, along with some buildings.
A small group of American forces surveyed the airfield shortly after it was seized by the Iraqis, but American military officials said it was unclear how much time it would take before cargo planes and other aircraft could land there. Among the troops who are being deployed to the airfield are engineers who have expertise in building and fixing runways.
Although the official number of United States troops in Iraq will rise to 4,647, that figure understates the actual number of service members in the country. The Pentagon uses a system for counting troops that excludes certain service members who are supposed to be stationed in the country for less than four months, and for commandos. Defense Department officials have said there are probably more than 5,000 Americans in Iraq.