Trump to announce US troop withdrawals from Iraq, Afghanistan
US President Donald Trump was expected to announce
further troop withdrawals Wednesday from Afghanistan and from Iraq, where
several thousand US troops hunting down jihadist sleeper cells have faced
increasing attacks blamed on pro-Iran factions.
The deadly bomb and rocket attacks have put
additional pressure on Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi, who has pledged
to rein in rogue groups pledged to fight the US military presence.
During Washington talks with Kadhemi last month,
Trump said US forces would leave Iraq but gave no timetable or specific troop
levels.
A senior administration official told reporters that
the president would make an announcement on Wednesday, but offered no
additional details.
The US has already been steadily downsizing its
troop levels in Iraq in recent months as Iraqis take over more combat and
training roles from foreign forces.
"These withdrawals are part of the agreed
transition of the US-led coalition's role in Iraq," an Iraqi official told
AFP ahead of Trump's announcement on Wednesday, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
The US deployed thousands of forces to Iraq in 2014
to lead a military intervention against the Islamic State group, which had
swept across a third of the country.
Even after Baghdad declared IS defeated in late
2017, US and other coalition troops continued supporting Iraqi forces with air
strikes, drone surveillance and training to prevent a jihadist resurgence.
By late 2018, there were an estimated 5,200 troops
still stationed in Iraq, making up the bulk of the 7,500 coalition forces
there, according to US officials.
Over the past year, dozens of rocket attacks have
targeted those forces as well as the US embassy in Baghdad's high-security
Green Zone, killing at least five military personnel -- three Americans, one
Briton and one Iraqi.
US officials have blamed the violence on hardline
factions close to Tehran, which as Washington's longtime foe has repeatedly demanded
that all US troops leave the Middle East.
Tensions skyrocketed early this year when a US drone
strike near Baghdad airport killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, prompting
Tehran to mount a retaliatory missile strike against US troops in western Iraq.
Enraged by the US strike, the Iraqi parliament voted
to oust all foreign troops still left in Iraq, although Kadhemi's government --
seen as friendly to the US -- has stonewalled that decision.
Instead, the coalition has been quietly drawing down
troops on its own since March, consolidating its presence from a dozen bases
across the country to just three.
Some troops were redeployed to the main bases in
Baghdad, Arbil in the north and Ain al-Asad in the west, but most were
transferred outside of Iraq, US officials told AFP.
They said the downsizing was long-planned as IS had
been defeated, but admitted that the withdrawal timeline was accelerated in
response to rocket attacks and the fear Covid-19 could spread among military
partners.
France has already withdrawn its troops and Britain
has significantly downsized to just 100 personnel in recent months.
British, French and US special forces are expected
to remain deployed in undisclosed locations around the country, diplomatic
sources said.
Still, attacks on US targets have continued. Late
Tuesday, a bomb targeted a supply convoy heading to an Iraqi base where US
troops are deployed, killing one member of the Iraqi security forces.
The US president is also set to announce further
withdrawals from Afghanistan in the coming days, the senior administration
official said.
Washington currently has 8,600 soldiers deployed in
accordance with a bilateral agreement signed in February between Washington and
the Taliban.
The Pentagon said in August that its goal was to get
down to fewer than 5,000 troops as inter-Afghan peace talks progress.
Trump previously mentioned in an interview with
Axios that the White House aimed to reach 4,000 to 5,000 troops in Afghanistan
before the US presidential election on November 3.
Under the US-Taliban deal, all foreign troops must
leave the country by the spring of 2021, in exchange for security commitments
from the militants.
Trump, who is trailing Democratic rival Joe Biden in
the opinion polls, has previously promised to bring troops home in a bid to end
what he has called America's endless wars.



