New Zealand calls time on non-combat mission in Iraq

New Zealand will begin scaling back its non-combat
mission in Iraq next month and bring home the last of its troops by mid-2020,
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said Monday.
Wellington deployed troops on a
"behind-the-wire" training mission in 2015 to boost the ability of
the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) to fight the Islamic State group.
Ardern said the small contingent of troops,
currently 95, who have been working alongside the Australian army at the Taji
military base north of Baghdad, had completed their mission.
"When it comes to Iraq, it's time to go,"
Ardern said, adding that 44,000 ISF personnel had been trained at the base.
"The New Zealand and Australian troops at Taji
have worked hard, not only to provide training, but also to ensure that the ISF
are well placed to take over this commitment at Taji in the near future."
She said New Zealand troop numbers at Taji would
fall to 75 next month, then 45 in January 2020, before the withdrawal in June
next year.
Defence Minister Ron Mark added that New Zealand would
be reducing its troop numbers alongside their Australian counterparts.
Australia has yet to make a formal announcement on
any downsizing of troop numbers in Iraq.
An Australian defence department spokesman did not
confirm Mark's comments, only saying that "we will continue to work
closely with New Zealand as it gradually draws down its footprint in
Iraq".
"Australia regularly reviews its overseas
operations, taking into account the needs of the Iraqi government and the
operational context on the ground," the spokesman added in a statement to
AFP.