Iraq allies vow support for bid to regain Ramadi from jihadists
PARIS - Agence France-Presse
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi gives a joint press conference following a meeting with French Foreign Affairs minister and with Foreign Affairs member of the anti-Islamic State coalition on June 2, 2015 in Paris. AFP Photo
Iraq's allies June 2 pledged support for Baghdad's plan to retake the city of Ramadi from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) jihadists, whose advance Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi described as a "failure" for the global community.The US-led coalition, which has been carrying out air strikes against ISIL, also called for the "speedy launch" of efforts to resolve the Syrian crisis, which it said was crucial to tackle the group rampaging through Syria and Iraq.
But despite a series of battlefield wins by ISIL, the coalition maintained it had a "winning strategy" and gave its seal of approval to Iraqi plans to claw back territory at crunch talks in Paris.
US Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken, standing in for the hospitalised John Kerry in Paris, hailed Baghdad's strategy as "the right plan both politically and militarily for Iraq at this time".
He insisted the coalition had made "real gains" and said ISIL now had 25 percent less territory than when the air strikes began in August.
Experts, however, say the militant group nevertheless controls an area the size of Italy across Syria and Iraq.
Baghdad has been fighting to wrest back Ramadi, the capital of Iraq's largest province Anbar, since the shock loss to ISIL last month -- the worst defeat for the coalition since it formed nearly a year ago.
Under the emergency plan adopted by Abadi's cabinet, Baghdad hopes to mobilise and arm the Sunni tribes of Anbar province, which they have previously been loath to do out of fears they could turn on the Shiite-led government.
Abadi also plans to ensure all Sunni and Shiite militias are operating under the government's authority, to avoid stoking sectarian tensions.
The loss of Ramadi as well as the historic Syrian city of Palmyra days later raised questions about the effectiveness of the coalition's strategy.
But Blinken insisted: "In Iraq right now we have the right strategy, a combination of air strikes, training and effective global partners."
The rout of Iraqi security forces in Ramadi also led to a diplomatic spat as US Pentagon chief Ashton Carter said there was "an issue with the will of the Iraqis to fight", in comments that deeply angered Baghdad and forced Washington to apologise.
Abadi himself called for more from his partners, saying most ISIL fighters were foreign and therefore an "international problem".
"There is a lot of talk of support for Iraq, there is very little on the ground," he told reporters before the Paris meeting.
He said that roughly six out of 10 ISIL fighters were foreign, with the remainder Iraqi.
The international community has to explain "why so many terrorists are from Saudi Arabia, why so many from the Gulf, why so many from Egypt, why so many from Syria, and Turkey and from European countries?"
Abadi continued: "There is a lack of intelligence, we are trying very hard on our part but this is a transnational organisation... This is a failure on the part of the world."
Separately on June 2, French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said 110 jihadists who left French territory to fight alongside ISIL had died Iraq and Syria.
Abadi's criticism came as ISIL claimed responsibility for a suicide attack on an Iraqi police base north of Baghdad on Monday that killed at least 37 people, mostly officers.
Officials also said on June 2 that the group's fighters have closed the gates of a dam in Ramadi, posing a humanitarian and security threat.
While the focus of the Paris meeting was the crisis in Iraq, the ministers also talked about neighbouring Syria where ISIL is wreaking havoc.
They said that with the "continued deterioration of the situation in Syria and the inability and unwillingness of (Bashar al-Assad's) regime to fight Daesh [ISIL]" it was urgent to find a political solution in Damascus.
In a joint statement, coalition representatives called for the "speedy launch of a UN-facilitated, genuine and inclusive political process" in Syria.
Aside from diplomatic support, Abadi said Baghdad was in need of weapons and ammunition to battle ISIL, adding that most of his country's weapons contracts were with Russia or Iran, which are both under Western sanctions.
The suicide attack against the police base slowed an operation to retake Ramadi, but Abadi said his troops' counter-offensive was "advancing quite quickly."
He insisted "Iraqis are prepared to fight" and said he was "investigating why some local commanders issued commands for the forces to withdraw" during the ISIL attack on the city.