DDMA Headline Animator

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

U.S. Troops May Be Sent To Iraq's Arab-Kurdish 'Trigger Line'

2009-08-17

American forces' assignment would be to build trust and bridge the gap between feuding Arabs and Kurds in northern Iraq. Al-Qaeda is exploiting the split between the two sides, says a U.S. official.

In an effort to defuse mounting Arab-Kurdish tensions, the U.S. military is proposing to deploy troops for the first time in a strip of disputed territory in northern Iraq, the top American general in Iraq said today.

Gen. Ray Odierno said the proposal would see U.S. troops deployed alongside Iraqi security forces and Kurdish peshmerga militiamen on the Arab-Kurdish fault line in northern Nineveh province, which has been the scene of several recent high-profile bombings.

Their goal, he said, would be to build trust between Iraqi security forces representing the Baghdad government and Kurdish militia answerable to the Kurdish regional government at a time when a spike in bombings attributed to Al Qaeda in Iraq has sent tensions between the two administrations soaring.

"What we have is al-Qaeda exploiting this fissure between Arabs and Kurds in Nineveh ... and what we're trying to do is close that fissure," he told journalists at his headquarters at Camp Victory on the edge of Baghdad.

Though the plan is still not finalized, Odierno said he had discussed it recently with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki and with Masoud Barzani, the president of the regional government, and that both had been receptive to the idea.

The push into the area by American forces would not be large, and Odierno said he did not envisage it delaying the withdrawal of all U.S. combat troops from Iraq by next August. Because the area is mostly rural, the deployment would probably not fall outside the terms of the joint security agreement that require U.S. forces to pull out from urban areas by June 30, he said.

"It won't be full-on if we do it. It will just be to build confidence, then we will slowly pull ourselves out," he said. "As we deliberately withdraw our forces, you will see that there will be less forces withdrawn from the north than any other place. It's a recognition of where we think the bigger problem areas are."

The deployment would not come at least until September, when a committee is due to meet to discuss the proposal.

The plan has potential risks, among them that U.S. troops could find themselves bogged down in the region if Kurds and Arabs have not resolved their differences, said Sam Parker of the U.S. Institute of Peace.

"Depending on the size and nature of the force involved, this could pose difficulties for U.S. plans to withdraw combat forces by August 2010 and all U.S. forces by the end of 2011," he said.

The status of an arc of territory stretching across Nineveh province, through the oil-rich city of Kirkuk and into the province of Diyala lies at the heart of what has proved the most intractable problem still threatening the stability of northern Iraq.

Kurds claim the territories belong to their autonomous region of Kurdistan. After the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime and the disintegration of the Iraqi army in 2003, Kurdish peshmerga moved into the areas, giving them de facto control. But Arabs claim the territories are theirs, and as the Iraqi government has grown in strength, Arabs increasingly have asserted their claim.

A string of recent bombings targeting the minority Turkoman, Shabak and Yazidi communities has seen both sides accuse the other of responsibility. There also have been several tense standoffs in recent months between Iraqi security forces and peshmerga along what has been dubbed the "trigger line" marking the divide between Arabs and Kurds.

U.S. commanders fear such incidents could escalate into full-blown conflict if the tensions are allowed to fester. Odierno said the purpose of injecting U.S. forces would be to enable the two sides to learn to work together.

"I think they'd all feel more comfortable with us there," he said.

But there's also a danger that the presence of U.S. troops will provide a disincentive to the parties to find a political solution to their differences, said Joost Hiltermann of the International Crisis Group.

"As a short-term measure, it's very good, because it shows American commitment to addressing this issue," he said. "In the longer term, it could make the parties more dependent on the U.S. at a time when the U.S. is planning to withdraw. It shouldn't be a substitute for U.S. diplomatic pressure to find a political solution to the problem of the trigger line."

In the meantime, Iraq's government is pressing ahead with a referendum on the security agreement that could force U.S. troops to leave Iraq sooner than expected. The Iraqi Cabinet finalized a draft law establishing the mechanisms for the referendum to be held on Jan. 16, the same day as national elections, according to a statement by government spokesman Ali Dabbagh.

The referendum, promised as part of a deal sealing the Legislature's approval of the agreement in December, was delayed until the same day as the January election to save effort and money.

If voters reject the security agreement, U.S. forces will have one year to pull out from Iraq, which means they would have to be gone by January 2011, 11 months earlier than anticipated.

Source: Free Internet Press.
Link: http://freeinternetpress.com/story.php?sid=22560.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.