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IRAQ WARS
Iraq top diplomat in Turkey to heal wounds post-Maliki
by Staff Writers
Ankara (AFP) Nov 05, 2014


Britain to send more personnel to train Iraqi forces
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 05, 2014 - Britain will send more security personnel to Iraq to help train forces for their battle against the Islamic State jihadist group, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon said on Wednesday.

The United Kingdom, which is supporting US-led air strikes aimed at driving IS jihadists out of significant parts of Iraq, is already training Kurdish forces in the country.

"We will be stepping up our training effort. We're talking to our coalition partners about how the... additional training is going to be provided, in training centres in and around Baghdad," Fallon told journalists in the Iraqi capital.

The training would be for battalions able to leave the front lines, he said, without specifying if it would involve Iraqi soldiers, police or both.

The exact number of trainers that would be sent had not yet been decided.

"One particular area of expertise we have is in counter-IED (improvised explosive devices). We've learnt from Afghanistan in dealing with roadside bombs and car bombs and we have some specialist knowledge to contribute," said Fallon.

Britain already has a "small number of people" in Baghdad, and "will be looking now to see how we can strengthen that, the liason work that we're doing in the ministries and the security agencies here," he said.

The Ministry of Defence said last month that a "small, specialist team" of soldiers was providing training to Kurdish forces in the country's autonomous north on the use of heavy machineguns.

And it said in a statement on Wednesday that Britain would be increasing the training on offer to the Kurds "to include infantry skills such as sharp-shooting and first aid, alongside the provision of further equipment".

Fallon met with Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, Kurdish regional president Massud Barzani and other senior Iraqi and Kurdish officials during the trip, on which he visited both Baghdad and the northern city of Arbil, the ministry said.

Prime Minister David Cameron has ruled out sending combat troops back into Iraq, wary of committing to a new conflict six months from a general election.

Britain was one of the main members of the US-led "coalition of the willing" that invaded Iraq in 2003 and overthrew dictator Saddam Hussein.

The last British forces withdrew from Iraq in 2011.

Britain has not participated in air strikes by the coalition against IS in Syria, where the jihadist group has also seized significant territory.

Iraq's new Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari on Wednesday made a crucial visit to Turkey aimed at mending ties badly strained under the rule of former prime minister Nuri al-Maliki.

Al-Jaafari is expected to meet all of Turkey's top leadership, including President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, during his three-day visit and started the trip by holding talks with Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

Relations between Ankara and Baghdad soured badly in the final years of al-Maliki's rule, with Erdogan accusing the former premier of bearing the blame for Iraq's security chaos.

The Iraqi government was also angered by the assistance given by Turkey to the autonomous Kurdistan region in seeking to export its own oil, which Baghdad said was illegal as it belonged to the state.

"The problems in Iraq were caused by the previous administration," Cavusoglu told reporters at a news conference with Jaafari.

"We want to improve our political and economic relations in this new process. In this regard, we welcome this new beginning in Iraq," he added.

In a sign of the improved ties, Turkish media said that the two sides had agreed to abolish all visa restrictions between them.

Baghdad has looked with great suspicion on the flourishing trade relations between Turkey and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG).

It showed little enthusiasm over the despatch of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters, via Turkish soil, to join the fight against jihadists for the Syrian town of Kobane.

Jaafari made clear that the new government was sticking to the position that the KRG had no right to unilaterally export its oil through a pipeline via Turkey.

"According to the Iraqi constitution, oil sales is the business of the central government.

"We will sort out the problem with the Kurdish oil in line with the Iraqi constitution," he added.

Al-Jaafari, a key member of the new Iraqi government under Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, is a familiar figure to Ankara having himself been Iraqi premier from 2005-2006.

The Shiite Maliki stepped down in September after over eight years in power, bequeathing a dire security legacy with Sunni jihadists in control of swathes of the country.


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