Washington: The United States recently sent a small number of special forces soldiers to Jordan to train with counterparts from Iraq and Jordan, a new step in the Obama administration’s effort to help Baghdad stamp out a resurgent Al Qaida threat, a US defence official said on Friday.
The US contingent was dispatched to take part in a training exchange with counterterrorism forces from Iraq and Jordan, allowing the administration to provide a modest new measure of support to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki.
“The training will bolster skills in counterterrorism and special operations tactics, techniques and procedures,” a US defence official said on condition of anonymity. The training, which includes less than 100 elite soldiers from the three countries, began last weekend. It will continue through the end of April, although the Iraqi soldiers will only take part through the end of this month, the official said.
The new training complements stepped-up sales of US weaponry to Al Maliki’s government, and reflects increased concern among US officials about Iraq’s security trajectory more than two years after all American troops departed. Reuters was first to report in January that US officials were considering supporting training of elite Iraqi forces in a third country. In the past, US officials had said that they were considering training the Iraqi forces at a privately run special operations training centre near Amman in Jordan, grappling with the mounting impact of the grinding conflict in neighbouring Syria, who is one of the United States’ closest allies in the Middle East. The US response to mounting sectarian tensions and surging violence in Iraq has been limited by reluctance to further empower Al Maliki, a Shiite Muslim leader increasingly at odds with Iraqi Sunni Muslims, and a widespread desire to ensure US soldiers aren’t involved in another Middle Eastern conflict.
Because US soldiers cannot conduct military activities in Iraq without a Status of Forces Agreement, training with Iraqi forces outside of Iraq is one way the Obama administration can try to help Iraq beat back a surge in militant attacks over the last year. Since early 2013, suicide bombings and other sophisticated attacks have once again become more common in Iraq, seeming to break the lull in violence that coincided with the final years of the US military presence that began in 2003. US anxiety about Iraq skyrocketed when militants from an Al Qaida offshoot, the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, with the help of other Sunni groups, overran Iraq’s city of Falluja in largely Sunni Anbar province.