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IRAQ WARS
US, Iraq weigh post-2011 US force: Mullen
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 7, 2011

Two US soldiers killed in Iraq: military
Baghdad (AFP) July 8, 2011 - Two American soldiers have been killed during operations in central Iraq, the US military said on Friday.

"Two US service members were killed Thursday while conducting operations in central Iraq," said the brief statement, which did not mention how or where they had died.

The latest deaths come after 14 US soldiers were killed in attacks in June, the deadliest month for American military fatalities since 2008.

The latest deaths bring the full number of American military deaths in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion to 4,471, according to an AFP count based on the website www.icasualties.org.

Nearly 50,000 US soldiers remain in Iraq, down from a high of 170,000 since the invasion, which toppled dictator Saddam Hussein.

All of them are scheduled to pull out by the end of this year, according to a 2008 pact, but Washington has been lobbying Iraqi leaders to allow a small contingent to remain beyond 2011 due to Iraq's still tenuous security situation.

The United States and Iraq are negotiating a possible new security deal that would keep US forces in the country beyond a December 31 deadline for withdrawal, the top US military officer said Thursday.

Admiral Mike Mullen's comments marked the first high-level confirmation from the US military that talks were underway on the politically-charged subject, which faces some stiff opposition in Iraq.

"The negotiations are ongoing and it's hard," Mullen told reporters.

He said the discussions were addressing both the size of a possible US military mission as well as the capabilities that Iraqi forces lacked.

"There are very clear capability gaps the Iraqis are going to have," said Mullen, citing air power, air defense and intelligence analysis.

"And both the Iraqi security forces and our forces recognize those gaps are there," he said at a Pentagon Press Association luncheon.

How those gaps would be addressed is "at the heart of the discussions and negotiations which are ongoing as we speak," the admiral added.

Mullen would not speculate on the optimum number of US troops that should stay on beyond this year, but added: "it's what the Iraqi government and really the Iraqi people say is acceptable to them to provide for their own security."

About 46,000 US troops remain in Iraq and the entire force is due to leave by December 31 under a security agreement with Baghdad.

But top US officials have said that they would consider keeping some troops there after the deadline if requested by Iraqi authorities.

Iraqi commanders acknowledge their military remains heavily dependent on US logistical support, air power, equipment and expertise, while some Baghdad politicians are anxious to retain American troops as a peacekeeping force in reserve.

President Barack Obama's administration has offered to keep up to 10,000 forces in Iraq next year, The Washington Post reported this week, citing US officials.

Such a move would be politically fraught both in the United States and in Iraq, where some view US forces as unwelcome.

Anti-US Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has threatened to launch attacks against American forces if they stay beyond the year-end deadline.

In April, Sadr threatened to reactivate the Mahdi Army, the militia he formally disbanded in 2008, if US forces do not withdraw by December 31.

The once-powerful Mahdi Army, which fought against Iraqi and US-led coalition forces between 2004 and 2007, has been identified by Washington as the main threat to stability in Iraq.

Before it was disbanded, the militia numbered some 60,000 fighters swearing fierce loyalty to Sadr.

In Washington, Obama also risks alienating some members of his own party if he backs off the withdrawal deadline, as many Democrats in Congress are anxious to wrap up the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The discussions on a possible extended US military mission come amid concerns in Washington over Iran's role in Iraq, and Mullen said any new security agreement would need to take Tehran into account.

Mullen accused Iran of increasing its support for Shiite militants in Iraq after having curtailed such activities in 2008.

Iran was supplying more sophisticated and more lethal weapons to the groups, including makeshift rocket launching systems and armor-piercing shaped charges, that were being used against American troops.

"Iran is very directly supporting extremist troops which are killing our troops," Mullen said.




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Iran sends more weapons to militants in Iraq: US
Washington (AFP) July 7, 2011 - Iran is stepping up its support for Shiite militants in Iraq, supplying them with more sophisticated weapons, the top US military officer said Thursday.

Admiral Mike Mullen said Iran had made a decision to curtail its support for Shiite factions in 2008 but has now increased its activity in Iraq, sending in lethal arms that were being used against American forces.

"Iran is very directly supporting extremist troops which are killing our troops," Mullen told reporters at a Pentagon Press Association luncheon.

The Iranian shipments are "significant and improved," said the admiral, including a makeshift rocket launching system, known as an improvised rocket assisted mortar (IRAM), and armor-piercing shaped charges, or explosively formed projectile (EFP).

"They are shipping high-tech weapons in there, IRAMs, EFPs, which are killing our people. And the forensics prove that," he said.

As the United States and Iraq negotiate a possible follow-on US force that would stay beyond a December 31 deadline, Mullen said any future security deal with Baghdad would have to take into account the threat posed by neighboring Iran.

"If we reach an agreement (on US troops remaining in Iraq)... it has to be done in conjunction with control of Iran in that regard," he said.

Mullen also said the arms were flowing into Iraq with the full knowledge of Iran's leadership.

"I would say they know about it," he said.

Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, said there was no question that Iran was trying to exert influence in Iraq, especially in the country's south.

His comments echoed the US ambassador in Baghdad, James Jeffrey, who said last week that insurgent Shiite groups beholden to Iran posed a threat to Iraq's stability.

US forces last month suffered their worst casualties in three years with 14 soldiers killed, most in rocket attacks.





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