Biggest threat to Iraq? Iran-backed militias, not Al Qaeda, US official says
Loading...
| Washington
On the heels one of the deadliest weeks of the year in Iraq, a senior US military official says Iranian-backed militias, not Al Qaeda in Iraq, pose the gravest threat to the country鈥檚 future.
Though the car bomb attacks that hit 13 cities in Iraq Monday bear the markings of Al Qaeda in Iraq, militias are the greater concern because of the support they 鈥渁re getting on a daily basis from Iran," said Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Buchanan, spokesman for US forces in Iraq.
The military has found caches of rockets supplied by Iran and 鈥渕anufactured as recently as 2010," he added.
By contrast, Al Qaeda has a weaker support structure, and there is no indication of any ties between the two. 鈥淲e have not seen those connections,鈥 Buchanan said in a luncheon with Pentagon reporters Tuesday afternoon. 鈥淚deologically they鈥檙e so different.鈥
Buchanan estimates that there are currently between 800 and 1,000 members of Al Qaeda in Iraq, and most are local fighters. Foreign fighters 鈥渁re really a trickle,鈥 he said. By comparison, one Iranian-backed militia group, the Promise Day Brigade, has 鈥渟everal thousand鈥 members.
The US military is grappling with how to best prepare the Iraqi military to meet threats after US troops depart. That departure is currently scheduled to take place by year鈥檚 end, unless the Iraqi government requests that US troops stay longer.
Military officials including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen have been warning for months that the Iraqi government must make a decision as quickly as possible about whether to invite US troops to stay in the country longer. With each passing day, some operations or training possibilities become 鈥渓ess feasible,鈥 Buchanan said, though he adds that even if a base were to close down and the Iraqis decided they wanted it reopened, that could happen as well.
The greater issue at that point, military officials warn, would be the expense 鈥 a growing consideration as pressure to cut the defense budget grows.
In any event, threats from both Iranian-backed militias and Al Qaeda will continue after US troops depart, even if that deadline is extended beyond year鈥檚 end. Said Buchanan, 鈥淭hese groups aren鈥檛 going anywhere when US troops leave.鈥
But Buchanan also spoke of improvements in the performance of Iraqi security forces.
In the wake of a March operation in the Iraqi city of Tikrit, when a number of Iraqis were murdered 鈥渆xecution style,鈥 Iraqi security forces 鈥渄id not cover themselves with glory in dealing with it,鈥 he acknowledged.
But two months later, during a similar operation, Iraqi security forces responded with 鈥渢remendously different results," he added, indicating that the forces are learning from their mistakes.
But while their performance continues to improve, Buchanan said, there are notable gaps that concern senior US military officials.
On matters of intelligence, which could be used to break up the sorts of spectacular attacks that occurred this week, Iraqi security forces remain 鈥渟uspicious鈥 of sharing information with each other. Buchanan attributes this tendency to a legacy of the Saddam Hussein era. 鈥淭he fundamental issue for me is a lack of trust.鈥