Following a meeting between President Biden and Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, there’s no sign a US withdrawal from Iraq will happen anytime soon despite earlier calls from al-Sudani’s government for an end to the presence.
Biden and al-Sudani met in Washington on Monday and released a statement reaffirming the US-Iraqi military partnership. The statement said they would continue talks on the future of the US-led coalition in Iraq, but the next meeting is not until July.
The US has about 2,500 troops in Iraq as part of an anti-ISIS coalition that formed in 2014. Al-Sudani has previously said Iraq can handle the ISIS remnants that are in the country without the foreign coalition, but the US is insisting on a long, drawn-out process to evaluate the threat of ISIS.
Both sides appear to be leaving open the possibility of a continued US presence in Iraq even if the anti-ISIS coalition ends its mission in the form of a “bilateral” partnership.
“The two leaders affirmed they would review these factors to determine when and how the mission of the Global Coalition in Iraq would end and transition in an orderly manner to enduring bilateral security partnerships,” Biden and al-Sudani said.
Ahead of his visit to Washington, al-Sudani wrote an article in Foreign Affairs where he called for a “new kind of partnership” with the US. He said there’s been an agreement to “end the international coalition in a gradual and orderly manner on an agreed timetable” but added that a committee will “develop a road map for future relations, including the presence of US advisers.”
Al-Sudani began calling for an end to the US presence after the US began bombing Iraqi Shia militias that are part of Iraq’s security forces. The US launched a series of major airstrikes in Iraq in retaliation for the drone and rocket attacks on US bases in Iraq, Syria, and Jordan, which came in response to US support for the Israeli slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza. Tensions have eased since al-Sudani’s government and Iran pressured the militias to stop attacking the US following the death of three US troops at a base in Jordan.
Iraq’s parliament voted to expel US forces back in 2020 after a US drone strike in Baghdad killed Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani and Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. But the US refused to leave and was able to stay despite the opposition due to its enormous economic leverage over Iraq.
Since the 2003 invasion, Iraq’s foreign reserves have been held by the US Federal Reserve, giving Washington control over Baghdad’s dollar supply and the ability to devalue the Iraqi dinar. The US also keeps tight control over Iraq’s ability to pay its neighbor Iran for much-needed electricity.
US knows it has to keep forces in Iraq to keep their bases in Syria viable and supplied
Cowards.
Either by a red carpet or hanging from a Chinook, they’ll find their way out.
Take it to the UN of course the security council will veto it, but it makes the complaint internationally visible.
Our military is like Velcro. Where our forces land, they stick. Then shoot webs everywhere to be sure.
By “our military,” did you mean Russia’s?
Talk about respecting the sovereignty of Iraq?
Don’t talk about respect for sovereignty on this site.
The Putin lovers will turn on you.
And I hope you aren’t one cause that will make you a hypocrite.
I imagine if the US calls Iraqis Neo Nazis and annexes parts of their good land with Oil, then support for the US could suddenly sky rocket on this site. Lol