Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi suggested during his weekly press
conference on Tuesday that Iraq is willing to take the lead in efforts
to handle the large number of foreign ISIS detainees caught in the
course of the war.
Abdul-Mahdi said Iraq was intending to charge any ISIS detainees involved in attacks on Iraqi territory, but was also willing to take non-Iraqi ISIS detainees from Syria and would also help repatriate those foreign citizens to their countries of origin, if those countries are willing.
This could be the most straightforward solution to the question of ISIS
detainees, as the Syrian Kurds are holding a lot of them, and clearly
don’t want to be the long-term solution to that. The US probably
wouldn’t be happy with the Assad government getting involved, given
their hostility to Assad, but the Iraqi government could be a more
palatable alternative.
Most of the international community also has ties with the Iraqi
government, which might make repatriation more simple from them than
from either Assad or the Kurdish YPG. The biggest downside is that a lot
of European countries seem not to want the detainees back, so Iraq may
be setting itself up to get stuck with a lot of detainees to manage.