The Pentagon has recommended sending 400 more U.S. troops to Iraq to
aid in the fight against ISIS, a senior U.S. military official told Fox
News late Tuesday.
The official said that the White House had not made a final decision
on the recommendation, which would bring the total number of American
troops in Iraq to approximately 3,400. That number includes trainers,
advisers, security and other logistical personnel.
The Pentagon also plans to open a sixth training base in Iraq's Anbar province, a vital battleground against the terror group.
The Pentagon says that the additional forces are aimed at bolstering
the participation of Sunni tribes in the fight, but the plan is not
likely to include the deployment of U.S. forces closer to the front
lines to either call in airstrikes or advise smaller Iraqi units in
battle. Currently, there are 2,598 Iraqi forces being trained by U.S.
forces. Of that number, about 800 are Kurds and the rest are Shiite
Muslims.
Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told
reporters traveling with him in Israel that it's not clear yet whether
opening new training sites would require additional American forces.
"To be determined," Dempsey said. He added that Gen. Lloyd Austin,
the U.S. Central Command chief who is responsible for U.S. military
operations across the Middle East, had not yet given Dempsey his
assessment of whether more resources would be required to implement the
proposed changes.
"And that's appropriate, because I want to first understand that we
have a concept that could actually improve (Iraqi military) capability,"
he said.
Dempsey said he has recommended changes to President Barack Obama but
he offered no assessment of when decisions would be made. He suggested
the president was considering a number of questions, including what
adjustments to U.S. military activities in Afghanistan and elsewhere in
the world might be needed if the U.S. does more in Iraq.
Dempsey said the Pentagon also is reviewing ways to improve its air
power in Iraq, which is a central pillar of Obama's strategy for
enabling Iraqi ground forces to recapture territory held by ISIS.
Obama said Monday that the United States still lacks a "complete
strategy" for training Iraqi forces. Obama also urged Iraq's
Shiite-dominated government to allow more of the nation's Sunnis to join
the campaign against the violent militant group.
Dempsey said Obama recently asked his national security team to
examine the train-and-equip program and determine ways to make it more
effective. Critics have questioned the U.S. approach, and even Defense
Secretary Ash Carter has raised doubts by saying the collapse of Iraqi
forces in Ramadi last month suggested the Iraqis lack a "will to fight."
Carter, during a recent trip to Asia, also said it's crucial to
better involve Sunnis in the fight, and that will mean training and
equipping them.
The viability of the U.S. strategy is hotly debated in Washington,
with some calling for U.S. ground combat troops or at least the
embedding of U.S. air controllers with Iraqi ground forces to improve
the accuracy and effectiveness of U.S. and coalition airstrikes. Dempsey
was not specifically asked about that but gave no indication that Obama
has dropped his resistance to putting U.S. troops into combat in Iraq.
"What he's asked us to do is to take a look back at what we've
learned over the last eight months of the train-and-equip program, and
make recommendations to him on whether there are capabilities that we
may want to provide to the Iraqis to actually make them more capable,
... whether there are other locations where we might establish training
sites," and look for ways to develop Iraqi military leaders, he said.
Dempsey said there will be no radical change to the U.S. approach in
Iraq, he said. Rather, it is a recognition that the effort has either
been too slow or has allowed setbacks where "certain units have not
stood and fought." He did not mention the Ramadi rout specifically, but
Dempsey previously has said the Iraqis drove out of the city on their
own.
"Are there ways to give them more confidence?" This, he said, is among the questions Obama wanted Dempsey and others to answer.
Dempsey said recommendations on how to improve and accelerate the
Iraq training efforts were discussed at a White House meeting last week
and said follow-up questions were asked about how the proposed changes
would be implemented and what risks they would pose to U.S. troops and
to U.S. commitments elsewhere in the world.
He stressed that the U.S. military is deeply involved across the globe, even as its budget is shrinking.
"You know our capabilities are in high demand to reassure European
allies," he said. "We've got additional issues in the Gulf related to
reassuring allies against Iranian threats."
Dempsey added that the U.S. is "still hard at it in Afghanistan,"
doing more in South Korea and accounting for the fact that some U.S.
allies in Asia are "unsettled" by China's building of artificial islands
in the South China Sea.