Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Iraq Steps Up Anti-ISIS Coordination with Iran, Syria, Russia

By AS Staff


Iraq, Russia, Iran and Syria set up an intelligence committee in Baghdad in order to coordinate fight against ISIS.

Iraq, Russia, Iran and Syria have agreed to set up an intelligence committee in Baghdad, a spokesman said Sunday, a further sign of Moscow's growing role in the region's conflict.
Iraq welcomed the creation of the cell as a chance to help harmonize often competing efforts in the fight against the Islamic State (ISIS) jihadist group.
"It's a committee coordinating between the four countries, with representatives of each country, in the field of military intelligence and aimed at sharing and analyzing information," Saad al-Hadithi, a spokesman for Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's office, told the AFP news agency.
He added the cell would focus on "monitoring the movements of terrorists... and degrading their capacity".
A statement from Iraq's Joint Operations Command said the deal with Moscow comes amid "growing concern over the presence of thousands of Russian terrorists engaged in criminal acts with Daesh," an Arabic acronym for ISIS.
Russia's Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev earlier this month estimated that 1,800 Russian citizens are fighting for ISIS, while reports have suggested Moscow is deliberately letting militants take their jihad (holy war) away from its own borders.
Hadithi would not say whether the new cell had already begun its work. There was no comment on the issue from Damascus and Tehran.
A Russian "military-diplomatic source" quoted by Russian news agencies said the center in Baghdad would be managed on a rotational basis, with Iraq taking the lead for the first three months.
"The main functions of this center will be collection, processing and analysis of information regarding the situation in the Middle East in the context of fighting the Islamic State group, distributing this information to the relevant parties and quickly forwarding it to the general staffs of these countries," the source was quoted by AFP as saying.
The move comes as Moscow boosts its military presence in neighboring Syria, deploying more troops and warplanes to an air base along with new arms deliveries to President Bashar Al-Assad's regime, a longstanding ally.
The United States was so concerned about reports of Russia’s increased presence in Syria that Secretary of State John Kerry phoned his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov a total of three times in ten days to discuss the situation.
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu flew to Moscow for talks with Putin earlier this week. During the meeting with Netanyahu, Putin sought to calm Israeli concerns over the deployment of Russian soldiers in Syria, telling the Israeli Prime Minister his forces would act "responsibly," and noting the Syrian regime was in not fit state to attack Israel.
The United States has a $500-million program to train and equip vetted moderates recruited from among the rebels fighting Assad, but it has faced repeated setbacks.
Washington's strategy in Iraq, built on an air campaign and the deployment of several thousand military trainers and advisers, has also come under increasing fire as failing to produce results.
Moscow has sold fighter jets and weaponry to Iraq but has taken the back seat as Iran and the U.S.-led coalition -- which also includes France and Britain -- often competed to be Baghdad's top partner in the war against ISIS.
A decades-long backer of the Damascus regime, Moscow has steadfastly supported Assad throughout four and a half years of a conflict that has killed more than 240,000 people and triggered the worst migrant crisis in Europe since World War II.
Western powers have recently softened their stance categorically rejecting a role for Assad in any political solution to the conflict in Syria.
Abadi's spokesman said enhanced intelligence cooperation would positively affect operations against ISIS, which proclaimed a "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq last year.
"Having a broader base of intelligence thanks to cooperation with these three countries as well as with the coalition will give our security forces more opportunities to achieve victory in the war against terrorism," Hadithi said, according to AFP.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home