Iraq and the United States began talks on the future of international coalition forces in Iraq on Saturday, January 27. This initiative occurs in an increasingly explosive regional climate, as coalition bases are regularly targeted by pro-Iranian armed groups.

Iraq and the United States on Saturday held a first round of talks on the future of American and other foreign troops in the country, with Baghdad expecting discussions to lead to a timeline for reducing their presence.

Roughly 2,500 US troops are still deployed in Iraq as part of the anti-Islamic State group international coalition formed in 2014 — the year the jihadist group overran swathes of Iraq and neighbouring Syria.

But after the Israel-Hamas war began in October, US-led coalition forces in Iraq and Syria have faced frequent attacks by Iran-aligned groups, leading to US retaliatory strikes and Iraqi complaints of American “aggression” against its territory.

The volatile situation has pushed Iraq’s Prime Minister — whose government relies on the support of Iran-aligned parties — to call for the coalition to leave, although talks between the two sides had been planned since August.

The office of Prime Minister Mohamed Shia al-Sudani issued a photograph of him with top-ranking officials from both the Iraqi armed forces and the US-led coalition.

Their joint commission “started its work today, in Baghdad, to review the mission of the Global Coalition against Daesh,” Sudani’s office said in a statement, using an Arabic acronym for IS.

“Military experts will oversee ending the military mission of the Global Coalition against Daesh, a decade after its initiation and after the successful achievement of its mission in partnership with Iraqi security and military forces.”

Sudani’s foreign affairs adviser, Farhad Alaaldin, told AFP that the talks “and whatever progress made will determine the length of these negotiations.

“Iraq is engaging the other countries taking part in the international coalition for bilateral agreements which serves the best interest of Iraq and these countries,” Alaaldin said.

‘Clear timeline’

On Thursday, Washington had said it agreed with Baghdad on the launch of “expert working groups of military and defence professionals” as part of the joint commission set up in agreement with Baghdad.

The three working groups would examine “the level of threat posed by ISIS, operational and environmental requirements, and strengthening the growing capabilities of the Iraqi security forces,” Sudani’s office said.

On Thursday, US Pentagon deputy press secretary Sabrina Singh acknowledged that the US military footprint in Iraq “will certainly be part of the conversations as it goes forward.”

Iraq’s foreign ministry sees the eventual formulation of “a specific and clear timeline… and to begin the gradual reduction of its (the coalition’s) advisers on Iraqi soil.”

There have been more than 150 attacks targeting coalition troops since mid-October, many of them claimed by the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, a loose alliance of Iran-linked groups that oppose US support for Israel in the Gaza war.

In 2014 IS declared a “caliphate” which they ruled with brutality before their defeat in Iraq in late 2017 by Iraqi forces backed by the US-led coalition. However, jihadist cells still stage sporadic attacks on the army and police.

With AFP