Official: Iraqis need help gathering intelligence
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — Iraq’s prime minister said Tuesday that Iraqi forces are ready to take over their own security as the U.S. begins to withdraw but that the government still needs help gathering intelligence to target insurgents and prevent attacks.
Nouri al-Maliki also stressed his government’s decision not to extend the June 30 deadline for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from urban areas includes northern areas of Mosul and Diyala, despite continued insurgent activity there.
“The timetable for the U.S. withdrawal is a definite date,” al-Maliki told The Associated Press, speaking aboard his plane en route home from Paris. “We will not accept any change.”
The comments were the firmest yet by al-Maliki, underscoring the government’s determination not to allow any extension of the deadlines set out in a U.S.-Iraqi security pact, which also calls for a full U.S. withdrawal from Iraq by the end of 2011.
Last month, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. Raymond Odierno, said he was worried Iraqi forces won’t be ready to assume full responsibility for Mosul by the end of June. U.S. commanders also have raised concern over Iraqi readiness to take over control in the volatile province of Diyala.
Al-Maliki dismissed such concerns, pointing out the security pact allows the government to ask for U.S. assistance if needed.
“There will be no delay in the U.S withdrawal, even in Mosul or Diyala,” he said. “If there will be a need for the U.S forces, they will be available outside the cities.”
U.S. combat troops largely pulled out of many cities in 2005 and 2006 but returned a year later as part of the U.S. troop surge that was designed to protect civilians from Shiite and Sunni extremists living in their neighborhoods.
However, al-Maliki acknowledged Iraqis need more help with intelligence gathering as the fight becomes less about ground battles and more about targeting potential sleeper cells of al-Qaida in Iraq and other Sunni insurgents believed responsible for staging most car bombings and suicide attacks.
“Realistically, the troops and weapons will not play the fundamental role,” he said. “The main thing we need is intelligence information coming through about the penetration into al-Qaida.”
There’s a lot at stake for al-Maliki, who faces national elections expected toward the end of the year.
The departure of heavily armed U.S. combat troops from bases inside the cities is important psychologically to many Iraqis, eager to see Iraqi forces in charge after six years U.S. military occupation.
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