Exit of Foreign combat forces in Iraq: exit confirms Iraq's ability to maintain security
Exit of Foreign combat forces in Iraq, Iraq is more stabilised after the exit of foreign forces.
Iraqi Prime Minister
Mustafa al-Kadhimi said on Saturday that the withdrawal of U.S.-led coalition
combat forces from Iraq confirms the ability of the Iraqi forces to maintain
security and stability in the country.
"In a few days, we
will witness the withdrawal of all combat forces of the international coalition
from Iraq according to the strategic agreement with the American side,"
al-Kadhimi said in a televised speech during a ceremony on the occasion of the
centenary of the founding of the modern Iraqi state in 1921.
"Their (remaining
forces) role will be in the advisory areas, indicating the ability of the Iraqi
forces to preserve the security of Iraq, the stability of its people,"
al-Kadhimi added.
Iraqi National Security
Adviser Qasim al-Araji on Thursday announced the end of the combat mission in
Iraq and the withdrawal of the U.S.-led coalition forces from the country.
Iraq's parliament on
January 5, 2020, passed a resolution requiring the government to end the
presence of foreign forces in the country.
In July this year, the
United States and Iraq held a session of strategic dialogue, during which the
two countries agreed on withdrawing all U.S. combat troops from Iraq by
December 31.
The U.S.-led coalition
began its mission in 2014 to defeat Islamic State after the militants took over
vast areas of Iraq and neighboring Syria.
Since the group's
military defeat in 2017, Islamic State fighters have been unable to hold
territory but are waging a continued low-level insurgency that regularly kills
Iraqi soldiers and civilians in remote mountains and desert areas.
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