US speeds up drone, missile deliveries to aid Iraq

This Apr 23, 2008 United States(US) Navy photo shows an MH-60R Seahawk firing a Hellfire missile during training near San Diego, California. US said on Monday it would speed up its deliveries of missiles and surveillance drones to Iraq as the Ba
This Apr 23, 2008 United States(US) Navy photo shows an MH-60R Seahawk firing a Hellfire missile during training near San Diego, California. US said on Monday it would speed up its deliveries of missiles and surveillance drones to Iraq as the Baghdad government battles a resurgence of Al-Qaeda-linked militants. -- FILE PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The United States (US) said on Monday it would speed up its deliveries of missiles and surveillance drones to Iraq as the Baghdad government battles a resurgence of Al-Qaeda-linked militants.

And the White House, meanwhile, dismissed claims that the fighting, which has seen militants retake the city of Fallujah, was a result of President Barack Obama's decision to withdraw US troops.

The Pentagon said that Washington would accelerate delivery of 100 more Hellfire missiles, which were due to be sent to Iraq in the next few months.

Colonel Steven Warren said an additional 10 ScanEagle surveillance drones would also be delivered.

Hellfire missiles, originally designed as an anti-tank weapon, can be fired from helicopters and warplanes.

ScanEagle drones are a low-cost three-metre aircraft capable of flying 24 hours.

The deliveries correspond to contracts already signed with Iraq. Some 75 Hellfire missiles were delivered to Baghdad in mid-December, US officials said.

Since then Iraq has seen a resurgence of fighting in the province of Anbar, which was a key insurgent stronghold for years following the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Last week, fighters from the Al-Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) reclaimed Fallujah, scene of some of the bloodiest fighting of the Iraq war between US troops and insurgents.

Col Warren said Washington was working with Iraq to develop a "holistic strategy to isolate Al-Qaeda-affiliated groups so the tribes working with the security forces can drive them out of the populated areas". But he reiterated previous statements from US Secretary of State John Kerry that no US forces would return to Iraq to assist in military operations.

"We'll not be sending forces to Iraq," he said.

Instead the US will continue to provide intelligence to assist and advise the Iraqis at a "ministerial level" through around 100 military personnel still based at the US Embassy in Baghdad.

The assistance would not extend to operational advice.

"We're not doing tactical work with the Iraqis," Col Warren said.

Despite the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq at the end of 2011, the US remains a key security and defense partner, providing more than US$14 billion (S$18 billion) worth of weapons to Baghdad since 2005.

Following the renewed fighting, the White House has been forced to rebut claims that the militants are filling a vacuum left by the departure of all US forces.

"There was sectarian conflict, violent sectarian conflict in Iraq when there were 150,000 US troops on the ground there," said White House spokesman Jay Carney.

And that argued that the idea that there would be no more fighting in Iraq if there were still 10,000 US troops there in a counter-terror role, as some in Washington have implied, did not bear up to scrutiny.

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