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IRAQ WARS
Iranian general says US did 'nothing' to save Ramadi
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) May 25, 2015


Biden tries to smooth Iraq ties after Pentagon outburst
Washington (AFP) May 25, 2015 - US Vice President Joe Biden on Monday sought to end an embarrassing rift between Washington and Baghdad after Pentagon boss Ash Carter blamed Iraqi forces for the fall of Ramadi.

The White House said Biden called Iraqi's prime minister Haider al-Abadi, just hours after the US Defense Secretary's suggested the Islamic State group won control of the city because "Iraqi forces showed no will to fight."

Biden "recognized the enormous sacrifice and bravery of Iraqi forces over the past eighteen months in Ramadi and elsewhere," the White House said.

As well as rowing back Carter's comments, Biden called to "reaffirm US support for the Iraqi government's fight against" Islamic State jihadists.

Carter's comments were seen as undercutting a US-Iraqi collective front in the fight against the radical militants.

They were also seen as humiliating for Iraq's prime minister, as he desperately tries to hold his country together with a thinly stretched army and assorted ethnic and sectarian militias whose loyalties lie outside Baghdad.

Abadi himself expressed surprise at Carter's remarks and suggested the head of the Pentagon "was fed with the wrong information."

Iraqi troops had held out in Ramadi for more than a year before succumbing to the highly-motivated highly-armed force a week ago.

Iranian hardliners were quick to seize on Carter's remarks, as they continued to to build influence with Iraq's Shiite majority.

"How can you be in that country under the pretext of protecting the Iraqis and do nothing? This is no more than being an accomplice in a plot," said Qassem Suleimani, the Revolutionary Guards' commander of foreign operations.

It was not immediately clear what repercussions there may be for Carter, who took office in February.

The nuclear expert caused angst in the White House even before being formally sworn in, by publicly supporting the US supply of weapons to Ukraine, a position the White House has been reluctant to embrace.

At that time the White House pointedly noted that any decision would be for Obama, not the secretary of defence, to make.

The United States has done "nothing" to help Iraq's army battle jihadists in Ramadi, according to a senior Iranian general involved in the fight against the Islamic State group.

Qassem Suleimani, the Revolutionary Guards' commander of foreign operations, hit out at Washington after Pentagon chief Ashton Carter said Iraqi forces "failed to fight" in Ramadi, which has fallen to IS.

"Mr. (Barack) Obama, what is the distance between Ramadi and Al-Asad base where US planes are based?" Suleimani said in a speech late Sunday in the southern province of Kerman carried by state news agency IRNA.

"How can you be in that country under the pretext of protecting the Iraqis and do nothing? This is no more than being an accomplice in a plot," said Suleimani.

Shiite Iran has military advisers in Iraq and Syria and provides financial and military support to the governments of both countries in their battle against Sunni extremists.

According to Iranian media, Suleimani has been active in Iraq, particularly at the end of March when Iran-backed Shiite militias helped to recapture the city of Tikrit.

Ramadi, located about 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of Baghdad, fell to IS on May 17 despite US air strikes and the presence of hundreds of US military advisers at the Al-Asad air base in the same province.

In his remarks on Sunday, Carter said that the US-led air campaign against IS, which controls large swathes of Iraq and Syria, was still working.

He said Iraqi forces had "showed no will to fight" even though they outnumbered their opponents, leading to Baghdad's worst defeat in almost a year.

But Suleimani argued that the United States had "no will to fight Daesh", using an Arabic acronym for IS.

He said the jihadists, who control several oil zones in Iraq and Syria "export their oil via countries belonging to the international coalition" led by Washington.

The struggle against IS was a matter of "national interest", Suleimani said.

On Sunday, General Ahmad-Reza Pourdastan, commander of Iran's ground forces, asked parliament for additional funds to fight the jihadists, who are also present in Pakistan and Afghanistan.


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The Islamic State group took full control of a border crossing between Iraq and Syria Sunday, tightening its grip on the heart of its self-proclaimed caliphate. The move gave IS control of the two main roads between Syria and Iraq's province of Anbar, as the jihadists pressed their most devastating offensive in months. The latest success came a week after IS captured the Iraqi city of Ra ... read more


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