Extra British troops are to be sent to Iraq to help in the battle against ISIS extremists, the government announced today.
Defence
Secretary Michael Fallon said the UK was 'stepping up' its military
presence after a 'small specialist' team was sent to instruct Peshmerga
in the northern city of Erbil last month.
UK
forces will offer further training to Iraqi soldiers and Kurdish
Peshmerga fighters, Mr Fallon said during a visit to Iraq today.
Defence
Secretary Michael Fallon announced UK forces will offer further
training to Iraqi soldiers and Kurdish Peshmerga fighters
The government stressed that combat troops were not being deployed to take on ISIS across large parts of Syria and Iraq.
During
his first visit to Iraq, Mr Fallon told the BBC: 'We are going to be
stepping up our training effort. I can't give you precise numbers. I'm
here to evaluate training needs and there are areas of expertise,
particularly in counter-IED, roadside car bombs, where we can help from
our experience in Afghanistan.
'So
we will be putting in more training people to help at the training
centres across the country, not just in the Kurdish areas.'
Mr
Fallon, who visited British army trainers teaching Peshmerga fighters
how to use heavy machine guns given by the UK, insisted the Government
remains clear that no combat troops will be deployed to Iraq.
Under
the expansion of the training mission, UK troops will teach Kurds
infantry skills such as sharp-shooting and first aid, and more equipment
will be provided. The UK will also send advisory personnel to Iraqi
headquarters.
Pressure
has been growing to provide more assistance to new Iraqi prime minister
Haider al-Abadi as his country's forces struggle to reclaim territory
in the north and west.
The UK troops will teach Kurdish fighters skills such as sharp-shooting and first aid, and more equipment will be provided
Mr
Fallon held talks in Baghdad with the premier as well as Iraqi security
advisers before flying north to Erbil to met the President of the
Kurdistan regional government Masoud Barzani and prime minister
Nechirvan Barzani.
He
added: 'The need is now. It's a very immediate challenge from Isil. As
they start to push Isil back out of the villages and towns that Isil
have gone into they are going to need this kind of assistance with
roadside bombs, particularly to counter the terror tactics that Isil
have been using.
'So, we are looking very urgently now how we can get more training help to them in the next few weeks.'
There
are areas of expertise, particularly in counter-IED, roadside car
bombs, where we can help from our experience in Afghanistan
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon
Asked
about concerns of mission creep, he replied: 'This is a very limited
mission. The Prime Minister's made it very, very clear we are not going
to recommit combat troops to Iraq. We've been there, we've done that.
'What
we are going to do is to help the new government of Iraq and its own
army take the fight to Isil through the aircraft we have deployed in the
sky, through intelligence gathering, and through specialist training.'
British
troops were part of the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 that overthrew
Saddam Hussein, and later took responsibility for Basra and the south of
the country.
The
last combat troops with Operation Telic, as it was called, left in
April 2009, with a small number staying on to train Iraqi forces until
2011.
RAF Tornado fighter-bombers have been taking part in US-led bombing raids on IS.
But
Prime Minister David Cameron has dismissed the prospect of sending in
ground troops to fight the Islamist group, which controls swathes of
Iraq and neighbouring Syria.
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