General Joseph Dunford said Friday the Pentagon will submit proposals to President Barack Obama on how to boost military support to Iraqi forces.
“We have a series of recommendations that we will discuss with the president in the coming weeks to further enable our support for the Iraqi security forces,” the top military officer said at a Pentagon briefing.
Dunford maintained that he and Defense Secretary Ashton Carter were of the opinion that “there will be an increase in US forces in Iraq in coming weeks, but that decision hasn't been made.”
The recommendations will address the question of how the US can “enable” Iraqi forces in their efforts to liberate Mosul, the second largest city in Iraq.
The Iraqi armed forces launched a military operation early on Thursday to oust ISIS from its stronghold in northern Iraq. It is the first phase of a large-scale offensive that Baghdad plans to conclude this year with the complete recapture of Mosul.
Gen. Dunford did not say how many additional troops would be deployed in Iraq, but acknowledged that the US force level in the country had already exceeded the authorized level of 3,870 approved by President Obama.
Pentagon officials have quietly said that the actual number is closer to 5,000 when accounting for troops considered to be on “temporary” deployment.
Strengthening the US military footprint in Iraq is a sensitive topic for the Obama administration, which has repeatedly vowed not to deploy ground forces there.
Earlier this week, US military officials confirmed that US Marines were operating from a small outpost in Iraq, providing targeting assistance and artillery fire to Iraqi forces as they march toward Mosul.
In recent weeks, the US military has stepped up airstrikes targeting ISIS leadership, command and control structure, and financing. A number of senior ISIS leaders have reportedly been killed in the strikes.
Carter, who was also present at the Friday briefing, said a US special operations team had killed the top ISIS terrorist in Syria during a pre-dawn raid the day before.
“We are systematically eliminating ISIS’s cabinet,” the Pentagon chief said. “The removal of this ISIS leader will hamper the organization’s ability to conduct operations both inside and outside of Iraq and Syria.”
ISIS terrorists, who were initially trained by the CIA in Jordan in 2012 to destabilize the Syrian government, now control large parts of Iraq and Syria. They are engaged in crimes against humanity in the areas under their control.
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