New Zealand is being asked to allow itself to be pulled into the Empire's war.
These reports from mainstream media have more than an element of fantasy.
"The
United States is prepared to assist the Iraqi Army with additional
unique capabilities to help them finish the job, including attack
helicopters and accompanying advisers, if circumstances dictate and
if
requested by Prime Minister Abadi,"
PM
Abadi is asking the US and NATO to get the fuck out of Dodge
US asks for more help fighting Islamic State
10 December, 2015
American
Defence Secretary Ash Carter told a Senate Armed Services Committee
hearing the US was stepping up its military role in Syria and Iraq
and in the past week he had asked other members of the coalition to
do more.
Defence
Minister Gerry Brownlee speaks to NZ troops at Ohakea Air Base on 16
November on their return from Iraq. Photo: Pool
/ Warwick Smith / Fairfax NZ
Defence
Minister Gerry Brownlee confirmed Mr Carter had sent a letter to the
government last Friday.
He
said it was a generic letter asking for help including elite troops,
air strikes, provision of ammunition and training.
New
Zealand and Australia are jointly deployed
to Iraq to
train local security forces as part of international efforts to
combat Islamic State.
The
second New Zealand deployment is on the ground at Camp Taji, near
Baghdad.
Mr
Brownlee told Morning Report the government was not
rushing to make a decision on the request.
Listen
to Gerry Brownlee on Morning Report ( 2 min 4 sec )
"We're
going through a review at the moment of the first tranche of the
training mission that we're involved in at Taji and that'll be
presented to Cabinet in March, and I think from that time we'll be
able to assess whether or not there's something else we could do."
More on New Zealand's role in Iraq
Labour
Party defence spokesman Phil Goff said New Zealand should "think
long and hard" about any wider involvement.
"In
every case of involvement in a military deployment we've seen that
committment get wider and last longer. "
He
said the consideration of a special force deployment was the likely
next step for New Zealand's involvement in Syria. Labour would only
support this as part of a United Nations mandated mission.
Ash
Carter said it had taken a "frustratingly long time" for
Iraqi forces to regain territory from Islamic State. Photo: AFP
Mr
Carter told the senate committee on Wednesday the US was prepared to
deploy advisers and attack helicopters if requested by Iraq to help
it "finish the job" of retaking the city of Ramadi from
Islamic State.
His
remarks were the latest sign of US preparations to intensify its
military campaign against the group, which controls wide swathes of
Iraq and Syria and has orchestrated and inspired attacks abroad.
Islamic
State captured Ramadi, a provincial capital just a short drive west
of Baghdad, in May in its biggest conquest since last year, and
retaking it would be a major victory for Iraqi Prime Minister Haider
al-Abadi.
Mr
Carter said it has taken a "frustratingly long time" for
Iraqi security forces to claw back territory, but pointed to
significant gains, including recapturing the Anbar Operations Centre
on the northern bank of the Euphrates River in the past 24 hours.
"The
United States is prepared to assist the Iraqi Army with additional
unique capabilities to help them finish the job, including attack
helicopters and accompanying advisers, if circumstances dictate and
if requested by Prime Minister Abadi," Mr Carter said.
President
Barack Obama is under mounting pressure to escalate America's
military role in Iraq and Syria, particularly after the 13 November
assaults in Paris that killed 130 people, claimed by Islamic State,
and last week's paramilitary-style attack in California by a couple
believed by authorities to have been inspired by Islamist militancy.
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