Hundreds of British troops will go to Iraq
Hundreds of British troops will be sent to Iraq next month, Michael Fallon, the Defence Secretary, has announced, as the war against Islamic State enters a new phase.
In an interview with The Telegraph, Mr Fallon says the British service personnel will be training Iraqi and Kurdish forces to fight Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isil) from January.
A small “force protection” deployment of combat-ready soldiers is also expected to be sent to defend the military training teams, who will be based at four centres inside Iraq, Mr Fallon said.
The new mission represents the first significant deployment of ground force since the last British troops withdrew from Iraq three years ago.
The details are still to be finalised but Mr Fallon told The Telegraph that the number of troops involved would be in “the very low hundreds”. At present, there are 50 British troops inside Iraq training local forces.
The announcement marks a new stage in Britain’s involvement in the fight against jihadists in Iraq and Syria. The RAF has conducted "a huge number" of air strikes against Islamic State, "second only to the United States, five times as many as France", Mr Fallon said.
Britain joined US-led air strikes earlier this year after the Commons voted in favour of raids on Islamic State targets in Iraq.
However, the UK has not joined America in bombing targets across the border in Syria, despite the fact that the government believes such action would be legal. Labour has so far declined to support military action in Syria and ministers do not want to risk a defeat in the Commons on military action.
