NATO aid to help beef up Iraq's defense forces

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg addresses the media after a North Atlantic Council Meeting at NATO headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday July 28, 2015.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg addresses the media after a North Atlantic Council Meeting at NATO headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday July 28, 2015.

BRUSSELS -- NATO allies agreed Friday on a package of measures to help strengthen Iraqi security and defense forces, including in the fields of military training, demining and countering improvised explosive devices.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the aid program, approved by the alliance's 28 member nations, is designed to help Iraq by providing support in areas where NATO "is best placed to add value."

Independent analysts said beefing up Iraqi defense capabilities also would contribute to stabilizing the southern border of Turkey, a NATO member, and boost the military campaign being waged by a U.S.-led coalition to defeat the Islamic State.

On Tuesday, NATO ambassadors held an emergency meeting at Turkey's request on the threat posed by the Islamic State and the countermeasures Turkey has been taking in response. Bruno Lete, senior program officer for foreign and security policy at the German Marshall Fund, a Brussels think tank, said the meeting "encouraged NATO to think more seriously about its strategy south" toward Islamic State and other radical Muslim groups active in Iraq, Syria and much of North Africa.

Until then, Lete said, NATO strategy sessions mostly focused on the perceived threat to the east: Russia.

In a statement, Stoltenberg said the new Iraqi assistance program had been developed at Iraq's request, and in close consultation with Iraqi authorities. He said NATO plans to help Iraq in seven priority areas, including advising on security sector overhauls, disposal of explosive ordnance, civil military planning, cyberdefense, military medicine and civil emergency planning.

A Section on 08/01/2015

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