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US renews vow to help Iraq combat terror attacks

Only hours before he met with Vice President Joe Biden for talks focusing heavily on security, three suicide bombings killed 14 Iraqi security forces, the deadliest in a series of attacks which have left 35 dead in two days.

"Vice President Biden reiterated the US commitment to equip Iraqis to fight Al-Qaeda, and Prime Minister Maliki made clear that he views the United States as Iraq’s security partner of choice," the White House said in a statement, calling the talks "friendly" and "constructive."

Unrest in Iraq has reached a level unseen since 2008 and killed more than 5,400 people this year, with Iraqi authorities so far failing to curb daily attacks despite a swathe of operations and tightened security measures.

Although Iraq has already received some $14 billion in US support, Maliki has said he intends to press Washington for more help when he meets with Obama on Friday at the White House.

"We do want to help the Iraqis develop the capability to target these networks effectively and precisely," a senior administration official told reporters after the two-hour breakfast meeting.

"It is a fact now that Al-Qaeda has a presence in western Iraq, and it has a presence in terms of camps and facilities and staging areas that the Iraqi forces are unable to target effectively," the US official said, asking not to be named.

Many militants are slipping into Iraq from Syria, armed with heavy weapons, and targeting Iraqi forces as well as civilian Shiite areas. "They’re targeting playgrounds, weddings, funerals, and this is having a devastating psychological impact," the official said.

Washington had "a pretty good handle now on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant networks and where they are and where it's coming from," the US official said.

In a bid to clamp down on the attacks, the US was "increasing expert cooperation with the Iraqis... to help the Iraqis have a better vision of what they face so they can target it effectively."

US officials have also already notified Congress of plans to sell Iraq "a major air defense system which allows them for the first time to take sovereign control of their air space, which right now they don't have," the official said.

He refused to go into details. But The Washington Post reported that Baghdad was hoping to buy US-made Apache helicopters.

Iraq has also ordered dozens of F-16 warplanes from the United States which were on track for delivery in late 2014, the US official said, confirming Baghdad had now deposited some $650 million as a down payment for the planes.

He insisted though that the solution to combating groups such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant did not just lie in weapons sales.

"What we don’t want the Iraqis to do is to take just a security-centric approach to this. This is an asymmetrical threat and it has to be approached asymmetrically," the US official said.

"What that means is making sure they have information in terms of where people are located, where it's coming from, where the funding is coming from, and that's something that we can do pretty effectively."

Maliki met later Wednesday with US lawmakers in a bid to persuade them to approve the arms deals, a day after a group of US senators accused him in a letter to Obama of contributing to an alarming slide back into a sectarian war.

Representative Ed Royce, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs committee, said after Wednesday's talks on Capitol Hill that they had discussed "a range of critical issues" including Iran and the September attack on a camp in Iraq, housing members of an Iranian opposition group.

"I urged the prime minister to do more to reconcile with his political opponents on key issues in order to marginalize the terrorists and militants who threaten to draw Iraq into another deadly civil war by exploiting these disagreements," Royce said in a statement.

AFP

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