World, Middle East

US, Kurdish Regional Government sign military protocol

Move comes in advance of anticipated campaign to ‘liberate’ Daesh-held city of Mosul

Sibel Uğurlu  | 12.07.2016 - Update : 12.07.2016
US, Kurdish Regional Government sign military protocol Peshmerga forces fire artillery during an operation against Daesh terrorists in Hazer region Mosul, Iraq on May 29, 2016. ( Hemn Baban - Anadolu Agency )

Arbil

By Idris Okuducu

ERBIL, Iraq 

In the run-up to an anticipated campaign to recapture the Iraqi city of Mosul from Daesh, the U.S. Defense Department and Iraq's Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) on Tuesday signed a protocol for stepped-up military cooperation.

The deal was inked in Erbil, the KRG’s administrative capital, by Elissa Slotkin, U.S. acting assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, and KRG Interior Minister Karim Sinjari.

The signing was also attended by KRG President Masoud Barzani.

"The main objective of the meeting [which preceded the signing] was to boost cooperation between the KRG and U.S.-led coalition forces," KRG spokesman Umit Sabah told reporters after the signing.

Noting that the protocol was the product of two years of discussions between the KRG and U.S.-led coalition forces, Sabah said that Barzani had met U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter last December with a view to ironing out the agreement’s details.

"The protocol outlines the military roles to be played by the various parties that have lined up against Daesh, with an emphasis on the upcoming liberation of Mosul," Sabah said.

*Anadolu Agency’s Sibel Ugurlu contributed to this report from Ankara


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