The United States will send 217 more troops, including additional special operations forces, to Iraq to expand a train-and-advise effort there to help government forces fight ISIS, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Monday morning.
The financially strapped Iraqis have also accepted America’s offer of Apache attack helicopters and an additional HIMAR rocket system as they prepare to try to retake the city of Mosul from the terror group, Carter said.
The move will boost the total number of U.S. troops in Iraq to 4,087, a senior U.S. military official said.
The United States will also contribute $415 million to the Peshmerga, a Kurdish military group.
The announcement came as Carter visited Iraq as part of a swing through the Middle East in which he also asked allies in the region to help in the effort to rebuild parts of Iraq destroyed during the war with ISIS.
Talk of sending more U.S. troops to Iraq began last month, as the country’s own military geared up to take take the city of Mosul from ISIS — considered a key to regaining control of the country. While Obama has been reluctant to send more American troops there — he was elected on a promise to withdraw, and announced its fulfillment in 2011 — defeating ISIS is the one big exception.
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