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US considering new relief mission in Iraq — sources

By AP - Aug 27,2014 - Last updated at Aug 27,2014

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is considering launching a humanitarian relief operation for Shiite Turkmen in northern Iraq who have been under siege for weeks by Islamic State militants, US defence officials said Wednesday.

The mission, if it went forward, would be the second recent US military humanitarian intervention in Iraq. US cargo planes dropped tonnes of food and water to displaced Yazidis on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq earlier this month, supported by US air strikes on nearby Islamic State fighting positions.

The administration is now focused on the imperiled town of Amirli, which is situated about 169 kilometres north of Baghdad and just a few kilometres from Kurdish territory. An estimated 12,000 to 15,000 people are estimated to have no access to food or water.

The head of the United Nation's assistance mission in Iraq, Nickolay Mladenov, earlier this week called for urgent action in Amirli and described the situation as desperate.

Three US defence officials said a humanitarian mission is under consideration. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they could not discuss internal administration deliberations by name. The timetable for a decision on whether and how to go ahead with the mission was not immediately clear.

Separately, the top US commander in the Middle East, Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, met Wednesday in Baghdad with Iraq's premier-designate, Haider Al Abadi, to discuss cooperation in the fight against the Islamic State group, according to a statement issued by Abadi's office. The statement said Austin expressed the US government's willingness to provide more counterterrorism training for Iraqi security forces.

The US has several hundred military personnel in Iraq providing security for American facilities, including the US embassy in Baghdad and the US consulate in Erbil, and coordinating with Iraqi security forces.

The US also has a military-run office of security cooperation as part of the US embassy, but the military personnel assigned to that office work on military sales rather than provide field training for Iraqi forces.

The siege of Amirli is part of the Islamic State's offensive, which seized large swaths of western and northern Iraq this summer and pushed further in neighbouring Syria.

Residents have put up fierce resistance since the siege began, preventing the Sunni militants from successfully taking over the town. But the militants have, in turn, cut off the town, leaving thousands without access to food, water and medicine, despite recent airdrops by the Iraqi military.

Like other minorities in Iraq such as the Christians and the Yazidis, the Shiite Turkmen community has also been targeted by the Islamic State, which views them as apostates. Tens of thousands of Turkmens, Iraq's third-largest ethnic group, have been uprooted from their homes since the Islamic State took Mosul, the northern city of Tikrit and a spate of towns and villages in the area.

Dr. Ali Al Bayati, head of an Iraq-based humanitarian group called the Turkmen Saving Foundation, said Wednesday that at least 15,000 civilians, including many women and children, remain trapped in Amirli without access to food or water.

He said the streets are blocked by Islamic State fighters and the only way out is by air. The nearest Iraqi ground force is in the town of Toz Khormatu, which has seen intense clashes in recent weeks. Electricity and water are completely cut off in Amirli, according to Bayati.

Bayati said airdrops from the Iraqi military have provided residents with desperately needed staples like rice, oil and cheese, as well as weapons to help them resist the Islamic State. However, the residents often go 10 days without any airdrops successfully reaching them.

David Pollock, a former State Department official and now a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Tuesday the US military could assist in opening a land corridor into Kurdish territory for the besieged Turkmen.

"It's a very urgent situation," Pollock said.

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